Very true, Patch. Roose was one of those areas. Cornish miners were familiar with the success of the Hadbarrow Mine at Millom (there was a discrete Cornish community at Moor Row) and the nearby settlement of Barrow was almost swamped by immigrant workers in the 1860s.
The rise of the Stank Mines coincided with the demise of the Cornish copper mining industry prompting a large migration to Cumbria. A shortage of accommodation for the miners who came to work in the Stank Mines caused the settlement of Roose to be developed close to the mine workings. It was a fairly isolated community back then, comprising 196 cottages in two rows (North and South Rows), built by the Barrow Haematite and Steel Company in 1873-74 on land purchased from the Duke of Devonshire for £6,940.
Hundreds of Cornish miners made Roose their home, transplanting their values and cultural traditions. Because it was a physically isolated community, it meant that this quintessentially ‘Cornish village in Furness’ remained undisturbed for a generation.
The majority of the immigrant Cornish came from parishes in the west of the region which were witness to large-scale copper mining: Gwennap and the area centred on the parishes of Breage, St Hilary, Marazion, Perranuthnoe and Germoe. The migration network can be explained. H.W. Schneider, the most influential individual at Barrow Haematite Steel Company had a strong connection with Cornwall where he had formerly been the Chairman of Helston Wheal Vor Mine in 1853-8, until forced to resign. Leaving Cornwall he focused his energies into developing the Stank Mines.
Schneider used his contacts in Cornish mining to recruit men known to him, particularly in the Wheal Vor area, which is centred on the Breage-Germoe district.
The Barrow Haematite and Steel Company built an Established Church in 1874, named St Perran’s. This was never widely used by the Cornish as the Cornish were mainly Methodists and had begun to run Sunday School classes in 1874 in Roose. A year later followers of the Bible Christians were regularly holding meetings in Jackson’s Barn at Roose Farm. In 1877 a purpose built Methodist chapel was opened at Stonedyke.
Today North and South Row, cottages for Cornish miners, remain virtually intact. The mines were worked by steam, and the pumping machinery included a Cornish beam engine originally from Wheal Mary Ann near Menheniot, Cornwall. I suspect that there's not trace of an engne house.
Back to Millom. Beginning in the mid-1850s soon after the mine opened, the first trickle of migrants from Cornwall made Millom their home. By 1866 they comprised a significant percentage of the underground labour force. By the end of the C19th century half the mineworkers were noted to have been of Cornish extraction. One, Captain Thomas Rich, became a member of the Millom Local Board of Health.
The emigration of Cornish to Cumbria is still evident today. In 1998 there were 174 electors in Copeland with Cornish names and these were particularly concentrated in the older parts of the iron ore mining and steel making communities of Cleator Moor, Egremont and Millom, with the streets of the latter having the highest concentrations of all, particularly those around the Glasson Dock area, ‘Glasson’ being a surname readily associated with Cornwall.
Some members of my mother's family worked in the iron mines at Dalton in Furness.
There were Cornish miners working on many British mines from the C18th. Too much to go into now!! But Cumbria caught my interest due to my family connections there. It's a beautiful part of the world. :thumbup:
Den heb davaz a gollaz i dir