Clunes - Port Phillip Mine
The Port Phillip & Colonial Mine, which operated from 1857 to 1891, is located on the outskirts of Clunes within Esmond Park. The site currently has large earth heaps covered in gorse.
The site is one of the stops on the Clunes Creek Walk.
Beside the road is an information sign about the mine which reads:
In 1851 the innovative Port Phillip and Colonial Gold Mining Company was floated in London to mine for gold on the Victorian goldfields.
The Port Phillip Company tried to mine at various sites around Victoria, but miners were hostile to the large, foreign owned company.
It was not until 1857 that work started after the superintendent of the Company, Henry Rivett Bland, negotiated an agreement to mine on Cameron's pastoral lease, receiving sole rights to mine the land for twenty-one years.
The deep quartz reefs under Clunes were the goal of the Port Phillip Company. Large stamping batteries to crush the quartz were erected.
Charles Kinnear and 100 shareholding miners of the Clunes Quartz Company provided the quartz to Port Phillip Company on a profit sharing basis.
A pioneer in many technical company mining innovations, the Port Phillip Company invested heavily in equipment. With 80 stampers it boasted one of the largest gold plants in the world.
It was the first Victorian mine to provide fresh air to the workings using a Roots Blower. Highly qualified engineers imported from England ensured a productive future for the Company.
The kilns of the Port Phillip Company are some of the earliest man-made structures surviving at Clunes. The kilns were used to roast gold bearing quartz, which made it easier to crush.
The Port Phillip Company was one of the top five productive gold mines in Victoria, producing 16,000 kilograms of gold. Operation ceased in 1891.
Photos:
Location
Scenic Drive, Clunes 3370 Map
Web Links
→ Bland life in Clunes