Free Miners of the Forest of Dean (General)
Does anyone know if the Freeminers had to register their names before operating a mine and are any of these registers still in existence. If so, where can they be accessed?
Dean Forest Mines Act 1838 - 1904
by slowhands , proud of his ancient Dean Forest roots, Tuesday, August 02, 2005, 10:54 (7089 days ago) @ Dennis
You had to be a Miner first, then once you were old enough , born /living in the right area you could apply to the Gaveller ( Gale Giver) to be a Free Miner. Then you could claim a Gale - essentially mining rights - and once granted you could extract !
I expect the records would have been at the Gavellers Office, Bank House, Bank St, Coleford but I suspect they were all moved, probably to the Glos Records Office.
To be registered, a man must be born and living within the Hundred of St Briavels, be over the age of 21 years and to have worked for a year and a day in a mine within the Hundred. (A Hundred was a subdivision of a County which had its own court and it has been suggested to be an area where the medieval king could demand the services of a hundred fighting men, in the case of the St Briavels Hundred the king would frequently demand the services of skilled miners. Today the Hundred of St. Briavels is an area slightly larger than, but encompassing, all of the statutory Forest of Dean.
Once registered as a Free Miner by the Deputy Gaveller, a Free Miner may claim up to three gales from the Crown (if they are not already being worked) and may make applications for any gales he thinks may become vacant. Once granted to him, he becomes the mineral owner in fee simple and has the right to work the specified minerals within the area defined by the gale. A galee may mortgage, sell or dispose of the gale as he wishes. A Royalty is paid to the Crown for each ton of mineral raised, or a 'dead rent' is paid if the gale is idle. The 'dead rent' or composition, is equivalent to an agreed minimum tonnage output. If no dead rent is paid the gale, can be reclaimed by the Crown, to be applied for and re-granted to other Free Miners.
Dean Forest Mines Act 1838 - 1904
by shepway , Tuesday, August 02, 2005, 11:32 (7089 days ago) @ slowhands
I can confirm that the records are now at Gloucester Record Office. You can find details of what they hold by searching the catalogue on line at:
http://archives.gloucestershire.gov.uk/DServe/DServe.exe?dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Inde...
Cheers
Mike
Entry D5947 looks promising
by slowhands , proud of his ancient Dean Forest roots, Tuesday, August 02, 2005, 11:56 (7089 days ago) @ shepway
Gloucestershire Records Office
Level Collection
DocumentRef D5947
Title Forestry Commission
Date (1668)-2003
Description Free miners' applications 1838-1956; photocopied register of free miners' applications 1838-1996 and free quarrymen 1838-1991; index to freeminers' applications; awards under the Dean Forest Mines Act (1838) 1841; gale books 1811-1838; 1842-1846; registers of applications for gales 1838-1933; original applications for gales 1838-1958; registers of rejected gale applications 1895-c.1934; registers of transfers of ownership of mines 1839-1924; records of stone quarry transfers 1873-1901; indexes to gales c.1908-1958 and list of gale titles (1896)-1996; lease and licence books 1847-1914 (with some plans); accounts 1841-1982; gale rent ledgers 1789-1841; coal and iron mine ledgers and other accounts 1841-1938; half-yearly schedules of coal and iron ore raisings 1860-1964; surface damage award books 1843-1982 (with some plans 1871-1982); St Briavels Castle estate and household accounts 1875-1894; plans of coal and iron workings 1835-c.1958; map of West Dean township 1859; in- and out-letters 1911-1933; reports of Royal Commissioners and Parliamentary Committees 1861-1893, 1927; Highmeadow estate accounts 1871-1942; samples of mine law court records (1668)-1834 [from series of records held at the Public Record Office]; records relating to the administration of the manors of Staunton, English Bicknor and St Briavels 1794-1893; 'Laws and Customs of the Mines in the Forest of Dean' 1900; various reports 19th-20th cents.*Coleford Railway: section drawing 1883; *plan of Westbury Brook abandoned iron mine, Mitcheldean, 2003; *plans of collieries and Commission land in the Forest of Dean, 19th-20th centuries