The Mines and the Miners

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    The mines seen as temples

    The Galinheiro mine had over thirty tunnels each 15 to 20 metres wide and over 50

    metres deep. Those looking at this enterprise were marveled at the imponence and the

    terror it inspired as well as the entrepreneur genius of those who made it come true. Those

    giant catacombs communicated among them through doors excavated in the walls raising

    from the depth of the abyss and going up vertically like the columns in a temple.

    Fear and dread in the mines

    In the mines you could breathe the smell of death. Many workers paid with their life for such

    dangerous risky work. Although the pits were dug after geological studies and under the supervision

    of experienced engineers, many families were victims of fatality. Many parents would repeat to their

    children with pain and sorrow: Your grandfather died behind that slab or Your elder brother was

    crushed to death deep down that pit.

    Untold storiesIt was in Casa dos motores (house of the motors) that the slate was

    cut. The company guards used to say that evil spirits were around. They

    would tell that during the night a ghost would come and kick the kettle

    making coffee on the stove. It would be thrown into the air, but it suddenly

    returned to its position on the stove as if nothing had happened.

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    Accidents in the mines

    Fortunately some great accidents in the slate mines and quarries did not cause any victims.

    Such was the case of arrasamento in Galinheiro. That was on a Christmas Eve in 1890. So nobody

    was injured or killed. It is said that the slate extraction in Galinheiro mine met soft ground. The

    pressure of the land over the mines led to the collapse of several pits.

    Later it became a lake for the delight of many of the residents in Valongo, particularly young

    people, who would enjoy their free time at the place.

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    By the 60s in Campo several mines collapsed in a single day. The miners from two different

    companies went down the pits in the morning and when excavating the walls (pillars) that separated

    the mines, the miners met face to face. There was a great demand for slate at the time. The miners

    had left the mine for lunch, when they heard a terrible noise: several mines had collapsed.

    However in Companhia Nova (as people would call it) in Carvoeira (one of the partners was

    English, the owners son of Milharia) once the miners were hammering the rock they broke the pillar

    separating it from another slate mine full of water. The result was a sudden flood. Most miners died.

    Some managed to survive swimming until they could grab the ladder to the top of the mine.

    The miners dance

    The song depicts the miners life. It was made and rehearsed by a miner in 1888. He lived and

    experienced the feelings that inspire this song.

    Joaquim Chiquita, a miner in the mines Of Vale dAcha, was injured in the collapse of a tunnel

    deep down the mine. His health was ruined and he eventually died.

    The characters dressed as miners start their performance by dancing. Then they pretend to

    be working digging the ground with their working tools, wedges, drills, picks and hammers, while they

    sing the following verses.

    Desgraado do mineiro

    Que anda debaixo do cho

    Acontece uma desgraa,

    L morre sem confisso

    Ai!

    Desce mina o desgraado.

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    A fica a trabalhar

    Andando na escurido

    Sem luz, nem dia, nem ar!

    Ai!

    O trabalho todo custa,

    Mas o nosso muito mais;

    Quantos vo pois e no voltam,

    No tornam a ver seus pais!

    Ai!

    Nossa vida negra e dura, entre perigos o viver,

    Em vida na sepultura

    Com o suor a escorrer!

    Ai!..

    The cantina

    The English company cared for its workers. It had a cantina, where workers could get much

    different kind of products. Goods were scarce. The canteen would supply goods and the workers

    would have them discounted in their wage. That was a kind of credit. Some old ex-miners say that all

    goods were cheaper. For example rice would be one tosto cheaper per Kg. The canteen was first

    built in Ch and later in Valongo.

    The English company also had a football field they had built in Cardosos, the first one in

    Valongo and a music band.

    The miners living and working conditions

    Life was hard. Living conditions were poor. The commodities and amenities of modern life did

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    not exist at the time.

    There was no healthcare or welfare system (only after 1947). If you were ill (and most were

    victims of tuberculosis or silicosis because of the dust in the mines and in the processing of slate; at 50

    most workers were unable to work) you would starve.

    And it is said that

    It said that the English company created a subsidy: if a worker fell ill, he would receive the

    equivalent to 3 days work of his wage. Then there was a time when out of about 1000 workers over

    200 were ill. Thus, on the day for the payment of the subsidy, it was always on Saturdays, the

    company communicated that the subsidy had been abolished. On the following Monday only six

    workers, suffering from tuberculosis, didnt get back to work. And the boss exclaimed: They werent

    ill after all! What a miserable people they are! (Source: ex-miner son)

    And then the war broke

    out

    In 1930 in the Great

    Depression period, the Valongo Slate

    and Marble Quarries sold all itsliabilities and assets to Empresa das

    Lousas de Valongo. The new

    company had both Portuguese and

    English shareholders.

    In the late 30s (1939) when World

    War II broke the company went

    through a serious economic crisis. Before the war there were around 1600 workers. In September 39

    only 300 kept their jobs. Europe was destroyed and the governments adopted protective politics as

    far as their own industries were concerned. Only after the 50s with the reconstruction of Europe, did

    the economy flourish again. Slate as a decorative stone began to be used in the building industry.

    Slate mining and processing became a highly mechanized industry.

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    The mines at present

    Nowadays the work at Milharia is almost completely mechanized.

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    Theres a semiautomatic assembly line for the tiles production, a machine designed to

    calibrate thickness and a department for billiard slate.

    Today in the area of Galinheiro Mines theres a department store and there are plans to build more

    houses.

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    The extraction of slate at Milharia is open cast and the main markets for its products are

    Germany, the UK, Spain, the USA, Japan and Australia.

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    These mountainous heaps of waste in Milharia quarries represent over a hundred years slate mining.

    Its a live museum!

    Just like this building the The Vallongo Slate & Marble Quarries Company had built in the 19th

    century.

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    This is typical British industrial architecture.

    The same building inside

    A perfect example of the various

    applications of slate in the

    decoration of houses.