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Noah A. Timmins
Timmins spent his youth in Mattawa, Ontario, where his father
operated a general store. The Timmins brothers, Noah and Henry,
inherited the store which serviced local miners and loggers. They
took a keen interest in prospecting, which prepared Noah for that
September day in 1903 when Fred LaRose stopped by and showed him
several rich ore samples from Ontario's Long Lake, renamed Cobalt.
Noah asked his brother to track down LaRose and buy an interest
in the Long Lake claims. LaRose had already sold 50% to his employers,
Duncan and John McMartin, for $1,500. When a dispute arose over
the claims, Noah Timmins brought lawyer David Dunlap into the
case to win for the syndicate.
LaRose then sold the last of his interest in the claims, gaining
$35,000 in total for the property. Dunlap was given a 20% interest,
completing a fiveman partnership of which Noah was the acknowledged
leader.
When the LaRose shaft was sunk below the surface mineralization
and into barren rock, Noah followed the advice of Dr. Willet G. Miller
and Professor Goodwin, and continued work until highgrade ore
was encountered at about 100 feet. The mine prospered, and the
Timmins brothers moved to Montreal and married the Pare sisters,
whose nephew Alphonse Pare was a mining engineering student.
In 1909, Pare informed his uncle Noah about a gold discovery made
in the Porcupine by Benny Hollinger and his grubstaker, Jack McMahon.
On Noah's instructions, Pare examined the Ontario property and
reported that it should be acquired. The McMartins and David Dunlap
joined the Timmins brothers after the initial deal had been made,
and Hollinger Gold Mines was incorporated in 1910.
Hollinger began developing its namesake mine which, during its
60year life, produced about 20 million ounces of gold from
the properties assembled by the partnership, the largest single
Canadian gold mine to this day. The site was originally marked
by a sign nailed to a tree, reading "Timmins", and a
community was born. Noah's development company purchased land
for the town which, through orderly design, was able to avoid
the chaos and problems experienced at Cobalt.
Noah again took the lead in seeking new opportunities. In 1924,
he provided $3 million for the building of Noranda's Horne smelter
in Quebec. He also provided development funds for the Siscoe mine
in Quebec, the San Antonio mine in Manitoba, and the early gold
mines at Yellowknife, N.W.T. He also funded the Young Davidson
mine at Matachewan, the Ross mine at Holtyre, placer mines in
the Yukon, and a gold mine in Colombia.
In published tributes, Noah Timmins is cited as "a man of
great ability, of extraordinary vision, and a classic example
of the general spirit of the mining industry which lives not for
itself but for the common good." He was a builder, and the
company he founded went on to finance the Iron Ore Company of
Canada in developing the great iron deposits of Quebec and Labrador.
In 1985, he was inducted into the Canadian Business Hall of Fame
for his innovative genius, adroitness, risktaking and entrepreneurial spirit.
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