Haile Gold Mine - History of Discovery of Gold Ore Zones at Haile Gold Mines, South Carolina

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Joseph E. Worthington
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
12
File Size:
883 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1990

Abstract

The Haile Gold Mine is one of the earliest gold discoveries in the eastern United States as well as one of the largest gold producers from that region. Gold was first discovered in the gravels of what is now known as Haile Gold Mine Branch in 1828 on lands then owned by Colonel Benjamin Hale (spelling not the same). Small placer workings were immediately started and it was not long before the surrounding residual soils and saprolites were also found to contain gold. Following the presence of gold in the residuum eventually lead to the discovery of the underlying gold-bearing lodes that actually outcropped in saprolite form where not masked by heavy vegetation or a thin veneer of Coastal Plain sand. The earliest attempts at production, immediately after discovery, utilized slave labor, washing gravel and residuum from leased tracts that were 15m (50 ft) square. Several at- tempts at small milling operations were made during the en- suing decades, but there was really no substantial or successful production until the 1880s.
Citation

APA: Joseph E. Worthington  (1990)  Haile Gold Mine - History of Discovery of Gold Ore Zones at Haile Gold Mines, South Carolina

MLA: Joseph E. Worthington Haile Gold Mine - History of Discovery of Gold Ore Zones at Haile Gold Mines, South Carolina. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1990.

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