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Remnant of Star Mine collapsing stirs memories

 

IMG 4363 copyA relic of the mining past of Drumheller, a lone sentinel of creosote and timber reaching high into the sky over Rosedale, reminding us of the past, stood again time. That was until a few of weeks ago when a few keen eyes saw that it had tumbled into a pile of wood.
There are relics of the mining past like those throughout the valley, often unrecognizable as to what they were. What we know is it is at the site of the Star Mine.
While many have identified it as a tipple, Rosedale native Rick Trembecky was able to help the Mail understand what the structure was.
The Mine was opened in 1913 by well-known mining pioneer John Murray, who then sold his interests a year later to Star Coal Mines Limited.
The original Star Mine Tipple was actually on the south side of the river according to The Valley of the Dinosaurs by Ernest Hlady, up until the late 1920’s the coal was hauled across the river by cables to the tipple, (hence the name of the community of Aerial).
In 1929, a spur line was completed by the CPR on the north side of the river. They moved the tipple closer to the seam, thus no longer needing the tramway. It was converted to the swinging bridge.
But what about the tower on the hill?
It was not a tipple, but rather, according to Trembecky, it supported a cable system for dumping slack, the term used for egg-sized coal usually too small for commercial use.
“Those held big pulley wheels, the pulleys were actually railroad car wheels,” he explains. "They had to build that up higher, so they ran a double cable all the way up from the tipple. In between those two hills there, that’s where they used to dump slack."
He said they would run a giant bucket up the cables towards the tower, and when the bucket hit a tripper on the cable it would dump the slack and return back to the tipple.
This would go on all day, as the mine was working, and he remembers this from his childhood.
In fact, there is one memory seared into his mind and was vivid as he recounted it.
He was just in Elementary School in Rosedale playing in the schoolyard near where Inland Plastics is now today.
He explained the cables and pulley would need maintenance and they would send a worker up the hill in the bucket to grease the tripper.
“I actually witnessed this, there were four or five of us kids at Rosedale school,” he said. “This guy gets a ride up there and the guy in the bottom at the tipple says you wave to me when you want me to bring the bucket down,” explains Trembecky.
He says the bucket could only go up or down, and it only changed direction when it hit a tripper on the cable.
He said the worker climbed out of the bucket to do his work about 40 feet over the slack pile to work on the tripper, and he noticed the bolt was loose on the tripper. He grabbed a wrench and began to tighten it.
“He gives it a really good crank with the wrench. So the guy in the tipple was figuring he was ready to come down. The bucket started going.”
The worker was left hanging from the wrench over the slack pile. Trembecky said the man hung on for as long as he could but eventually fell into the hot slack pile.
A search of The Drumheller Mail archives appears to corroborate the story. In the Wednesday, April 25, 1956 edition, it confirms Victor Dropko “was working in a rising rock hoist bucket when he dropped to a small hill and then rolled down the steep slope.”
The May 9 edition reported a verdict of accidental death was returned to Coronor Dr. G.H Whitmore by a coroner’s jury.
His death was also reported in the Saskatoon Star Phoenix.


Drumheller RCMP respond to assault in progress

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On Thursday, October 31 at approximately 4:30 p.m., Drumheller RCMP members responded to an assault in progress call at a rural location in Starland County east of Michichi.
On arrival, RCMP members took an adult female suspect into custody.
It was alleged that the suspect, known to the victim, had forcibly entered a home and assaulted the 68-year-old female resident who received minor injuries.
The female suspect, a 26-year-old resident of Big Valley, was arrested for:
Mischief;
Assault; and
Break and Enter to a Residence.
The female is scheduled to appear in the Alberta Court of Justice in Drumheller on December 20, 2024, to answer to the charges.
The name of the suspect is not being released as a Court Information has not yet been sworn.

High hopes for Dorothy Elevator repairs

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The iconic Dorothy Elevator is still hanging on and there are some hopes that repairs can be made before it deteriorates more.
The Dorothy Elevator is one of the most photographed historic elevators in the province. Built in 1928, the Alberta Pacific Grain Company Elevator was used until 1951 when it was closed. The lone sentinel still stands, but age and weather have taken a toll on it.
A few years ago the roof was torn off in a weather event, and last spring more damage came to the elevator.
Jim Faubion said some work has been done to make it safe.
“When we lost the south end of the elevator, it was really uneven and shaken, so they went up with a zoom boom and put up a bunch of bracing at the top to hold it in place, and they fenced it off to keep people away obviously in case something comes down,” he said.
Special Areas, which owns the artifact did the work.
“Due to a windstorm earlier this year, a portion of the upper section of the Dorothy elevator was damaged, with materials blowing off the structure near the adjacent highway. In response, the Board had a safety assessment done to ensure no risk to the public. Based on this assessment, repairs have been made,” said communications officer Maeghan Chostner in an e-mail.
Faubion hopes it can be preserved.
“It seems like it is pretty sturdy, right now there is no south wall on the top part,” he said. "I am optimistic, I am hoping they can come up with a game plan and button it up and make it stable enough to live another 40 or 50 years,” he said.
“But if you don’t keep up with the upkeep it slowly dwindles away.”
“The Board recognizes how iconic the Dorothy Elevator is to our region and continues to investigate options for the structure. The area around the elevator has been fenced off and no public access is permitted,” stated an email from Chostner.


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