My tuppence-worth...
Firstly - perhaps mostly for those who will read this, but will not comment - allow me to say where I'm coming from.
I've lived in north Wales all my life and I believe that a huge amount of our heritage is tied up in the abandoned slate workings of the area. I don't think that many people realise how many people worked in the slate industry and certainly not the conditions, which we today would consider unacceptable. The slate tips and abandoned quaries stand as the only suitable momument to these men, one which is quite breathtaking in scale.
For my part, I'm an architectural historian - and somewhere I even have the certificate to prove it! I've therefore got an interest in the history that surrounds us that goes a little beyond the tourist outlook. I've seen many historical buildings in Wales lost forever and once something's gone, it's gone forever. In this instance, what's being lost is a very important part of Welsh heritage as it is the result of crafts and skills that we have have lost entirely.
No doubt this might give rise to the suggestion that I sit in a nice university office somewhere, wearing a tweed jacket, drinking a cup of tea and being paid a fortune by the state to do nothing. Not the case: I run a small business locally employing 12 people and we struggle to break even against a fickle market. So I'm not coming at this from a point of view that things should be preserved at the cost of jobs.
The destruction of this incline head is extremely regrettable: it simply isn't replacable. As far as I can see, there is no good reason for it, other than recovery of materials - some for re-use, some for scrap. For the sake of a very short-term gain, a historical artefact has been lost for future generations who will never be able to appreciate the skill, craftsmanship and sheer hard work that went into building it.
Pictures are nothing in comparison. It is only by being able to see for ourselves that we will ever understand our heritage. One can only hope that such destruction can be stopped, at least until buildings, inclines and other artefacts can be surveyed and recorded - and their historical worth assessed.
Surely some of the machinery removed could be given - or even sold to - the Welsh Slate Museum so that future generations can appreciate our heritage?
Would anyone from Greaves be willing to discuss their future care of our history?
Hello again darkness, my old friend...