
Killhope Lead Mine
From about 1750 to 1850 lead mining was big business and Britain
was the world's leading producer. The North Pennine lead field comprising
Teesdale, Weardale, South Tynedale and the Derwent valley formed
the most important lead producing area in the country. Lead mining
was also carried out in the Yorkshire dales, particularly in neighbouring
Swaledale and Arkengarthdale.
There is evidence that the
Romans mined lead in the region and during the
later Anglo-Saxon age Bede records that lead
miners from Swaledale often haggled with
Catterick merchants over the price of lead. The
Prince Bishops of Durham exploited lead and
silver deposits in Durham's dales while
monasteries mined and smelted lead in the
Yorkshire Dales. In Henry II's reign lead was
shipped from South Tynedale to Windsor and from
at least 1400 German metallurgists introduced new
lead extracting skills to the North. In the 16th
century Sir William Bowes owned extensive lead
mining interests in Teesdale and Weardale and
operated a smelting mill but it was not until the
late 17th century that the industry really
developed.
The Blacketts, a Tyneside coal owning family
were mining lead in the Allendales near Hexham in
1684. A few years later they leased land in
Weardale from the Bishop of Durham. Lead mines
owned by the Blacketts included Burtree Pasture
in Weardale, Coalcleugh in the West Allen, and
Allenheads Mine. The London Lead Company was
mining around Alston from 1696 and in the
following century extensively mined in the
Derwent Valley, Weardale and Teesdale. The
company was noted for its social welfare and
built houses, schools and libraries for its
workers. It was the first company to introduce
the five day week. From 1880 Middleton in
Teesdale was its northern headquarters. The
company operated Teesdale mines until it folded
in 1905.
Growing towns and the industrial revolution
stimulated the demand for lead for use in
roofing, piping, casting, building materials,
lead shot, paint-bases and glazing. Lead works
began to open on Tyneside at places like Elswick,
Hebburn, Blaydon, Bill Quay and Byker Bridge.
Newcastle was the main point of export for lead
from the Durham dales (including Teesdale), but
Stockton was often used for exporting Swaledale
lead. Until the growth of dales railways around
1860 lead was usually carried to port by teams of
Galloway ponies along packhorse routes.
The earliest methods of extracting lead were
simple bell pits or through Hushing, an open cast
technique. Hushing involved damming streams and
then releasing the water by directing it into a
man-made trench in order to remove vast
quantities of peat and soil from suspected layers
of lead. This created artificial valleys up to
half a mile long and sometimes as deep as 100
feet. Many can still be seen in the lead mining
dales of the region, particularly Weardale.
By the late eighteenth century the preferred
method of mining was to dig stone tunnelled
shafts called Levels into the hillsides along a
vein. The lead was hauled from the mines along
wooden rails (later iron) by horses. Lead mines
were well drained and much safer than coal mines
in terms of flooding. The lead ore was stripped
of its waste products outside the mines, often by
boys and then washed and crushed before
transportation to a smelting mill where the lead
would be produced in the form of ingots along
with any silver.
Smelting mills were erected throughout the
dales and served several mines. Horizontal
condensing tunnels were often built such as the
mid nineteenth century Rookhope Chimney. Here a
two mile long horizontal tunnel eventually led to
a vertical chimney. It served partly to redirect
polluting fumes away from the workers but also
allowed the formation of lead and silver deposits
from the fumes to collect on the walls which were
scraped free and collected by lead workers.
In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
century hydraulic machinery was extensively used
in mines, on dressing floors and smelt mills and
there was an extensive network of man made mill
races streams and channels. Water power was
increasingly used in the 1870s. Weardale's
Kilhope Mine (opened 1860) saw the introduction
of a great 30 feet diameter wheel in 1878 by
Blackett Beaumont. It hauled tubs of ore up to
the crushing mill while other wheels worked the
crushing machines, jiggers, buddles and
separators. Mill races drove the wheels and the
mill race was linked to other plants at Burtree
Pasture and Westgate.
The lead-ore from mines in Allendale and
Weardale were particularly rich in silver in the
early nineteenth century but by the end of the
19th century they had been thoroughly worked. One
of the most important silver mines was that at
Allenheads between Stanhope and Alston. It was
closed in 1896, but was once the largest silver
mine in the world. Silver could be extracted from
the lead ore (when it was present) using a
special process caled crystalization which was
developed at Blackett's Lead Works at Blaydon on
Tyne in 1833.
By the 1850s, the best lead ore was removed in Britain and cheaper
ore was available from the United States, Germany and most significantly
from Spain. Ironically, many of these foreign developments were
backed with British capital and expertise. Many Northern mines closed
in the 1870s and some miners sought work abroad, notably in the
United States. Lead mining companies folded or sold their interests
to new companies like the Weardale Lead Company of 1883. This company
continued mining at places like Rookhope and although some mines
continued operating until the 1930s, others reopened during World
War One. Lead Mining was virtually dead by the 1900s, the only consolation
being that former lead mining waste products like Witherites, Barytes
and Flurospar acquired commercial uses in the twentieth century.

Members of the Earby Mines Research Group
who were to clear the disused lead mine at Killhope
|