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Mines - Premier Mines
The property of
Silbak Premier Mines aggregates 86 Crown-granted claims and includes an area
of about 5.3 square miles on the west slope of
Bear River Ridge immediately north of the Alaska-British
Columbia border.
It is presently reached from Stewart by the Granduc
road, a distance of 14 miles. The property represents the consolidation of the
former
Premier, B.C. Silver, Sebakwe, and Premier Border claim groups and is currently controlled by the
Selukwe Mining Company of London.
The Cascade Falls No. 4 (Lot
3590) and Cascade Falls No. 8 (Lot 3591)claims, now known to cover the principal orebodies, were part of an eight-claim
group discovered and staked by William Dillworth and the Bunting brothers in June,
1910.
They probably were attracted by an oxidized capping which still forms a
bare ridge
west of the main glory-hole. Claims Cascade Nos. 4 and 8 along with an
adjoining group were taken over by 0. B. Bush, who organized the Salmon-Bear River
Mining Co. in 1910/1911 to develop them.
During the next two seasons, short tunnels
(Nos. 1 and 2) and surface cuts were put in on low-grade showings, but nothing
was done on adjacent quartz-pyrite-native silver mineralization.
In 1914, surface
work directed by W. J. Rolfe traced the silver showing 800 feet downhill to
the
west and discovered good grades in gold and silver along this length. Possibly as
a
result of the 1914 war, work was discontinued until H. R. Plate, representing a
New
York syndicate, commenced work on the Nos. 1, 2, and 4 tunnels.
In 1918, R.
K. Neill, of Spokane, bonded the property from Pat Daly and commenced work
on
the No. 1 tunnel, where Plate had stopped in apparently barren quartz. Within a
few
rounds Neill exposed ore which showed native and ruby silver, and high-grade
ore
was then shipped to Tacoma.
In the fall of 1919 the American
Smelting and Refining Company acquired a 52-per-cent interest in the property from Neill and his associates, R.
W. Wood, A. B.
Trites, and W. R. Wilson, of Fernie, for one million dollars cash.
Crude ore shipped
during 1919 and 1920 from Premier averaged 4.24 ounces gold and 141 ounces
silver per ton, and milling began in 1921 at 200 tons per day. This was increased in 1926 to 400 tons and an average 430 tons per day was
actually handled.
B.C. Silver Mines Ltd., which
held two claim groups adjoining the Premier, was incorporated in 1919, began exploration in 1922 'and after considerable
exploration, in 1925 intersected ore 1,500 feet east of the Premier ore zone in the 3
level area.
Sebakwe and District Mines Ltd., which gained control of the adjacent
Bush property
in 1926, started a tunnel from the east fork of Cascade Creek (now
Cooper Creek)
and intersected the mineralized zone at about 1,050 feet.
Independent operation
of the various mining companies and syndicates continued on the zone until
1936, when the Premier Gold Mining Co. Ltd., B.C. Silver Mines Ltd., and Sebakwe and District Mines Ltd. were consolidated to form Silbak Premier
Mines Limited. The latter two groups were controlled by Selukwe Mining Company
of London, which, upon merger, received a substantial interest in Silbak
Premier Mines.
After many years of continuous
profitable operation, low base-metal prices forced
Silbak Premier to close in 1953. Development work was resumed in 1955 under the direction of Henry L. Hill and Associates and in 1956 the property
was rehabilitated, but fire destroyed the mill and surface buildings at the No. 4 level
portal after only a few months' operation. At this time, underground work was
concentrated
on the 790, 940, and 1060 levels.
Low metal prices in 1957 again forced
closure of the property except for geologicalstudies.
In 1959, Silbak Premier granted
a one-year lease on the upper levels of the mine
to Blermah Mines Ltd. The lessees mined the upper part of a small
high-grade ore
lens found on the south side of the abandoned glory-hole. This oreshoot was
discovered
after waste rock had sloughed from the pit wall and exposed silver-gold mineralization.
At the termination of the one-year lease, Silbak Premier commenced mining the lower part of the high-grade sulphide lens during parts of 1960, 1961, and
1962. Production from this one lens amounted to roughly 2,736 tons of ore containing
18,595 ounces
of gold, 394,933 ounces of silver, 16,258 pounds of copper, 215,999 pounds of
lead, and 322,118 pounds of zinc.
Stimulated by this plum of bonanza
ore, the company reviewed the potential of the property, but work at the
mine
was severely hampered when in November, 1961, the Salmon River section of
the
Stewart-Premier road was washed out by overflow of water from Summit Lake.
The
washed-out section of the road, entirely within Alaska, was largely rebuilt by
Silbak
Premier.
In 1963 work was initiated on a
loading-trestle and ore-bin at the open pit and on
the excavation of a mill-site at No. 6 level portal. A new camp was also
erected at
No. 6 level.
Loading facilities at the open pit were completed and a new 75-ton mill and cyanide plant constructed and put into operation in 1964 to handle broken
ore from the open pit.
In 1965, Bralorne Pioneer Mines
Limited undertook a management agreement with
Silbak Premier for the operation of the mine.
During construction,
mineralization was exposed along the new Granduc road north
of the No. 6 portal, consisting of massive, crudely banded pyrite and
sphalerite with interstitial galena and scattered microscopic tetrahedrite.
The
mineralization, which was not completely outlined, appears to consist of a 10- to
12-foot-wide, north-trending, steeply plunging lens confined to schistose volcanic
breccia which lies as a small pendant within intrusive hornblende potash feldspar
porphyry.
Bralorne Pioneer Mines Limited
continued management of the property until November, 1967, and
since then the property has been idle. In December, 1969, a
new five-year option was signed with The Granby Mining Company Limited.
Production
Record
During the period from 1918 to
1953 when continuous operations ceased, Premier Gold Mining Co. Ltd., B.C. Silver Mines Ltd., and the successor
company, Silbak Premier Mines Limited, as well as the Premier Border group
purchased in 1958, produced about 4,700,000 tons of ore from the deposit with gross
earnings about $30,000,000. Of this, approximately $22,000,000 was paid out in
dividends.
Since 1953, the Silbak Premier
Mines Limited glory-hole has produced another 26,000 tons of good ore.
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