|
Edmund Horne
Born in Enfield, Nova Scotia, Horne was a miner and prospector
of wide experience long before he ventured into the wilds of Quebec's
Rouyn Township. He worked for several years at the Oldham gold
mine near his home before wanderlust seized him. His travels took
him to Colorado, and then to the gold camps of British Columbia
and California. In 1908, Horne caught wind of the silver discoveries
in Cobalt, and came to northern Ontario to start the most important
chapter of his wandering miner's odyssey.
Horne first entered the Quebec hinterland by canoe in 1911. Although
this visit did not result in a discovery, the favorable geology
on the west side of Osisko Lake in Rouyn Township reinforced his
view that the unexplored wilderness of Quebec was worth serious
investigation.
But others felt the region was too isolated, and it was not until
1914 that Horne was able to revisit the prospect. What is now
Noranda ground was prospected, and a showing of wellmineralized,
heavily fractured rhyolite was discovered. Horne decided to take
samples home for assaying, and stake the ground later if they
kicked. Unfortunately, the samples showed no gold, and so bitter
was Horne's disappointment that he decided he was "all washed
up on golden dreams."
But this despondency was shortlived, and Horne returned
to Ontario's established gold camps where he optioned claims and
raised enough money to grubstake his next venture into Quebec.
Horne returned to his prospect at Lake Osisko in 1917, took more
samples, and returned to Ontario. But once again the assays ran
disappointingly low.
It was not until the spring of 1920 that Horne found enough supporters
to grubstake yet another expedition. Using the chainoflakes
route, Horne and prospecting partner Ed Miller set out by canoe
for Rouyn Township, and began staking ground in September of 1920.
Surface exploration started the next season, which was to result
in the discovery of several encouraging showings. The assay results
from these and other showings continued to be positive, and new
money was raised.
Horne's backers, the Tremoy syndicate of residents from New Liskeard,
Ontario, then sold their interests to another group of adventurous
men who were willing and able to finance and develop the copper
and gold prospect. It turned out to be one of Canada's greatest
orebodies, "the Horne", and Noranda was born in 1922.
Today, Noranda employs more than 32,000 people, and has assets
of $11.8 billion.
The name Horne lives on in Quebec. At the same location as the
original mine stands Noranda's worldclass Horne copper smelter.
This mining camp owes much to Horne, who was clearly a courageous
man with faith in his own ideas, able to see beyond the horizons
of his day.
|