James Hebbard


James Hebbard was a miner who became manager of the Great Central Mine, Broken Hill.

History

Hebbard was born in Bendigo, Victoria, in July, 1862, the fourth son of Mary "Martha" Hebbard, née Kitto, and John Hebbard, a Cornish miner, who married in England in 1847.
Hubbard was educated at Kennedy's Collegiate School and the Bendigo School of Mines, then at age 16 began night work underground at the United Hustlers and Redan mines at Long Gully, Bendigo, taking his classes during the daytime.
He also worked at Johnson's Reef Extended whose manager was Richard Pope, and whose daughter he later married.
In June 1884 Hebbard began work underground at the Hen and Chickens mine, Broken Hill, when the famous W. R. Wilson was manager. He had only been there a few weeks when Wilson recommended him to Crisp Brothers as manager of their Lubra mine at Purnamoota. Hebbard took the job and held it for six months.
In 1885 Hebbard returned to underground mining for the Broken Hill Proprietary Company under general manager William Jamieson and mine manager Sam Sleep and was soon promoted to underground foreman. Then at the end of 1885 he took a managerial position with the Britannia and Scotia Silver Mining Company; six months later he had returned to his post with BHP.
Early in 1886 Jamieson, Wilson, Sylvester Browne and some others founded the Broken Hill Junction Silver Mining Company, and in January 1887 appointed Hebbard mine manager.
In October 1888 he was appointed manager of Tom's Lewis Ponds Silver and Gold Mining Company at Lewis Ponds Creek, Orange, New South Wales.
In 1891 he accepted a Government job as Inspector of Mines, hailed by the press as a good appointment.
In 1901 he left the Public Service for the Sulphide Corporation's Central Broken Hill Mine as assistant general manager to C. F. Courtney, whom he succeeded in 1903, when Courtney became general manager of the Corporation in Australia. At some stage Hebbard moved into the Central Mine Manager's Residence on Piper Street, South Broken Hill, now on the New South Wales State Heritage Register.
The mine was periodically affected by "creeps" which resulted in destruction of the mill, threatened other buildings on the town side of the workings, and resulted in the death of at least one man. At great expense they rebuilt the mill, administration block, power house, and all other such facilities on the South Broken Hill side of the mine. The gamble paid off, as no further such losses occurred.
In 1902 the Central Mine was the first on The Barrier to exploit the new magnetic separation process for refining zinc ore. It worked sufficiently well to justify doubling their capacity, but was no help with "slimes", which remained an intractable problem. Courtney, while in England during 1903–4 sent out a model plant to demonstrate the Cattermole process of froth flotation, which promised to separate heavy ores from the lighter stuff.
In 1905-1908, Hebbard was manager of the Central Mine when he replaced the Cattermole process with the Minerals Separation's flotation process, the first industrial scale test of the froth flotation process. Minerals Separation, Limited in London discovered the process, and sent staff to Broken Hill to build the plant. Hebbard in an article published in the Proceedings of the Australasian Institute of Mining Engineers detailed the Sulphide Corporation's Central Mine plant and the evolution of the process, a revolutionary method of extracting metals from low grade, complex ores. The article was reprinted in 1915, after the process had been successfully introduced in United States and South American mines. Hebbard also improved the Minerals Separation machine, called a cell, as the Hebbard Subaeration cell, used throughout the world.

Other interests

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James Hebbard married Olivia Pope in December 1887; they had three daughters:
They had a home at Beryl Street, Broken Hill, close to Bromide Street; later 29 Fisher street, Fullarton, South Australia
;Family of John Hebbard and Mary Hebbard, née Kitto