Welcome Nugget
The Welcome Nugget was the name given to a large gold nugget, weighing 2,217 troy ounces 16 pennyweight. (68.98 kg), that was discovered by a group of twenty-two Cornish miners at the Red Hill Mining Company site at Bakery Hill (near the present intersection of Mair and Humffray Street) in Ballarat, Victoria, Australia, on June 9, 1858. It was located in the roof of a tunnel 55 metres (180 feet) underground.[1] Roughly shaped like a horse's head, it measured around 49 cm (18 in) long by 15 cm (6 in) wide and 15 cm (6 in) high,[2] and had a roughly indented surface.[1] It was assayed by William Birkmyre of the Port Phillip Gold Company [3] and given its name by finder Richard Jeffery.[4] Eclipsed by the discovery of the larger Welcome Stranger eleven years later in 1869, it remains the second largest gold nugget ever found.[2]
The finders had been among the first to introduce steam-driven machinery into the field at Ballarat and had looked first at nearby Creswick with no luck. Their luck changed at Bakery Hill, however, and several smaller nuggets weighing from 12 to 45 troy ounces had been uncovered before they found the Welcome.[5]
It was found in 1858 at the diggings of Ballarat, Victoria, under rather peculiar circumstances. The proprietors of a "hole" had gone away to lunch, leaving a hired man digging with a pickaxe. Suddenly the pick struck something. The workman dug around it to see what it was, and then he fainted dead away. The owners returned, and seeing the man lying down, thinking he was dead, one of them jumped in, turned him over to see -what was the matter with him, and then he fainted also. Both of them were dragged out and immediate digging was wildly begun for the nugget, which lay partly exposed. The mass was so great that at first they supposed they had come upon a reef of pure gold.[6]
Sold for 10,500 pounds sterling, it found a home in Melbourne until being sold again on March 18, 1859. It weighed only 2,195 troy ounces (68.272 kg) and fetched 9,325 pounds sterling at its resale.[1] From there it was conveyed to Sydney and exhibited there before being transported and exhibited in the Crystal Palace in London. The Royal Mint bought it in November 1859 and minted gold sovereigns out of it.[2]
Models of the Welcome Nugget were made and distributed to the Geological and Mining Museum in the Rocks in Sydney, and the Museum of Victoria, as well as the Powerhouse Museum, who purchased their model in 1885.[1] Models are also a feature of two displays in Ballarat, the Pioneer Miners (Gold) Monument on the corner of Sturt and Albert Streets in Ballarat Central (1951) and at The Gold Museum opposite Sovereign Hill at Golden Point.[7] In the United States, a replica of the "Welcome Nugget" is exhibited in the Mineralogical Museum at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 "10097 Model of gold nugget 'Welcome Nugget' found at Bakery Hill, Victoria, 1858, plaster, maker unknown, Melbourne, Australia, 1858–1885 – Powerhouse Museum Collection". Powerhousemuseum.com. Retrieved 24 May 2010.
- 1 2 3 Fox, Mark. Discovering Gold. Curriculum Corporation. p. 15. ISBN 1-876973-63-3. Retrieved 25 May 2010.
- ↑ William Birkmyre of the Port Philip Gold Company
- ↑ Some sources spell as "Jeffrey"
- ↑ "Nuggets: Origin and Ending". The Argus (Melbourne): 7. 16 August 1913.
- ↑ "Famous Nuggets". Clarence and Richmond Examiner (Grafton, New South Wales: National Library of Australia). 12 February 1901. p. 2. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
- ↑ Lewis, Mary (Autumn 2001). "A German Impression of the Australian Goldfields". The La Trobe Journal. Retrieved 5 February 2016.