place

Britannia Mine Museum

Copper mines in British ColumbiaMining museums in CanadaMuseums in British ColumbiaNational Historic Sites in British ColumbiaUse Canadian English from January 2023
Britannia Mine Museum 2013
Britannia Mine Museum 2013

The Britannia Mine Museum, formerly British Columbia Museum of Mining, is a non-profit organization in Britannia Beach, 55 km kilometres north of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, on the Sea-to-Sky Highway on Howe Sound. It is governed by the Britannia Beach Historical Society. The museum preserves and presents to the public information and artifacts related to British Columbia's mining industry.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Britannia Mine Museum (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Britannia Mine Museum
Sea-to-Sky Highway, Area D (Elaho/Garibaldi)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Phone number Website External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Britannia Mine MuseumContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 49.6233 ° E -123.2044 °
placeShow on map

Address

The Britannia Mine Museum

Sea-to-Sky Highway
V0N 1J0 Area D (Elaho/Garibaldi)
British Columbia, Canada
mapOpen on Google Maps

Phone number

call+16048962233

Website
britanniaminemuseum.ca

linkVisit website

linkWikiData (Q14874570)
linkOpenStreetMap (641097922)

Britannia Mine Museum 2013
Britannia Mine Museum 2013
Share experience

Nearby Places

Britannia Mines Concentrator
Britannia Mines Concentrator

The Britannia Mines Concentrator is a National Historic Site of Canada. The large, inclined gravity mill was built on the northwest side of Mount Sheer to assist the transfer of copper ore through the chemical and mechanical processes of the plant. It is a landmark in Britannia Beach, British Columbia some forty-five kilometers north of Vancouver. The nearby volcanic peak of Mount Garibaldi indicates the presence of magmatic inclusions and volcanic cores, in which copper is usually found. As such, the town and mill sit on the western shore of the Britannia Range and defined by the large fjord of Howe Sound. The mining claims were discovered in the 1880s and the Britannia Beach Mining and Smelting Company established in the Edwardian years. Copper was first mined in the area in 1903 and the distance from smelters necessitated the construction of an ore concentrator, a system to deliver ore, and a system to ship the ore concentrate. A primitive concentrator, No. 1, was built in 1904, which was upgraded with two more units, collective known as No.2, built in 1914 and 1915. A fire in 1921 destroyed these, and a concrete and steel structure to house a new concentrator was completed (immediately to the right of the 1914 plant) in early 1923. In the late 1920s, Britannia Mines was the most productive copper mine in the British Empire, and it also produced silver and gold. Now owned by the Britannia Beach Historical Society, it is part of the Britannia Mine Museum.