Dolgoch quarry, Gwynedd
Dolgoch slate quarry was a slate quarry in Mid Wales, approximately halfway between Bryn-crug and Abergynolwyn. The quarry was named after a nearby stream, the Nant Dolgoch. 'Dol-gôch' is Welsh for 'Red-meadow'.
The slate at Dolgoch is described as silver-grey in colour; this is very similar to the slate from Bryn Eglwys quarry and the quarries around Corris.
Although the quarry had favourable transportation arrangements compared to many quarries in the area, it was never worked on a significant scale, and was short-lived – opening in 1877 and closing in 1884.
History
W. W. Jones
In early January 1868, W. W. Jones leased land in Dol-gôch ravine and started trying to establish a quarry. Jones was a local prospector who opened many mines in the area; most of them were unsuccessful, with the exception of the Tonfanau stone quarry, near Tywyn.Dolgoch Slate and Slab Co. Ltd.
In April 1872, Jones gave up his lease to the Dolgoch Slate and Slab company limited. This newly-formed company intended to raise £30,000 to build a quarry here. The landowner, Athelstan John Soden Corbet, agreed a lease for the Dolgoch Slate and Slab Co. Ltd. This allowed them to quarry slate here for 40 years, from 25 March 1872, for a rent of £30-per-annum. At the time, Athelstan Corbet was in considerable debt, and hoped that the Dolgoch quarry to pay these off. However, the new company did not actually open a quarry in the ravine for many years, due to financial restrictions.In November 1875, a quarry opened, under the direction of Messrs J. L. Fnniberlain & Co.
In January 1877, the ownership of the quarry was transferred to the Dolgoch Slate and Slab Co. Ltd., which further developed the quarry. Around the same time, the Cwm-Pandy quarry also opened, south-west of Dolgoch; many sources speculate that the openings of these quarries were related, although no evidence has been found to support these claims. A year later, Athelstan Corbet's estate was auctioned, as he had been unable to pay his debts. The Dolgoch farm, on which the quarry lies, was sold to Edward Lyon, of Scrigford, Staffordshire.
The Dolgoch quarry appears to have been successful, and in June 1880 was significant enough that the government's Chief Mines Inspector for North Wales added the quarry to the surrounding district.
In August 1880, a major storm caused significant damage to the quarry. The quarry never recovered, and closed in April 1884.
Revival attempts
In 1897, the newly-formed Dolgoch Slate Limited tried to secure a 25-year lease for the land occupied by the quarry on 2 August 1897. The company intended to raise £20,000 to revive the quarry. The land occupied by the quarry was then owned by Robert Jones Roberts, and rented to John Price. Roberts did not agree on the lease, so the revival attempt was abandoned.Quarrying in the ravine was prohibited from 1902 onwards, under the terms of the sale of the ravine from Robert Jones Roberts to the Tywyn Urban District Council.
However, this did not stop two further attempts to be made, both by workers from the Bryn Eglwys quarry. The first attempt was made in 1910, because of the closure of Bryn Eglwys between December 1909 and 1911. The final attempt was made to revive the quarry for a brief period in 1921, when there was a dispute between Sir Henry Haydn Jones, the manager and owner of Bryn Eglwys quarry, and a group of quarry workers. Both attempts were unsuccessful.
Geology
Three parallel veins of Ordovician slate run through mid Wales, from the region north of Dinas Mawddwy through Corris and south west towards Tywyn: the Broad Vein; the Red Vein or Middle Vein ; and the Narrow Vein. These veins are the southern edge of the Harlech Dome anticline which surfaces in the north at Blaenau Ffestiniog. The Dolgoch quarry worked the Broad Vein and the Narrow Vein; these are the same two veins that were more successfully worked at the Bryn-Eglwys quarry around west.The widest of these veins is the thick Broad Vein that lies to the north of the site and consists of layers of hard, grey shale with patches of slate. The Broad Vein slate is hard and durable, but does not split into thin sections, so is generally unsuitable for use as roofing slates.
The Middle Vein lies about south of the Broad Vein. It is about thick but contains low-quality, friable slate that contains a large number of fossils, predominately graptolites. This vein was not worked commercially at Dolgoch. The British Geological Survey now considers the Middle Vein to be a part of the Broad Vein, not a separate formation.
The third vein is the Narrow Vein which lies about 100 yards south of the Middle Vein and is also about thick. It contains the highest quality slate of the three veins and the most commercially valuable, being easy to split into roofing slates and slabs and both durable and strong. The vein is mostly a continuous bed of slate, containing only the occasional seam of quartz. However the quality of the rock varies over the depth of the vein; the best material is found nearest the surface.
Description
There are four adits at Dolgoch; they are located between SH652044 and SH655043.Adit 1 is located close to the Lower Dolgoch Falls. It is approximately long and dog-legs to the right slightly, ending at a chamber that is open to the sky, but fenced off for safety.
The other three adits are on the level above the Lower Falls, and along the walkway to the Middle Dolgoch Falls.
Adit 2 is very wet for most of its length, although it gets drier towards the end. It is approximately long and bends towards the left slightly as you go in.
Adit 3 is the shortest, as it is only long.
Adit 4 is the longest and most complexly-shaped. It twists and turns mostly to the left until, approximately away from the entrance, it divides into two. The left-hand branch goes approximately further from the junction. The right-hand branch goes approximately further after the junction. Part-way along the right-hand branch, about 90 feet from the junction, there is a narrow drive, around long, to the left.