, by
J C Burrows in 1893.
Timeline • 1829 – John Taylor publishes his Prospectus for a School of Mines in Cornwall. • 1838 – Sir
Charles Lemon, offers to establish a school for miners. • 1839 – Classes for miners start in
Truro. • 1858 –
The Miners Association formed. • 1858 – The Miners Association begin classes in different mining areas of
Cornwall such as
Camborne,
Pool,
St Just and
St Agnes. • 1863 – Some 200 students attend classes in eleven mining education centres in Cornwall. • 1876 – Gustavus Lambert Basset, the great mine entrepreneur, makes a bequest to build a laboratory in
Camborne, The Basset building, for the use of the pupils of The Miners Association. • 1882 – The adjacent Camborne Science and Art School building opened. • 1887 – J.J. Beringer delivers a lecture to The Miners Association, now called The Mining Institute, in which he outlines new proposals for the establishment of a Mining School. • 1888 – The Camborne School of Mining is created. • 1897 –
King Edward Mine is leased from the Pendarves family to complement the facilities available to students for practical exercises. • 1902 – The first
Bottle Match is played between CSM and
Royal School of Mines (RSM). • 1910 – The
Redruth and
Penzance Schools of Mines are amalgamated with Camborne to form the Camborne
School of Metalliferous Mining. • 1913 – The Cornish Institute of Engineers is founded by J.J. Beringer. • 1924 –
King Edward Mine is abandoned due to flooding and Great Condurrow Mine is leased. • 1935 – The building adjacent to the Basset Memorial Building is purchased, refurbished and equipped, and named the Josiah Thomas Memorial Building. • 1936 – The Associateship of the Camborne School of Mines (ACSM) is introduced. • 1955 – The
University of Exeter is established by
royal charter. • 1969 – Attempts to merge CSM with
Plymouth Polytechnic are aborted. • 1974 – The ACSM is accredited by the
Council for National Academic Awards. • 1975 – CSM moves to the
Trevenson Campus at
Pool,
Redruth. Associated with a massive re-equipment grant. • 1979 – Original CSM Building demolished to make way for a Tesco Supermarket. • 1993 – Merger with University of Exeter. • 1998 –
South Crofty Mine closes with loss of hundreds of jobs in Camborne. • 2004 – CSM moves to the
Tremough Campus in
Penryn, in a new building suitable for 21st century, and with a massive re-equipment grant. • 2020 – The Mining Engineering degree program intake is 'paused' for the first time since it has been offered in its BEng format. CSM was the last institution to offer this in the UK. • 2023 – Mining Engineering degree program returns, with 4 year in-service BEng and Mine Management Degree Apprenticeships
Principals/Directors • J. J. Beringer: 1888–1910 • W. Ficher Wilkinson: 1910–1912 • J. J. Beringer: 1912–1915 • A. Richardson: 1918- ~1922 • R. A. Thomas: ~1922-1933 • S. Ball: 1933–1941 • A/Principal G. A. Whitworth: 1941–1946 • G. A. Whitworth, OBE, ACSM, MIMM: 1946–1960 • R.A. Gorges: 1960–1969 • P. Hackett, BSc, PhD, CEng, FIMM: 1970–1994, OBE: 1970-1994 • K. Atkinson, BSc, PhD, C.Eng, C.Geol, FIMMM, FCSM: 1994–2002 • R. J. Pine, BEng, MSc, PhD, MICE, FIMM, CEng, FREng: 2002–2008 • F. Wall, BSc, PhD, FMinSoc, FGS: 2008–2014 • H. Glass, MSc, PhD: 2014-2015 (Acting) • K. Jeffrey, BSc, MSc: 2015–2021 • S. Hesselbo, BSc, PhD: 2021–2022 • P.J.Foster, BEng, PhD: 2022 –
Notable alumni •
James Howard Williams, known as Elephant Bill •
Percy Sherwell,
Transvaal,
MCC and South African Cricketer, and captain of the
South African Cricket Team •
Eric Roberts, MI5 agent during WWII •
Sam E. Jonah, former CEO of
Ashanti Goldfields Corporation and Chancellor of the
University of Cape Coast •
Albert Ernest Thomas, member of the
Legislative Assembly of Western Australia from 1901 to 1905, and mine manager of mines in
Coolgardie and
Norseman •
Arthur Wilson,
Cornwall and
England rugby union player and member of the British team at the
1908 Summer Olympic Games •
Rex Tremlett, gold prospector, author, and broadcaster •
Geoffrey Healey, automotive engineer, famous for the Austin-Healey marque of motorcars •
Sophie Parkin, writer, artist, poet, and proprietor of an arts club == See also ==