Across the bridge crossing the Grey River from the carpark is where the actual bricks were made.
This is one of the areas where the bricks were made. There were 5 kilns here in total and each one was able to make 2000-3000 bricks.
About 12 men and boys worked in these buildings, the clay dust would've been unbearable with the only ventilation being through open windows in the mill building. Temperatures in Winter were below freezing - no insulation at all in winter while in summer those working in the sheds with it's underfloor heating really felt the heat. No human rights conditions in those days.
This is how the mining site would've looked back when it was in action - note the bridge on the other side shows this was taken from the hill which now has a road leading to the main highway looking behind the sheds. Photo by H. Yeadon 1880s - both mines were shut down in 1906 and 1908.
A memorial set up to remember those who died in a mass explosion on the site that ripped through the mine on 26th March 1896 killing 65 men, 53 are buried in a mass grave at nearby Stillwater Cemetery and 33 in a single grave each. Two men who were sent in to investigate were later found unconscious after inhaling black damp, a mixture of nitrogen and carbon dioxide. The official enquiry afterwards found the cause was a detonation of a charge in an area of the mine where no one should've been working. Some said that methane gas produced by coal had accumulated because of an ineffective ventilation system.
Photo from Te Ara showing the first bodies being taken out of the mine from.
The mass grave as it was being filled back in 1896. Photo from West Coast History.
The memorial and mass grave surrounded by Victorian iron railings as it looks today in such a peaceful quiet place in the country.
Linking up with Through my lens, Tuesday Treasures, My corner of the world and Wordless Wednesday.