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Abraham Mills (geologist)

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Abraham Mills (Circa 1750 – March 2, 1828) was an English mining company manager and geologist.

Life

Early in life he was near Exeter in Devon. In 1783 he was leasing property at Gerston near West Alvington in the same area; his brother Henry Mills was a timber merchant at Rotherhithe. William Roe, looking to replace his father Charles Roe with a business manager, recruited Mills to the Macclesfield works of Roe & Co., an English copper smelting company.[1]

Roe & Co. lost its Anglesey copper mining lease in 1785, when Lord Uxbridge refused the renewal on the Mona Mine. In search of fresh supplies, it purchased disused Irish copper mines in County Wicklow.[2][3] From 1787 Mills was working the Cronebane copper mines of Wicklow, with Thomas Weaver (the elder). The Associated Irish Mining Company then operated there to 1816.[4] When gold was discovered in the locality in 1795, Mills and Weaver reported to the government; and Mills and John Lloyd wrote scientific papers about it.[5] During the Irish Rebellion of 1798 Mills acted as a militia commander, with the rank of Captain in the Cronebane Infantry.[6][7] In November 1798 the mines were transferred to a partnership of Mills and Thomas Weaver (the younger).[8]

Landscape (1804) in County Wicklow, Ireland, by Frederick Christian Lewis after Thomas Sautelle Roberts, showing Abraham Mills's residence to the left

Mills played a major part in the relocation of Roe and Co.'s smelter from Toxteth on Merseyside to a site on the River Neath in South Wales. He went to the proposed site on the way to Cornwall, and set up transitional arrangements. Land was on a lease from George Rice, 3rd Baron Dynevor (landlord from 1793) to Richard Parsons, who sublet to Mills and Edward Hawkins.[9]

In 1799 Mills gave evidence to a House of Commons inquiry into the copper trade.[10] In 1799, also, the bank Hawkins & Mills closed. It had been the first bank in Macclesfield when it had opened in 1787, set up by Mills and Edward Hawkins. Mills from the start had not been an active partner.[11]

Mills was a Fellow of the Royal Society,[12] and was on the Chemistry and Mineralogy Committee of the Dublin Society.[13] From 1810 he was expressing pessimism about the future of Roe & Co.; and the company was dismantled from about 1817.[14] He had a position in the Ordnance Department at Dublin. He died at Bodlendeb, Caernarvonshire, on 2 March 1828, aged 78.[15] He had one child, Mary Anne, who married Thomas Legh of Macclesfield on August 20, 1792.[16]

Geological works

In 1789 Mills wrote to Richard Kirwan, offering corrections to a paper of Kirwan on English collieries. In it he cited the example of the Blakelow pit, on Macclesfield. Kirwan with good grace had Mills's letter read to the Royal Irish Academy.[17][18] A visit to Islay, where Roe & Co. had a mine that had just closed, led to a paper in the 1790 New Annual Register, Observations on the Whyn Dykes of Ilay.[19] In it Mills proposed the volcanic origin for the quartz-dolerite formations known locally as "whin dykes". John Lloyd challenged him on the point, and he published On the Strata and Volcanic Appearances in the North of Ireland and Western Islands of Scotland (1790);[20] in the geological debate of the time, this paper made Mills a supporter of the igneous theory.[21] James Hutton took account of it, in his Theory of the Earth.[22][23]

Mills also wrote:

  • A mineralogical account of the native gold lately discovered in Ireland (1796)[24]

Death Announcement

Evening Mail 12 March 1828 – Deaths: On Sunday, 2nd instant, at Bodlendeb, near Conway, Caernarvonshire, in the 79th year of his age, deeply & universally lamented by his relatives & friends, Abraham Mills Esq., F.R.S., late one of the officers in His Majesty’s Ordnance department. Dublin.

Abraham Mills was buried on the 8th of March 1828 at Conway, Caernarvonshire, Wales. (Source Welsh Archive Services).

See also

References

  • Timothy Alborn, An Irish El Dorado: Recovering Gold in County Wicklow, Journal of British Studies, Vol. 50, No. 2 (April 2011), pp. 359–380. Published by: The University of Chicago Press on behalf of The North American Conference on British Studies. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/658187. PDF.
  • Dorothy Bentley Smith (2005). A Georgian Gent & Co.: the life and times of Charles Roe. Landmark Publishing. ISBN 1843061759.

Notes

  1. ^ Smith, pp. 444–5.
  2. ^ Jonathan Brown (1993). Entrepreneurship, Networks, and Modern Business. Manchester University Press. p. 176. ISBN 978-0-7190-3685-9. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  3. ^ Henry Hamilton; Henry W. Hamilton (27 January 1967). English Brass And Copper Industries To 1880. Taylor & Francis Group. p. 157. ISBN 978-0-7146-1312-3. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  4. ^ Sir Richard John Griffith (1814). Geology of Ireland. Graisberry and Campbell. p. 19. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  5. ^ Edward Gibbon Wakefield (1812). An Account of Ireland, Statistical and Political: In Two Volumes. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown. p. 130. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  6. ^ Alborn, p. 365.
  7. ^ Army (1820). A list of the officers of the militia and of the yeomanry cavalry [&c.]. p. 365. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  8. ^ Smith, p. 529.
  9. ^ Smith pp. 503–505.
  10. ^ Smith, p. 530.
  11. ^ Smith p. 484, p. 532.
  12. ^ Torrens, H. S. "Martin, William". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18216. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  13. ^ Dublin Society (1803). Transactions of the Dublin Society for the Year... Graisbery & Campbell. pp. 138–9. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  14. ^ Smith, pp. 555–6 and p. 565.
  15. ^ The Gentleman's Magazine. A. Dodd and A. Smith. 1828. p. 285. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  16. ^ John Burke; Bernard Burke (1847). A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland. H. Colburn. p. 710. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  17. ^ Smith, p. 492.
  18. ^ Richard Kirwan, Letter from Richard Kirwan, Esq; F.R.S. and M.R.I.A. to the Right Honourable the Earl of Charlemont, P.R.I.A., The Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy Vol. 3, (1789), pp. 49–54. Published by: Royal Irish Academy. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30078919
  19. ^ Smith, p. 495.
  20. ^ Some Account of the Strata and Volcanic Appearances in the North of Ireland and Western Islands of Scotland. In Two Letters from Abraham Mills, Esq. to John Lloyd, Esq. F. R. S.
  21. ^ Joseph Ellison Portlock (1843). Report on the geology of the county of Londonderry, and of parts of Tyrone and Fermanagh: Examined and described under the authority of the master general and board of ordnance. (with 1 Map. Pl. 1 – 38. and Pl. A – J.). Andr. Milliken. pp. 45–6. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  22. ^ Dennis R. Dean (1992). James Hutton and the History of Geology. Cornell University Press. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-8014-2666-7. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  23. ^ James Hutton (1997). Theory of the Earth: With Proofs and Illustrations, in Four Parts. Geological Society. p. 255 note. ISBN 978-1-897799-78-9. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  24. ^ A Mineralogical Account of the Native Gold Lately Discovered in Ireland. In a Letter from Abraham Mills, Esq. to Sir Joseph Banks, Bart. K. B. P. R. S. (January 1, 1796).