Historical information
This image is a reproduction of an 1899 original depicting the 'Williams Good Luck Mine' on the Mopoke Reef (also called 'Morepork Gully') in the Dingle Ranges, approximately three miles from Beechworth. The foreground of the image is littered with piles of smashed rock and detritus, known as ‘mullock’, beside a reinforced mine shaft, a vertical access passageway allowing miners to enter the mine and haul ore out using lifting technology such as a poppet heads, whims or windlasses. A group of miners and a dog appear close to an open-sided miner’s hut.
Following the discovery of gold at Beechworth in 1852, rushes quickly followed at surrounding creeks and gullies in the district. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, small syndicates of miners continued to work old or abandoned quartz reefs, often persisting without the assistance of heavy machinery to remove the large amounts of rock, in order to obtain yields at ever greater depths.
The group of miners in this photograph are Mr. Roger Williams and Sons, who revived operations at the ‘Old Good Luck’ mine on the Mopoke Reef in the Dingle Range near Beechworth around 1892, working the site for more than two decades. An emigrant from Cornwall with experience in the tin mining industry, 19 year old Roger Williams senior sailed to New Zealand in 1840, then to Australia where he spent time in the Bendigo Gold Fields before settling in Beechworth in the early 1860s. Mr Williams senior worked on various mining activities in the district, including the Rocky Mountain Tunnel project. Conversant with the character of gold-bearing reefs in the area, the syndicate dug an eight hundred foot tunnel, digging down as far down as two hundred feet with little capital save their labour, to connect and provide better working access to the mass of reefs and veins in the vicinity. Progress was hampered by poor air quality charged with fumes from dynamite and large quantities of rock had to be crushed to obtain payable yields.
The Victorian Goldfields are filled with ruins and remnants of the area's rich mining history, ranging from small alluvial diggings to the remains of huge mining companies. Site names often changed several times throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Some sites were abandoned and forgotten, others were worked continuously over many decades. The names of mines were often repeated at different locations throughout the Victorian Goldfields. For example, there is a Mopoke Gully heritage mine near Fryers Creek, Victoria. 'Mopoke' is a common onomatopoeic name for Morepork and Australian Boobook owls.
Significance
This image has historical, social and research significance for patterns of emigration during of the Victorian Gold Rush, and the historical, social and environmental impacts of mining at Beechworth at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. As gold became scarce and government support and large company investment waned, poor hard-working miners laboured intensively to make a living through periods of high unemployment. This image can be compared and studied alongside other historical mining photographs and objects in the Burke Museum Collection. It has potential to improve our understanding of miners working conditions and the shifting character of mining in the Beechworth district.
Physical description
Black and white rectangular reproduction photograph printed on matte photographic paper.
Inscriptions & markings
Obverse:
Williams Good Luck Mine Beechworth /
Roger! /
Reverse:
6858 /
Subjects
- burke museum,
- beechworth museum,
- beechworth,
- gold fields,
- gold rush,
- victorian gold rush,
- gold ming history,
- colonial australia,
- australian gold rushes,
- mining technology,
- beechworth historic district,
- indigo gold trail,
- migration,
- indigo shire,
- good luck gold mine,
- victorian goldfields,
- mining syndicates,
- gold fever,
- quartz-mining,
- small-scale mining,
- old good luck mine,
- mopoke gully,
- quartz reefs beechworth
References
- The Argus Melbourne, 01 Apr 1909 - BEECHWORTH MINING ACTIVITY. - Trove (nla.gov.au) Reference to "Old Good Luck Mine" at the Dingle Range owned by Williams and Sons.
- Chiltern and Howlong Times and Ovens Register, 03 Oct 1916 - The Old Good Luck Reef. - Trove (nla.gov.au) 'Old Good Luck Reef'; Mr. Roger Williams and Sons; L. Williams.
- Heritage Victoria. 'North East Victoria Historic Mining Plots 1850-1982). Historic Notes'. Record of prospecting at Dingle Range near Stanley (1872, 1906)
- Carol Woods (1985) Beechworth: A Titan's Field (Book) ISBN/ISSN: 0949905259 Woods C (1985) Beechworth: A Titan's Field, Hargreen Publishing Company, North Melbourne.
- Goldfields Guide - Exploring the Victorian Goldfields
- Life on Spring Creek - A blog by Jacqui Durrant (2 February 2018) Gold diggers - attire and identity
- Ovens and Murray Advertiser, Beechworth, 27 May 1914 - Death of Mr. Roger Williams. - Trove (nla.gov.au) Obituary Mr. Roger Williams. Information on the life of Mr. Roger Williams. References Good Luck Mine at Mopoke Gully, near Stanley.
- Ovens and Murray Advertiser, Beechworth, 30 Sep 1905 - QUARTZ MINING AROUND BEECHWORTH. - Trove (nla.gov.au) Local quartz mining revival; Williams and Sons mining activity at the Old Good Luck, Mopoke Gully.
- Ovens and Murray Advertiser, 07 Oct 1905 - QUARTZ MINING AROUND BEECHWORTH. - Trove (nla.gov.au) Quartz mining revival, Beechworth. Interview with Mr. Roger Williams