In the course of researching the construction of the private siding to the new Prince of Wales Shaft Engine House - at the early stages of the 1907-1914 working of Phoenix United at Minions - I have come across a brief reference to the only fatality among the workforce during this period.
According to H R Shambrook's paper in the 1977 NMRS Memoirs, James Rudd was killed in November 1912 in the 150 fathom level, driven from PoW Shaft, as a result of the premature detonation of a charge. Such is the style of presentation of Shambrook's work that is difficult to determine the source and therefore the veracity of this information, but it may be the result of information given to him by W Hedley Harris, the Phoenix United Accountant and site First Aider.
My difficulty is that I can find no trace of James Rudd in the Register of Deaths Index, the 1911 Census, Parish records or the Burial Records of the Dissenters' Chapel in St Cleer. If I broaden the search criteria to include Devonshire, and create a five-year spread of dates, I can still find no firm evidence of his existence. A national search of the Death Register produces only two matches: James Edward Rudd, aged 46, whose death was registered at Plympton St Mary in 1909, and James G Rudd, aged 18, whose death was registered at Whitehaven in the Spring of 1913.
I would really appreciate any views Forum members may have on the reliability of Shambrook's information and whether it is likely that the Phoenix United operation of 1907-1914 was employing underground workers from afar. Certainly the management from 1911 onwards was an international mining consultancy with strong connections to the Australian gold mining industry. As I say, any views would be very gratefully received.