Burma Mines Ltd.

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Burma Mines, Ltd.
FormerlyBurma Mines, Railway and Smelting Company, Ltd.
Company typeSubsidiary (Parent: Burma Corporation)
IndustryMining
Founded1906 (1906) in London, England

Burma Mines, Ltd. or Burma Mines Limited was a British operating firm headquartered in Burma (now Myanmar) which operated one of the largest lead-zinc-silver mines in the world.[1]

Early history[edit]

Initially known as the Burma Mines, Railway and Smelting Company, Ltd., it was incorporated in 1906 in London, England.[2] Later, in 1908, the name was shortened to Burma Mines, Ltd.[3]

During the early 1900s, the British-owned Great Eastern Mining Company was the first to hold prospecting leases and mining rights at Bawdwin in Namtu Township.[4] Due to financial constraints, the Burma Mines, Railway and Smelting Company, Ltd. bought out the organization's interests relating to the development of Namtu's Bawdwin mine.[5] Records show mining production in the Bawdwin mine before 1500 with the region later abandoned by 1868 amid the Taiping rebellion.[6] The Burma Mines company was solely interested in the recovery of the immense quantities of lead and zinc in the slag heaps left by the ancient Chinese operations.[7] Extensive sampling of the lead-rich slag had been conducted.

In 1909, the company completed the construction of a fifty-mile railroad known as the Burma Mines Railway.[8] It was used to transport the slag exported at the mine to be treated at a smelter. Around 1911, the Burma Mines company moved their smeltery equipment from Mandalay to Namtu Township, in northern Shan State.[6]

In 1913, engineers of the company discovered a massive silver-lead-zinc ore body on the mines' premises.[9] The ore body was considered the world's largest high-grade silver-lead-zinc ore body. By 1918, the company erected a mill for concentrating the mine's lead, silver, and zinc ores under the supervision of American engineers and mechanics.[10]

In August 1920, Sir Trevredyn Rashleigh Wynne, named chairman of the firm circa 1915, called a company meeting in London and announced the formation of a new company registered in India. The British operating firm withdrew from the mines and its smelting, milling, and power plant, leaving the mines and smelting activities in the hands of the Indian company. Burma Mines, Ltd. of England was liquidated to distribute its shares among its shareholders.[11]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Student Engineers Are Gathered For Banquet - Newspapers.com™". newspapers.com. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  2. ^ "Company No: 87848; Burma Mines Ltd. Incorporated in 1906. Dissolved between 1916 and 1932 | The National Archives' catalogue". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  3. ^ "Burma Mines | British Museum". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  4. ^ BAILLARGEON D. “Imperium in Imperio”: The Corporation, Mining, and Governance in British Southeast Asia, 1900–1930. Enterprise & Society. 2022;23(2):325-356. doi:10.1017/eso.2020.49
  5. ^ Laurence Robb, Andrew Mitchell, 2021. "Mineral Deposits of Myanmar (Burma)", Mineral Deposits of Myanmar (Burma), Laurence Robb, Andrew Mitchell
  6. ^ a b "Salt Lake Mining Man Tells of Old Chinese Producer - Newspapers.com™". newspapers.com. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  7. ^ "Utah Engineer Achieves Notable Record in Orient - Newspapers.com™". newspapers.com. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  8. ^ "Fluctuating fortunes at the Bawdwin mine". frontiermyanmar.net. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  9. ^ BURMA MINES, LTD. (1913, November 4). Kalgoorlie Western Argus (WA : 1896 - 1916), p. 5. Retrieved May 29, 2024, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article33529387
  10. ^ United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. (1918). Commerce Reports, Volume 3.
  11. ^ "Company Meeting: Burma Corporation, Limited. - Newspapers.com™". newspapers.com. Retrieved 2024-05-29.