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Eldon Leslie Brown
Important advances in metallurgy, far-north town building and
innovative exploration techniques are also indelibly on the record
of Brown achievements.
Eldon Brown was born in Toronto in 1900 and earned a degree in
mining engineering from the University of Toronto in 1922. The
following year, he joined the Victoria Syndicate, an exploration
subsidiary of the Mond Nickel Company. Assigned to Manitoba in
1926, he was instrumental in acquiring for the syndicate an option
on the Sherritt copper-zinc prospect. When Sherritt Gordon Mines
Limited was formed in July 1927, Eldon Brown became the first
employee and general superintendent.
Here, 100 miles from the nearest railway, he received his first
experience in frontier mining development. He directed this development
from 1927 to 1931. A 1,500 tpd production plant was built, notable
for its low operating costs, and a community of 1,500 people established.
In 1929, the depression struck, metal prices fell and in June 1932
the operation was closed.
There was glitter in gold at this period and Eldon Brown quickly
became involved in equipping to production God's Lake Gold Mines
Limited. Prospecting, initiated by Brown, discovered gold at Sachigo
River, 125 miles east of God's Lake in 1935, and under his direction
this small, short-lived mine became the highest grade operation
in Canada. In the period during and after World War II, he directed
to production Madsen Red Lake Gold Mines.
Brown returned as manager of the Sherritt Gordon Mine when healthier
metal prices allowed it to be reopened in 1937, but by 1951 the
orebody was exhausted. Meanwhile, in 1945 he became president
and managing director of Sherritt. His exploration initiatives
located a nickel/copper deposit at Lynn Lake, 120 miles north
of Sherridon, a 2,000 tpd concentrator was built and a community
of 1,000 people established - again without the benefit of established
roads or railway.
As soon as drill cores were available from Lynn Lake he launched
a research program to determine the best metallurgical treatment
of the ore. With the help of Dr. Frank Forward of UBC, the research
team developed the "Sherritt Ammonia Leach Process"
that was first used in the refinery opened in 1954 at Fort Saskatchewan
in Alberta. This refinery ultimately reached 50 million lb/year
of nickel capacity.
The nickel refining process developed by Brown's team permitted
direct treatment of flotation concentrates for the production
of pure nickel, omitting the conventional steps of roasting and
smelting. This produced an environmentally clean process without
the emission of sulphur dioxide to the atmosphere.
Eldon Brown was president of The Canadian Metal Mining Association
1950-51, received the Alumni Medal of the Engineering Alumni of
the University of Toronto in 1954, the Selwyn G. Blaylock Medal
of CIM in 1968 and was elected to the Alumni Hall of Distinction
of the University of Toronto in 1980. He lived in Brechin (Ontario) on North America's largest Aberdeen Angus operation, until his death in 1998.
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