In the 1960s the Messina Transvaal Development Company (MTD) developed what was at that time called the Mangula Copper Mines Ltd (MCM). They registered the company, MTD (Mangula) Ltd, on the
stock exchange. Soon after independence, MTD sold their assets to ZMDC, a
parastatal. The mineworkers lived in compounds, while the mostly white bosses lived in suburbs, and had their own sports club. In the 1960s and 1970s, the town was known for its
football team, the Copper Stars, including players like the Chieza brothers. There were games at the stadium every alternate Sunday, which were enthusiastically attended. Mhangura Copper Mines Ltd, a subsidiary of Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation, operated one of the biggest
copper mines in the country here. All mining was closed in the late 1990s, due to falling prices on the world copper market. The workforce was reduced to 800 when the mine closed, and its local economy, which had centred on extracting and milling copper, collapsed. Local banks and shops closed down. By 2014 the town's water, power, and sanitation infrastructure were failing. In 2022, a private investor was looking for backers to restart exploration at Mhangura, and the
Zimbabwean Government engaged Scout Aerial Africa to undertake an
Aeromagnetic survey, and produce a drilling programme, with maps showing potential areas to target for mining, within the
Shackleton claims and Mhangura extension. ==Demographics==