I was in Cornwall at a time when the opening of Pendarves, Wheal Jane and Mount Wellington was quite recent history, and I knew people involved in the subsequent closure and re-opening of Wheal Jane.
Wheal Jane was, ultimately unsuccessful because of the water, but also because various ambitious technical programmes ( the hydraulic sand backfilling and the then-very advanced mineral processing ) didn't pay off. Mount Wellington was defeated by the water. Pendarves simply didn't make money, but produced enough ore of a sufficient quality and nature to be sort-of viable for some years as a secondary operation.
You must also remember that even then, Cornish mining would have been in the doldrums for thirty years ( since the 1930s ) and had become very insular; I don't believe that South Crofty and Geevor would have lasted so long without the influx of outside talent and experience brought in by Gold Fields and RTZ, and the outside contractors ( particularly Foraky and Thyssens ).
It's quite true that the incoming investors didn't feel the need to inform the locals what they were doing,that's a general comment. However you COULD look in the technical press, if you had access to it, and learn quite a lot, and that's still a general comment.
I didn't get offered a position at Combe Down because I was a nice chap who happened to be in the right place at the right time, I got it because I'd been plugged into the loop of industry gossip for years... with Foraky in the 80s, the same consultant in SE Cornwall in the mid-90s, with the same director in Iran in the mid-2000s, etc etc. That's how an industry of that sort works, in large part.
Frankly, the sums being spent at South Crofty aren't all that large for investors of that sort, well accustomed to quite high-risk, long-term ventures. The team there now are men who have long-term connections with the area, but when ( if ) they expand, they will draw that talent from further afield; they will have no real option.
I saw all this in Cornwall in the 70s, in Aberdeen in the development of the North Sea and I've seen it since in places like West Africa and Kazakhstan. This is why CSM has been largely focussed on the offshore industry in recent years, why the only successful start-up in Cornwall in recent years has been Seacore, with a mention in despatches for Hydrock; because the industry is about following the money.
Sitting outside the Job Centre whingeing about "local jobs for locals" isn't going to get you anywhere, because the people actually investing in those jobs aren't playing that game. Nor are they interested in the local faction fighting and land speculations. That has always been true, and hasn't changed.
The internet is a wonderful thing. I probably know more than I've ever known about what my contemporaries at CSM are doing now. I see them in Canada, Australia and elsewhere, having never returned; I see them in the oil industry, and running various operations ranging from land fill to the fire brigade, in one case. But, these are mainly up-country men; if they were indeed "wise men from the East", they were too wise to remain in Cornwall when there was no sufficient reason to do so.
I formed the view a long while ago that the Cornish did not understand mining on that level, that their insular views and clannishness tended to produce an unhealthy degree of putting the cart before the horse, or possibly expecting the cart to move itself in some way rather than use a horse from Exeter or other fabled cities in the wider world.
To a considerable extent, this comes from having attended CSM at a time when that Institution was changing, moving away from the insularity and resting on its laurels of the previous decades; and from its ongoing success, I'd say that was right. I always believed in Peter Hackett's reforms, at a time when they were a very divisive issue, because they seemed to me to be valid, and I think the passage of time has validated that view.
So, I await developments with considerable interest, less optimism, and in the knowledge that I have nothing to lose by being completely wrong. If the call comes to go down there for six months or a year for some specific purpose, all well and good. If not, all well and good too.
But it's my honest opinion that when you lose sight of the fact that mining is just another "hard dollar", you are missing the point.
''the stopes soared beyond the range of our caplamps' - David Bick...... How times change .... oh, I don't know, I've still got a lamp like that.