Lead Mine, Cregg, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Mining
In the townland of Cregg in County Galway, the landscape carries the marks of lead extraction, an industry that shaped pockets of rural Ireland far more than the bare countryside now suggests.
Lead mining was rarely a grand enterprise in the west of Ireland; it tended to operate in small, often short-lived bursts tied to fluctuating metal prices, the ambitions of local landowners, or the interests of outside speculators. The physical evidence left behind, collapsed adits, spoil heaps, the occasional rusted fitting, can be easy to walk past without recognising what it represents.
Lead ore, primarily galena, was worked at various points across Connacht from at least the seventeenth century onwards, with activity intensifying during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when demand from industries such as shot-making, paint manufacture, and plumbing kept prices viable. Many such workings in County Galway were modest operations, dependent on local labour and often abandoned once the accessible ore was exhausted or the economics shifted. The site at Cregg fits into this broader pattern of small-scale extractive industry, the kind that rarely made it into newspapers but quietly employed men from surrounding townlands for seasons at a time.