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Green fields highlighted by sunrays through heavy clouds from Curbar Edge

Celebration as conservation project sees historic copper mine no longer at risk

Wednesday 24 July 2024

The conservation of a unique Peak District mining structure has been recognised in a celebration event at historic Ecton Copper Mine.

Completion of work to the Ecton balance cone has allowed the wider, nationally important, Ecton Copper Mine site in Staffordshire to be removed from the UK’s Heritage at Risk Register.

Partners in the project came together to cut a ribbon and thank everyone involved. Mining songs were performed by members of two choirs - West Bridgford Social Singers and Everyone Can Sing, led by musical director Simon Thompson.

The project was achieved thanks to grants totalling £145,000 throughthe Defra-funded Farming in Protected Landscapes programme.

Celebration at Ecton Mine

Archaeologists from the Peak District National Park Authority worked alongside partners, including Ecton Mine Educational Trust, Ecton Hill Field Studies Association and Historic England to guide the conservation project.

Funding allowed a multi-disciplinary feasibility study to understand the structural integrity of the Ecton balance cone, its archaeological complexity and its importance for wildlife.

The Ecton Mine balance cone is a complex structure, both above and below ground. A scheduled monument, falling within two Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), Ecton was once the deepest mine in England, using cutting edge 18th century technology to extract copper ore from depths of up to 300 metres below the River Manifold.

The balance cone housed a counterbalance to support some of the weight of the winding rope and reduce the load on the Boulton and Watt steam-powered winding engine which, in 1788, was only the sixth ever commissioned in the world.

Anna Badcock, cultural heritage team manager at the Peak District National Park Authority, said: “It is fantastic to see the removal of Ecton copper mines from the national Heritage at Risk Register.

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