| The
Museum of Lead Mining
|
| 18th
Century Living | 19th
Century Living | The
Cottages Today |
The
Beam Engine |
Wanlockhead is the highest village in Scotland at 1531 feet above sea level. It is situated in the Lowther Hills in South West Scotland. Today it can be easily accessed by either the M74 or by the A76. It is still considered very rural and occasionally in the winter snow can still close the roads completely, isolating the village from the rest of Scotland and the World!
The village has existed for over three hundred years. The first miners came to pan for gold and lived in tents through the summer months, but it was impossible to stay in the winter because of the severe weather conditions.
As Wanlockhead was an isolated place, many generations of the same families lived and worked here. During the recessions in the lead industry, many of the families left to start new lives in Canada, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand and United States.
At the Straitsteps Cottages you can experience what it was like to live as a miner in the 18th and 19th centuries. One cottage depicts a cottage interior around 1740 and the second around 1890. The artefacts on show, illustrate how the people of Wanlockhead lived, worked and played. The tour guide will explain how the miners' families lived during these two time-periods.
| 18th Century Living | |
| By the time the
lead mining industry had started the tents were replaced by stone buildings made from local stones and
thatched with heather or sods. These
buildings mostly consisted of 'but and ben'
cottages and consisted of one room with a rushes floor and a fire place which was
no more than a hole in the wall with ventilation through a hole in the roof
which acted as a chimney.
|
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| Fuel for the fire was peat. The windows did not have any glass in as it was too expensive due to the window tax and the elements were kept at bay by wooden shutters. |
| 19th Century Living | |
| As new mining
families moved into the area they were allowed to build their homes on any free
ground they liked.
When The Duke of Buccleuch took over the mining operations, housing
substantially improved. The houses now had two rooms and the roofs were
covered with slate and there was an outside toilet.
|
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| The windows were fully glazed but they were small to keep the heat in. Peat fires were replaced by coal by 1809 which was burned in cooking ranges with a proper chimney. |
| The Cottages Today | |
|
Children
can visit the cottages, dress up in period clothing and take part in
role playing scenarios, making oatcakes and carrying out the chores that
the children of the time would have to do. A fun day out. Contact
us for full details.
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| The Beam Engine | |
|
Outside the Straitsteps Cottage is the
Beam Engine. This unique piece of hydraulic pumping equipment
which pumped water out of the Straitsteps mine, is the only remaining water-bucket engine to be seen
on a mine in Britain.
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