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Pictured  above is the Exhibit Hall that was formerly a change house when Sterling Hill was a working zinc mine.

Sterling Hill is one of two mines that make up one of the most renowned mining districts in the world. Who would think that the mineral deposits at the Sterling Mine and its sister mine in nearby Franklin would be one of the great geological mysteries known to earth science today? They exist in the Skylands of New Jersey, just an hour from midtown New York

The Sterling Mine is named for William Alexander, Lord Stirling, who owned the property from 1761 to 1776 and made attempts to smelt the local ores. Dutch prospectors and the Lenni Lenape Indians probably knew about the Sterling Hill orebody much earlier, which outcropped in plain sight above the Wallkill River.

The Franklin-Sterling Hill mining district represents two centuries of American mining history and technology, mining law and the earth sciences. It was not until after the perfection of ore-dressing techniques in the early 1800’s that mining the deposits became economically feasible.

The ore mined in the district was primarily zinc ore. This ore consisted of the minerals known as,

Zincite, a zinc oxide

Willemite, a zinc silicate

Franklinite, a zinc iron manganese oxide

These three minerals are very rich in zinc and are just a few of the 340+ minerals found in the district. This is about 10% of all those known and constitute a world record for the number of mineral species from a single locality. Yet zincite and franklinite are nowhere else mined outside the district. Willemite is found in very limited quantities scattered around the globe. Besides the richness of the ore, many of these minerals fluoresce. Again this is a world record number of at least 80 species that are fluorescent, more than any single place on earth.

The Sterling Hill Mine closed for a variety of reasons in 1986. When this mine closed, it meant the end of all underground mining in the state of New Jersey. The Sterling Hill Mining Museum was established in 1989 and opened to the public on August 4, 1990. The Museum has been listed on the Register of Historic Sites since 1991. The Museum continues today as a non-profit foundation. We are also a Mines, Metal and Men Site.

It is a cool 56° in the mine. So be sure to bring your sweater or light jacket along before the tour actually begins. Proper footwear is required.

 

Exhibit Hall Entrance

 

"Key to the Mountain" is an estimated three-fourths life size statue displayed at the entrance to the Harry & Elizabeth Zobel Exhibit Hall.

According to a spokesperson for its creator, Gary Prazen of Original Creations, Inc. in Helper, Utah who is referred to as the "Icon of mining art," it portrays an early time miner swinging his hammer while holding the steel (drill) to single jack drill a hole for explosives that, after detonation, would expose the ore locked within the mountain, thus, giving this statue its title: Key to the Mountain.

Prazen's second grade teacher first recognized his artistic talent and predicted he would someday become a fine artist. Among his works, his mining sculpture has grown into the largest collection of mining related sculpture available. For more information about his other metalwork or to view the artist's collection, visit his web site at www.original-creations.com.

 

 
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