Mining Camp: Difference between revisions

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The ~~Arizona Mining Camp~~, or the Great Peck Mine was an exhibit showcasing the life of miners, and the methods of obtaining ore from mines. The Great Peck Mine was a prosperous silver mine near Prescott, Arizona. This exhibit opened in early October. <ref>"This is the best month to see the exposition." ''The Plain Speaker''. 04 Nov. 1904, p. 5.</ref> The main goal of the exhibit was to display the working of a mine to people who had never seen one in operation.  
The '''Arizona Mining Camp''', or the Great Peck Mine was an exhibit showcasing the life of miners, and the methods of obtaining ore from mines. The Great Peck Mine was a prosperous silver mine near Prescott, Arizona. This exhibit opened in early October. <ref>"This is the best month to see the exposition." ''The Plain Speaker''. 04 Nov. 1904, p. 5.</ref> The main goal of the exhibit was to display the working of a mine to people who had never seen one in operation.  


==Description==
==Description==

Revision as of 02:28, 24 November 2022

Great Peck Mine
Alternative namesArizona Mining Camp
LocationMining Gulch
No. of Buildings1
Construction
Construction Cost$100,000 ($3.02 million in 2021)

The Arizona Mining Camp, or the Great Peck Mine was an exhibit showcasing the life of miners, and the methods of obtaining ore from mines. The Great Peck Mine was a prosperous silver mine near Prescott, Arizona. This exhibit opened in early October. [1] The main goal of the exhibit was to display the working of a mine to people who had never seen one in operation.

Description

A large, five-acre enclosure was erected near the Inside Inn on the southern end of the Mining Gulch. There, a facsimile of the Great Peck Mining camp of Prescott, Arizona was reproduced to represent the mining camp as it was in the 1870's. Included in the mining camp was a dance hall.

Within the enclosure, four shafts were sunk into the ground, each 200 feet deep. On the first one was installed a heavy-duty first-motion reel-hoisting engine operating two four-ton skips. The other shafts were powered with an electric hoist, gasoline engine, and steam engine. Lead ore was supplied by Missouri lead mines and lowered into the shafts.

Electric and Compressed air drills were used in the shaft then hoisted and taken to the mill just as though it had been taken from place in the drifts and sloped of the underground workings. A twenty stamp mill, using Wilfley tables, was erected for crushing the ore. [2]

After the Fair

The machinery was relocated to the Great Peck Mine in Prescott, Arizona.

See also

Arizona

Notes

References

  1. "This is the best month to see the exposition." The Plain Speaker. 04 Nov. 1904, p. 5.
  2. "The Great Peck at Exposition." Weekly Journal-Miner. 13 Apr. 1904, p. 3.

External links