Jumper drill - Casgliadau Arlein | Museum Wales
Mae’r wefan hon yn defnyddio cwcis i hwyluso’ch defnydd. Gweld ein Polisi Cwcis
Gosodiadau

Gosodiadau Cwcis

Angenrheidiol

Mae'r cwcis hyn yn gwbl angenrheidiol ar gyfer weithrediad y wefan.

 

Cwcis sy'n mesur defnydd y wefan

Rydym yn defnyddio Google Analytics i fesur sut ydych yn defnyddio'r wefan er mwyn i ni ei wella yn seiliedig ar angen defnyddwyr.

 

Cwcis sy'n helpu gyda chyfathrebu a marchnata

Gall y cwcis hyn gael eu gosod gan wefannau trydydd parti a gwneud pethau fel mesur sut rydych yn gwylio fideos YouTube.

 
 
Gweld ein Polisi Cwcis
Lleoliadau +
Amgueddfa Cymru
English
Fy nghyfrif
Chwilio
Casgliadau ac Ymchwil
Adrannau Casgliadau Arlein Canolfan Gasgliadau Cenedlaethol

Teulu
Amgueddfa
Cymru

Amgueddfa Genedlaethol Caerdydd

Sain Ffagan Amgueddfa Werin Cymru

Amgueddfa Genedlaethol y Glannau

Big Pit Amgueddfa Lofaol Cymru

Amgueddfa Lechi Cymru

Amgueddfa Wlân Cymru

Amgueddfa Lleng Rufeinig Cymru

  • Casgliadau ac Ymchwil
  • Adrannau
  • Casgliadau Arlein
  • Canolfan Gasgliadau Cenedlaethol
  • Erthyglau
  • Cymru Hynafol
  • Celf
  • Celf ar y Cyd
  • Hanes
  • Hanes Naturiol
  • Yr Amgueddfa ar Waith
  • Iechyd, Lles ac Amgueddfa Cymru

Casgliadau Arlein

Amgueddfa Cymru

Chwilio Uwch

Chwilio Uwch

Image filter options
Nôl i Ganlyniadau

Jumper drill

Jympar from Chwarel Gorseddau, Cwmystrallyn. Despite this jympar’s shorter length being worn away / shortened, as one of the only surviving objects from Chwarel Gorseddau it is a unique object.

In the slate quarrying industry, a jympar was a specialized tool used to bore shot holes into the rockface before blasting. It was essential in the days before pneumatic drills and modern explosives (used during the late eighteenth century – mid nineteenth century). A jympar is double ended with a swelling about a third of the way along its length, the shorter length used for starting a hole, and the longer for completing it.

The now disused Gorseddau Slate Quarry was first opened 1807, as a small concern, but its main period of working was between 1854 and 1857 (the ‘golden age’ of the slate industry) when it was developed by the Bavarian mining engineer Henry Tobias Tschudy von Ulster. The quarry was a complete commercial failure. Despite massive capitalisation and investment in milling, water courses and reservoir, workers' housing and railway to Porthmadog, returns were minimal. By 1859, its 200 men were producing less than 1400 tons per annum - seven tons per man year. Output peaked at 2140 tons in 1860. The quarry closed in 1867, possibly with some later sporadic working.

Its development testifies to the fact that everyone that invested in the slate industry expected to make a fortune. Huge sums of money were invested in the quarry, but it failed within a few years of opening because of the poor quality of the slate.

Gorseddau is an outstanding example of a mid-nineteenth century slate quarry landform and tells a story of over-ambitious investment and financial disaster.

Pwnc

Diwydiant

Rhif yr Eitem

2025.16

Mesuriadau

Meithder (mm): 1187
diameter (mm): 65

Categorïau

Slate
Nid yw sylwadau ar gael ar hyn o bryd. Ymddiheuriadau am yr anghyfleustra.

Eitemau cysylltiedig

Diwydiant

Saucer

LED 4/89/1
Mwy am yr eitem hon
Diwydiant

Jug

LED 45/38
Mwy am yr eitem hon
Diwydiant

Furniture

LED 82/31
Mwy am yr eitem hon
Diwydiant

Spectacles

LED 60/2
Mwy am yr eitem hon

Map o'r Wefan

Amgueddfa Cymru

Amgueddfa Cymru

  • Ymweld
  • Casgliadau ac Ymchwil
  • Dysgu
  • Blog
  • Ein Cefnogi
  • Siop
  • Llogi Cyfleusterau

Ein Hamgueddfeydd

  • Amgueddfa Genedlaethol Caerdydd
  • Sain Ffagan Amgueddfa Werin Cymru
  • Amgueddfa Genedlaethol y Glannau
  • Big Pit Amgueddfa Lofaol Cymru
  • Amgueddfa Lechi Cymru
  • Amgueddfa Wlân Cymru
  • Amgueddfa Lleng Rufeinig Cymru

Ymunwch â Ni

  • Cysylltwch â ni
  • Cymryd Rhan
  • Tanysgrifio i'n Cylchlythyr
  • Facebook
  • Instagram

Corfforaethol

  • Amdanom ni
  • Swyddi
  • Swyddfa'r Wasg
  • Llyfrgell Luniau
  • Canolfan Casgliadau Cenedlaethol
  • Gweithio gydag eraill
  • Datganiad hygyrchedd
  • Cwcis
  • Hawlfraint
Noddir gan Lywodraeth Cymru
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
Rhif Elusen 525774