Showing 1 - 20 of 21 , query time: 0.01s
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Standing above the cavern in the Gilman mine where the ball and rod mills are housed. The mills are on an incline for gravity feed down to the loading docks. At the center right of the photo, steel rods are stacked for use in the rod mill.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
At 16 level, the ore train would dump rock into the large pit (Grizzly) at the bottom of which was located a jaw crusher. The crusher would send the ore into the ball mill and rod mill where the ore was pulverized to a fine powder. Inside the ball mill, there would be ore and steel balls, approximately 10 in. in diameter. As the mill rotated, the ore was crushed by the balls. Eventually, the balls would wear down and Bob Riggle remembers his dad...
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Machinery seen through railings.
Cover Image
4) Belden
Format:
Image
New Jersey Zinc Co. mill and mining facility in Belden (Eagle River Canyon), August 1998. Both the mine and the railroad were out of operation by then. The surface tram is visible going up the incline of the cliff at right midground.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Looking across the railroad tracks at Belden, the tram house is white, midground; the surface tram cable is running up the cliff on the right. Cribbing visible at center.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
The dryer building for zinc is at the far right. The zinc slurry would be heated and dried, leaving a very fine zinc powder. The powder was shipped in sealed box cars as it was so fine it would blow away in an open car. The rail line for shipping runs through the Eagle River Canyon (Belden area) so the final products for shipping were finished at this level.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
At right is the ball mill. At left is the rod mill. The mills are on an incline for gravity feed down to the loading docks. At the center right of the photo, steel rods are stacked for use in the rod mill.
Cover Image
8) Belden
Format:
Image
Railroad tracks running through Belden in the Eagle River Canyon. The New Jersey Zinc Co. used the railroad to ship ore from the Gilman mines located above Belden. "After the trains quit running, Buster and I walked the railroad tracks." -- Angela Beck Oct. 11, 2010; photo taken August 1998.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Men jockeying the new dryer from the flatbed rail car to the dryer building.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Bill May adjusting the controls on the compressor at Belden; Harold Steinmeyer supervising.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Quinton Sagrillo performing maintenance on the new zinc dryer. Sagrillo was a dryer operator for New Jersey Zinc. Sagrillo served in World War I and then lived in Telluride and Denver. He and his wife Rose then managed the State Agricultural Farm Experiment Station at Avon for four years. He accepted employment with New Jersey Zinc, working there for 20 years before retiring in 1959.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Quinton Sagrillo or Frank Jones or Mike Chockie lubricating part of the zinc dryer at Belden.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Entrance point of the zinc concentrate into the dryer.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Harold Steinmeyer and Bill May in the compressor room at Belden. Compressor equipment in the background is Ingersoll-Rand. During the spring and summer months, power for the compressors was provided by using Pelton Wheels (turbines) situated in nearby Fall Creek to generate electricity.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
New dryer being put in place at Belden. Drying fins are seen in the inside of the dryer.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Moving the zinc dryer from a railroad car into the dryer building at Belden. A wall section approximately 60 feet long has been removed in the dryer building to move this equipment into the facility.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Moving a dryer section into place by blocking and chaining. Small sections pf pipe were also used to move the dryer.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Section of the zinc dryer being fitted into place at Belden. Chains and blocks are used to move the equipment into the building.
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Team installing a new dryer at the New Jersey Zinc Co. facilities at Belden. From Left: Don Ginther, Lynn Walker, [unknown], Homer Sultzer, Buck Hickman, Forrest Witthauer. [Courtesy of Theodore Beck]
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Harold Steinmeyer (left) and Bill May in the compressor room at Belden. Prior to the electrical power plant at Gilman, much of the electricity for the mine (compressors) was supplied by the use of Pelton wheels (turbines) powered by the water from Fall Creek at Belden.