‘Here’s to Low-Grade Ore and Plenty of it,’ the Hearsts and the Homestake Mine

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Duane A. Smith
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
5
File Size:
1072 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2003

Abstract

They are gone now. Gone like that long ago generation that gave them birth. The Homestake Mine, nestled in the northern Black Hills, closed in 2001 after 125 years, the longest run of any major American gold mine. The Homestake Mining Co., which guided its destiny for those many years, is gone too. It merged with Barrick Gold. The Hearst family, which guided the early destiny of both, has long since gone beyond its mining heritage and into the national and even international spotlight. The mine and the company passed from the scene with as little fanfare as heralded their birth, amid the Black Hills gold rush of the 1870s. They both grew into American mining legends, as did the town they sired and nurtured, Lead. In a real sense, the mine and the company symbolized one of the last links to a vanished world and a mining era.
Citation

APA: Duane A. Smith  (2003)  ‘Here’s to Low-Grade Ore and Plenty of it,’ the Hearsts and the Homestake Mine

MLA: Duane A. Smith ‘Here’s to Low-Grade Ore and Plenty of it,’ the Hearsts and the Homestake Mine. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2003.

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