The outback mining centre of Maninga Marley is situated some 620 miles north-east of Perth. The Maninga Marley Gold Mine, from which the place takes its name, was found by prospectors Ernest Alfred Arundel and Matthew Dwyer. The claim was registered by Arundel. In 1906 the lease was held in four names, Arundel, Matthew and John J Dwyer and Charles A Greenham. Since its discovery, this little mining centre has turned out over £200,000 worth of gold, and is yet, so to speak, only scratched. Some day when the capitalist takes a hand to open up the shows, another busy centre will be added to the State. The district round Maninga Marley is good stock country, and notwithstanding the small rainfall, horses, donkeys, cattle, and sheep, thrive wonderfully well, and the land is now mostly taken up for pastoral purposes.
Maninga Marley is a townsite and mine, 20 kilometres south-east of Sandstone near the Sandstone-Menzies Road. The parent mine was called Maninga Marley, but it was also the name for the area, with a couple of named mines, and several prospector shows. Over a wider area, it is called Black Range. Gold was discovered in the area by E. Arundel and Mat Dwyer, in 1903. The most active period of mining was from 1904 to 1910. The Maninga Marley Gold Mine was extracting gold from its Daphne lease, on a reef 6 foot wide.
In 1906, it was reported there were seven shafts as part of the gold mine, 45 to 70 feet deep, with the main shaft at 120 feet, cutting the reef at the 50 foot level. There was 4 foot of good stone near the Hanging Wall, separated by a divisional wall, with 4 to 6 feet of poorer grade stone, and 2 feet of gold bearing stone on the Footwall.
By 1906 a 10 head battery had been erected. H.E. Wright was mine manager until 1906, then it was Arundel. A heavy water inflow saw operations stop in 1909, however the battery crushed for other leases until 1912.
In 1925 the mine was being worked alone by Frederick Sonnenschein (59). There were two areas, the part worked by the prospector, and the abandoned workings. An explosive charge broke through to the abandoned part which was full of water. This rushed into the other workings and Sonnenschein drowned.
Maninga Marley was somewhat unlucky in the placing of its townsite. When local residents requested the warden to allot business areas, he complied by marking out several streets. When Mr Hans Irvine came along and purchased the Havilah mine he considered that the reef might extend further so pegged he out the entire townsite thus precluding any further business areas. When questioned the warden exclaimed, ‘The whole blessed place seems to be reefs, and if I give a site today there’s nothing to show that somebody won’t strike a reef digging a verandah post and peg out the whole country”.
Original Reward Claim document – supplied by Ian Murray
Moya Sharp
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hello moya my auntie was born at maniga marley hence me looking up the town my sisters & I are interested so I will send you photos via my email
my aunty was born elizabeth may lang her mother was elizabeth ann lang her father was ernest terry (austin ) Lang my aunty was born in 1910 she had older brothers one born at laverton ( william ) 1908 & john born at worsley siding 1904 kind regards pamela hine I am 77 Elizabeth ann Lang maiden name was elizabeth wood her mothers maiden name was ellen roche/ roach ? carnt find ellen roach /wood was she ever in you neck of the woods many thanks pam hope i hear from you
Hi Pam I will look forward to hearing from you and seeing your photos. Thanks for getting in touch. Im happy to help if I can.
Hello Miya
My dad was born here on 8th January 1908. His name was Douglas William Jones. Do you know of his family?
Thank you
Vanessa
Hi Vanessa, I see your grandparents were William Oldmeadow JONES and Daisy Florence nee SPENCE who he married in Northam in 1902, which Im sure you may already know. Unfortunately your fathers birth was registered in the Black Range district which is where Maninga Marley is located and I dont have access to these records. I see that it looks like they were in the Goldfields area at least from 1903 when your fathers sister, Glory Bernice, was born in Mt Morgans. William applied for the following mining lease in 1907 – https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/201949781?searchTerm=%22William%20Oldmeadow%20JONES%22