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Dredge mine
Dredge mine









dredge mine

Today, you find it abandoned in the lake’s shallow water across from the Quincy Mining Company Stamp Mills Historic District. Its actual name is Quincy Dredge Number Two, and before that, the Calumet and Hecla Dredge Number One. Key elements which contribute to the heritage value of this site include: - the completeness of the vessel including its hull, superstructure, gold processing facilities and ancillary equipment - the systems associated with the vessel’s structure and function as mining equipment - its functional design and disposition of space - its materials such as the wooden hull and metal equipment - those structural components developed specifically for use in northern dredging, including hardened bucket lips, heating systems (steam boilers and electric heaters) and double walls, - its shore deadmen and related cable system, - its setting in the field of dredging activity near Bonanza Creek, - its viewplanes to gold field tailings and to Bonanza Creek, - its linkage to other sites and landscape features related to corporate mining – the Bear Creek camp site, the power plant, other dredge sites, roads, power and telephone line systems.The Dredge, located on Torch Lake on M-26 heading out of Hancock towards Lake Linden, is a favorite historical marker in the Copper Country. Source: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, Minutes November 1987, June 1997 Commemorative Integrity Statement, August 1999. 4 lies in its association with Klondike gold mining and in its illustration of the process of bucketline sluice dredging used by corporations to mine placer gold in the Klondike Gold Fields in the 1899-1966 period. It has since been preserved as a National Historic Site. There, it sank on its present site in 1959. From September 1941 to the fall of 1958 it mined Bonanza Creek.

dredge mine

All of its major mechanical components were refurbished by the Yukon Consolidated Gold Corporation and encased in a new wooden hull and superstructure built on Bonanza Creek. It was dismantled when paying gravels ran out in 1940.

dredge mine

to mine the gravels of the Klondike River Valley. 4 was constructed in 1912-13 by the Canadian Klondike Mining Co. 4 was declared a National Historic Site of Canada as symbolic of: - the importance of dredging operations in the Yukon (1899-1966), and - aspects of the evolution of gold mining in the Klondike from early labour-intensive to later corporate industrial phases of gold extraction.ĭredge No. Located at its last place of operation on Bonanza Creek in the Klondike goldfields just outside of Dawson City, Yukon, it is now preserved and operated as a historic site. 4 is a preserved bucketline sluice dredge used to mine placer gold.











Dredge mine