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Tuesday 12 February 2019

Ghost of Glenloth Well Mine

Ghost of Glenloth Well Mine



Located on the Eyre Peninsula, Glenloth Well is approximately an hour and fifteen minutes south-west of Kingoonya near Lake Harry. Glenloth Well is home to the Glenloth Goldfields, a natural deposit of Gold and Hematite that was noted by the Government Geologist in 1893.

 By 1904, a mine and extraction building was constructed. A five-stamp battery mill (a type of machine that crushes rocks instead of grinding them) was built, powered by a 14-horse powered engine with a vertical boiler, drawing water from Lake Harry.

A small settlement was established to process the mine. The closest towns today are Kingoonya (32kms north-east), Glendambo population 77 (74 km's east), Tarcoola (87 Kms north-west).
In 1936, a daughter of an owner of the East-West Mine at Glenloth Goldfields, Yvonne Marie Heylen, wrote to The Mail newspaper, telling of a local ghost story.

Her article is as follows:
“Last week one of the old miners who was working as a tributer on our mine told father that there was a ghost down one of the old underlie tunnels, near where he was working. He said he could hear weird noises and sounds of running feet at night.
Next night he took his carbide lamp and crawled along the old abandoned tunnel or 90 ft. when suddenly his lamp went out.
 In the darkness, two yellow eyes of fire appeared before him, and the next instant' he received a heavy blow on the head from the ghost. Scrambling along on hands and knees, the poor miner came out of the tunnel as fast as he could and gave the alarm.
Father and one of my brothers took candles and ropes and went to investigate. They discovered that the ghost was Billie our billygoat, who had been missing for several days.
Billie was soon rescued and taken out of the tunnel.

Yvonne Marie Heylen. Glenloth Goldfield.”

 While in this case, it turned out to be a goat and not a ghost haunting the old mine-shaft, the moral of the story here is; don’t crawl into deep dark places on your own, you never know what you might find!

Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2018    
The Haunts of Adelaide: History, Mystery and the Paranormal.


References:

1901 'IN SOUTH AUSTRALIA. FIND OF GOLD AT GLENLOTH WELL.', The Register (Adelaide, SA: 1901 - 1929), 26 April, p. 7. , viewed 27 Dec 2018, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article56068329
1936 'The Ghost in the Mine', The Mail (Adelaide, SA: 1912 - 1954), 14 November, p. 7. (MAGAZINE), viewed 26 Dec 2018, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article55732930

Gee, L.C.E. & Brown, H.Y.L., (1908), Record of The Mines of South Australia, 4th ed., Government Printer, Adelaide, South Australia.
Record of Mines, (1980), Summary card No:8, Gairdner S 5315/Harris
Noble R.J., Just J. and Johnson J. E., (1983), Catalogue of South Australian Minerals-1983, Government Printer, Adelaide, South Australia

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