Mining Alluvial gold from a
copper,
silver,
gold and
platinum deposit in the area was found in the Thomson River upstream of Coopers Creek resulted in a number of mining claims being made in the area during the Victorian gold rush. However, very little gold was actually discovered in Coopers Creek. It was the discovery of the first copper deposit in Victoria, in 1864, which led to the continued viability of township. Initial
smelting conducted in Coopers Creek was unsuccessful and unprofitable due to lowered copper prices and the large quantity of firewood being consumed in the process. A new source of copper was found in 1878 and led to the significant increase in mining infrastructure, including a new
crushing mill,
kilns and smelting
furnaces, and an increase to 70 men being employed at the mine. By 1880, however, the copper found two years earlier had been exhausted and the mine fell into relative disuse for twenty to thirty years. The last gold mined from
Happy-Go-Lucky was sold to the copper smelting works at Coopers Creek before its closure in 1915. The Walhalla mine closed around the same time. Operations at Coopers Creek ceased in 1915 following the pattern of mine closures in the area. Lime quarrying continued in Coopers Creek until 1952 when the last quarry closed. Woodcutting had also been a major industry in the Coopers Creek area, mainly to support the mining operations by providing firewood and construction materials. This tree felling had a significant impact on the area, however, as, by the 1930s, there was such a shortage of trees that they needed to be felled in adjacent valleys. The 1939
Black Friday bushfires further devastated the Coopers Creek area and forced a large part of the population to move into larger towns and cities to seek employment. ==Township==