Tuesday, 2 August 2016

Ironbark


Dubbo Dispatch, Saturday September 17th, 1904



Mr. E. Ewers, who some few months ago
erected a saw mill plant near Goonoo siding,
was busily engaged when our representative
called in getting out an order of 20,000 feet of
pine timber for Orange. During the past eleven
weeks Mr. Ewers had forwarded 50,000 feet of
ironbark to Cobar and Mount Boppy. This
gentleman also has an order from the Govern-
ment for 24,000 feet of ironbark timber to be
forwarded to Bourke for general repairs there.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/228584722



Monday, 1 August 2016

Party of gold prospectors...

Dubbo Dispatach, Ssaturday October 31st, 1903



Mr. J. B. Brown, of Brisbane street, and
party of gold prospectors, leave for the vicinity
of Mount Boppy, Cobar, on Monday, where
they intend putting in a couple of months pros-

Wednesday, 27 July 2016

Cyanide Worker Wanted

The Sydney Morning Herald, Friday, 18th May, 1900.



THE MOUNT BOPPY GOLD-MINING COMPANY,
Limited.
CYANIDE. - Applications are invited for the Position of
Assayer and Cyanide Works Manager. Applicants must
have a thorough knowledge of the cyanide process, and
especially the treatment of slimes by filter presses, &c.
Apply with copies of testimonials to
S. W. VALE,
Superintendent.

Boppy Mount, May 15, 1900.

Mount Boppy Becoming a Small Town

Western Champion, Friday, 18th may, 1900.



There are about 200 people on the
Mount Boppy goldfield, and business
sites are being rapidly pegged out.
Mr C Morris is building an hotel, and
two butchers, Messrs Finn and Frost,
and two bakers, Messrs Love and
Corbett, are in active operation.
There are a number of small stores,
and all the boarding houses are full.
Money has been voted for a post office,
a school, a daily mail, and a Govern-

ment tank.

Mrs Ross moves to Cobar - to her self-designed Great Railway Hotel.

The Cobar Herald, Saturday, 14th April, 1900.



The Great Railway
Hotel.
On Monday last Mrs Susan Ross obtained
the license for her new hotel, and it was
officially opened on Tuesday evening, when
the landlady generously served free drinks
for about a hour. The Cobar Brass Band
was engaged for the occasion, and it dis-
coursed splendid music outside the hotel.
Sandwiches were provided, and the land-
lady's health was drunk over and over again
in flowing bumpers. A HERALD representative
was shown over the premises during the
week. The building has a splendid frontage
to Lewis and Mollineaux streets, near the
Railway Goods Sheds, and is about four
minutes' walk from the railway. To Lewis
street it has a frontage of 140ft, while it
extends along Mollineaux street for fully
100ft— truly a great frontage. The bar on
the corner is large and spacious, being 25
feet square, and is well stocked with first
class spirits and beers. Immediately under
the bar is the cellar 12ft x 12ft, and 12ft
deep. In summer the advantage of such a
cellar will be better realised. Around the
bar are four parlors, well furnished and
varnished, with good linoleum on the floor.
Taking up the Mollineaux street wing we
find a long corridor 6ft wide and 12 1/2 ft high.
On the street side first comes a spacious
dining room, 28ft X 18ft. fitted up with
several tables. Next to this is a nice parlor
16ft x 18ft, opening off which is a travellers'
bedroom 12ft square. To the end there are
three rooms, one of which the landlady
hopes some day to convert into a private bar.
On the opposite side are 5 first class bedrooms,
each 12ft x 12ft, all 12ft 6in high, well
lighted and ventilated. The Lewis street
wing is devoted to a large dining hall 28ft x
14ft, and 14 bedrooms, each 12ft square. The
bedrooms are divided by a 6ft hall running
to extreme end. In each room there are
two beds, which allows of very much room to
each boarder. The whole hotel has about 32
rooms in all, the ceiling in each being 12 1/2 ft
high, with double walls. The building is of
Colonial pine, nicely varnished, and ceiled
with finely corrugated iron. The kitchen
is also fitted with all requirements, including
large range, brick oven, etc. The hotel will
be surrounded be a long verandah, the
framework of which is already up. The yard
is large and roomy, containing a 50ft long
stable in addition to buggy sheds, etc. The
whole was planned by Mrs Ross herself
in her spare hours at Mount Boppy
and the arrangements of the house do her
great credit indeed. Permanent boarders
should find every convenience in the Great

Railway, especially cool rooms.

AAEC/MBGMC - Still need a tank

The Sydney Morning Herald, Monday, 26th March, 1900.



THE MOUNT BOPPY GOLD-MINING COMPANY.
Limited.
TENDERS
will be received up to the 7th APRIL for the Excavation
of a Tank for Water Conservation. Approximate area,
80,000 cubic yards.
Full particulars may be obtained and specifications in-
spected at the office of the Company, on the mine.
S. W. VALE,
Superintendent.

Boppy Mount, March 23,1900.

AAEC/MBGMC

The Cobar Herald, Saturday, 24th march, 1900.



MOUNT BOPPY GOLD-MINING
COMPANY.
This is a company with a capital
of £110,000, a modest one as gold
mines go nowadays. It, however,
deserves attention, for we, ('Mining
Journal of London') notice that
Messrs J. Taylor and Sons, the well-
known consulting engineers, appear
to be interested in its success. Few
people, perhaps, have better opper-
tunities of picking up something that
is good in gold-mining, and the pros-
pectus affords evidence that this firm
is bona fide interested in the ulti-
mate prosperity of the concern, for
not only do they appear as the con-
sulting engineers and managers, but
among the directors we find Mr Frank
Taylor, and after a careful perusal of
the particulars of the proposition we
fail to find anything which does not
appear to offer other than reasonable
and fair terms to the possible sub-
scribers for shares. Everything,
indeed, appears to be as it should be,
open and above board. We note an
absence of the now usual waiver
clause, which itself points to the fact
that the promoters have neither any-
thing to conceal nor any desire to
keep anything back. The vendors
and promoters are the Anglo Aus-
tralian Exploration, Limited, who
some two years since acquired the
gold mining leases, aggregating some
105 acres, in the Cobar district of New
South Wales, near the Boppy Moun-
tain station, on the railway which runs
westward from Sydney to Cobar.
This property together with certain
plant and machinery which is being
acquired from the Gallymont Gold-
fields, Limited, will be purchased by
the company for £70,000, in fully
paid shares, 40,000 of which is re-
ceived by the Gallymont Company,
and the remaining 80,000 is the price
taken by the vendors for the mining
leases and other property. Of the
balance of the capital of the company
30,000 shares of £1 each are offered
for subscription to provide working
capital. Of this amount, 20,500 have
been applied for by the vendors, the
directors and their friends, and the
allotments are to be made pro rata to
all applicants. These applications
are not made by way of the usual
underwriting, for it is stated that they
are made without any payment what-
ever by way of commission or other-
wise. Since the vendors have been
in possession development work ap-
pears to have been actively prose-
cuted. Shafts have been sunk, and
several crosscuts made, with the re-
sult that, as appears from the report
of Mr William Frecheville, A.R.S.M.,
the ore shows an average value of
17dwt of gold per ton. In all, some
35,475 tons of ore are said to be in
sight, averaging, according to Mr
Frecheville, 14dwt of gold per ton.
There is one difficulty, that of water.
This, however, is to be met by the ex-
cavation of large storage tanks, and
this will be one of the first things to
which the working capital will be
applied. Good sites for the purpose
are said to exist upon the property.
Considering the Promising nature of
this district of New South Wales,
there ought to be a good future before
this company. Mr Frecheville says
'the showing in the mine, consider-
ing the amount of work done, is a
very fine one, and if the reef main-
tains its thickness and gold value in
depth, it should prove very profitable.
In view of the amount and value of
the ore exposed there should be no
hesitation in providing the necessary
working capital — say, about £25,000,
on fair terms.' We are glad to be
able to agree with Mr Frecheville.
Mr Vale, the new manager for the Mount
Boppy mine will take up his residence in

Cobar.