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George Nedham (miner)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

George Nedham or Needham (died 1584) was an English entrepreneur and prospector associated with copper mining at Keswick in Cumbria.

Career

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Thornsett Hall, now Thornsett Hey Farm, was the 16th-century home of the Nedham family
Needham Grange, Hartington Middle Quarter
Copper mining in 16th-century Cumbria was centered around Caldbeck

Nedham's family was from Snitterton, Thornsett, and Darley Dale in Derbyshire.[1] His father was Otwell Nedham and his mother Elizabeth, a daughter of Nicholas Cadman of Colly or Cowley, Derbyshire.[2][3] High Needham is a hamlet in the parish of Hartington Middle Quarter.

In 1564, George Nedham, then primarily involved in the cloth trade, was associated with the merchant Lionel Duckett in a political movement to cease trading with Spanish-governed Antwerp. He drafted "A Letter to the Earls of East Friesland" advocating trade at Emden.[4] Nedham was fluent in several languages, and translated a treatise on mining written in German into Italian.[5]

The Company of Mines Royal was founded in May 1568. Nedham was one of the lesser shareholders and joined with a German miner Daniel Hochstetter or Hechstetter to mine copper in Cumbria at Caldbeck and other sites.[6][7][8] In September 1568, Nedham discussed building a wharf at Workington with Master Curwen, a landowner who had recently hosted Mary, Queen of Scots. Nedham went to Buxton, near his family home, and bought a large watchdog with a chain to guard the mining works.[9]

Timber was used for construction and as a fuel for the smelting furnaces, some bought from Sir George and Catherine Radcliffe's woods at Borrowdale. A contract for the Borrowdale timber was signed by Thomas Thurland and Richard Dudley of Yanwath in 1569.[10] In 1567, Nedham had written to William Cecil describing Catherine Radcliffe as "marvellous unreasonable" and "many times so froward that nothing could be had at her hand", claiming that she inflated the prices of useful timber in the district.[11]

Coal was brought from the Workington district, but the plan for a wharf there was not realised. Nedham also had hopes for a deep-water haven at "Pillafowdre" or "Peel a Fouldre" (Piel Castle) on the Lancashire coast, and wrote to Cecil about this spot where Martin Swart had landed with Lambert Simnel. Instead, Lakeland lead and copper was carried to Newcastle-upon-Tyne on the east coast for export.[12]

Scottish gold

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A Dutch prospector, Cornelius de Vos obtained a gold mining contract in Scotland with Regent Moray.[13] George Nedham reported that Cornelius de Vos corresponded with Daniel Hochstetter and Johannes Loner at Keswick in October 1568, and sent a Dutch miner Rennier to them with requests, asking for assays of ores and skilled workmen to be sent to Scotland. The miners of Keswick were reluctant to get involved, and Nedham wrote to Lionel Duckett for advice and to know if Elizabeth I was supportive, considering the political instability in Scotland. Nedham asked Duckett to keep the business secret and ask the courtier John Tamworth to get the Queen's opinion.[14] Tamworth had been a diplomat in Scotland, and had recently delivered money to Regent Moray from Elizabeth's privy purse.[15]

Hurtful humours

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In two letters to Francis Walsingham, Nedham described the work of Joachim Gans at Keswick, who from 1581 smelted copper with Daniel Hochstetter.[16] Gans carried out analysis of nine "hurtful humours" or "corrupt humours", materials in the ore which made producing pure copper difficult. Gans, according to Nedham, was able to mitigate the problem and the humours were "by art made friends" to increase the yield. The nine hurtful humours were identified as; sulphur, arsenic, antimony, vitriol, "calcator", alum, iron, black stone, and white stone. Nedham recommended that Joachim Gans join the new copper works at Neath. Gans, who was Jewish, was from Prague and later settled in Blackfriars, London.[17]

Marriage and family

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Nedham married Clare Jasper of Antwerp.[18] He and his son Arthur Nedham were appointed farmers of the London Custom House in 1577.[19]

Around 1602, his son, Francis Nedham, wrote a report on copper mining at Keswick and Coniston with George Bowes.[20][21] The manuscript is held by the Bodleian Library.[22]

References

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  1. ^ G. D. Ramsay, The Politics of a Tudor Merchant Adventurer (Manchester, 1979), p. 20.
  2. ^ John Lodge, Peerage of Ireland, 4 (Dublin, 1789), pp. 218–219.
  3. ^ Thomas Norris Ince, "Derbyshire Pedigrees: Needham of Thornsett and Snitterton", Reliquary and Illustrated Archaeologist, 7 (London, 1867), p. 208.
  4. ^ G. D. Ramsay, The Politics of a Tudor Merchant Adventurer (Manchester, 1979), pp. 11–12, 20, 25–26.
  5. ^ William G. Collingwood, Elizabethan Keswick: Extracts from the original account books, 1564-1577, of the German miners, in the Archives of Augsburg (Kendal, 1912), p. 113.
  6. ^ G. D. Ramsay, The Politics of a Tudor Merchant Adventurer (Manchester, 1979), p. 13.
  7. ^ George Grant Francis, The Smelting of Copper in the Swansea District of South Wales (London, 1881), p. 35.
  8. ^ F. J. Monkhouse, "Some Features of the historical geography of the German mining enterprise in Elizabethan Lakeland", Geography, 28:4 (December 1943), pp. 107-113.
  9. ^ William G. Collingwood, Elizabethan Keswick: Extracts from the original account books, 1564-1577, of the German miners, in the Archives of Augsburg (Kendal, 1912), pp. 22–25, 29, as "Needham".
  10. ^ William G. Collingwood, Elizabethan Keswick: Extracts from the original account books, 1564-1577, of the German miners, in the Archives of Augsburg (Kendal, 1912), p. 47.
  11. ^ A. Hoechstetter-Müller, "Die 'Company of Mines Royal' und die Kupferbergwerke in Keswick, Cumberland, zur Zeit Joachim und Daniel Hoechstetters (1526–1580)", Aus Schwaben und Altbayern: Festschrift für Pankraz Fried (Thorbecke, 1991), p. 82 (citing TNA SP 12/42 f.172 & SP 12/43 f.35).
  12. ^ F. J. Monkhouse, "Some Features of the historical geography of the German mining enterprise in Elizabethan Lakeland", Geography, 28:4 (December 1943), pp. 111-113: TNA SP 12/42 f.172.
  13. ^ John Hill Burton, Register of the Privy Council of Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1877), pp. 612-4.
  14. ^ Eric H. Ash, Power, Knowledge, and Expertise in Elizabethan England (Baltimore, 2004), p. 48: Calendar State Papers Domestic, 1547–1580, p. 320 (TNA SP 12/48 f.28).
  15. ^ Elizabeth Goldring and others, eds, John Nichols's The Progresses and Public Processions of Queen Elizabeth I, vol. 5 (Oxford, 2014), pp. 247-8, 250, 254: CSP. Foreign Elizabeth 1564-5 (London, 1870), p. 460 no. 1494: Roger A. Mason & Martin S. Smith, A Dialogue on the Law of Kingship Among the Scots (Routledge, 2004), p. xxxi: Samuel Cowan, Who wrote the Casket Letters, vol. 1 (London, 1901), pp. 292-3
  16. ^ Carole Levin, The Reign and Life of Queen Elizabeth I: Politics, Culture, and Society (Palgrave Macmillan, 2022), pp. 198–199: George Grant Francis, The Smelting of Copper in the Swansea District of South Wales (London, 1881), pp. 25–35.
  17. ^ Israel Abrahams, "Joachim Gaunse: A Mining Incident in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth", Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England, 4 (1899-1901), pp. 83-101.
  18. ^ John Lodge, Peerage of Ireland, 4 (Dublin, 1789), p. 219.
  19. ^ G. D. Ramsay, The Politics of a Tudor Merchant Adventurer (Manchester, 1979), p. 19.
  20. ^ Richard Smith, Samuel Murphy, Warren Allison, 'The lost German mines at Caldbeck', Transactions of the Cumberland & Westmorland Antiquarian & Archeological Society (2001), pp. 89-104: George Hammersley, Daniel Hechstetter the younger, Memorabilia and letters, 1600-1639 Copper Works and life in Cumbria (Stuttgart, 1988).
  21. ^ W. G. Collingwood, "The Keswick and Coniston Mines in 1600", Transactions of the Cumberland & Westmoreland Antiquarian & Archaeological Society, 28 (1928), pp. 1-32. doi:10.5284/1063321
  22. ^ Bowes & Nedham, "Report on the Mines Royal at Keswick (and Coniston), written in the last quarter of the 17th century", Bodleian MS. Lister 17