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Who we are: MinSouth is a local learned society
of the Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining (IOM3). Our mission is to
be the focus for mining & minerals related professionals based in London and
the South East of England, to inform the wider public and to support the IOM3
in its objectives. In particular we have a voice through the Mining and Minerals
grouping of the IOM3, the International Mining & Minerals Association, IMMa.
We are funded by a grant from the IOM3 and through company sponsors who share
our learned society aims.
Our community: Our 800 plus members belong to the
thriving mining community centred on London of technical consultants,
suppliers of equipment and support services, financial advisors and the
head office staff of major international mining companies and a number of
junior companies. Also we have members representing the "Royal School of
Mines" and other academic institutions teaching geology and engineering,
which lie within our area. International visitors often attend our meetings.
IOM3 members can select us as their local society and non IOM3 members may
join MinSouth directly. We welcome new members. Join here
Activities and Networking: EventsOur
programme provides this community with a monthly social get together,
the Mining Sundowneron
the last Thursday from January to November, and evening technical meetings,
monthly from October to June, an Annual Prestige Lecture presented by a major
industry figure, a joint meeting with the British Tunnelling Society and an
Annual Commodity Day. Attendance at MinSouth Technical Lectures qualifies as
part of the Continuing Professional Development (CPD), required to maintain
Chartered Status.
We promote activities with the Association of Mining Analysts,
including a series of Masterclasses
to inform each group on the other's key issues.
Student Support: Students
We subsidise the IOM3 membership fees for students on relevant courses. Students
sit on our Council and we hold a heat of the IOM3 Young Person's Lecture Competition,
each March for graduate and postgraduate students. In recent years entrants have come
from the Royal School of Mines and usually at least one other university, such as
Delft University (Netherlands), Camborne School of Mines (Exeter University) and
Southampton University. The IOM3 provides grants and bursaries in support of post
graduate research.
Secondary Education: Education
On secondary education, we are a sponsor of the Ecton Mine Educational Trust,
a hands on facility for school children and we support the Schools Affiliate Scheme of
the IOM3. We have available on request an educational CD, "Metals - where on Earth do
they come from?".
Our Council: Council & Constitution MinSouth is managed by a council of elected and co-opted members led by our president and vice president and supported by an honorary secretary and an honorary treasurer. We have a formal constitution, which governs the actions and responsibilities of the council. Our councillors bring a broad range of experience and interests to the affairs of the society. We have a track record of younger members taking major roles.
History: Learned Society: 1958 to Date:
MinSouth is the current incarnation in a long history of local branches and sections representing the major professional mining bodies based in the United Kingdom. MinSouth took its present form as a local society of the Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, the IOM3, in October 2004.
The IOM3, itself was formed in 2002 by the merger of the Institute of Materials and the Institution of Mining and Metallurgy, the IMM. In July 1998, the IMM, which had traditionally represented the non-coal mining professionals, had merged with the Institute of Mining Engineers, the IMinE, which represented coal mining professionals. The IMinE had itself in an earlier merger in 1991, absorbed the Institution of Mining Electrical and Mining Mechanical Engineers, IMEMME.
The history of MinSouth parallels this history of the national bodies. We trace our history back to 22nd January 1958, when the Southern Counties Institute of Mining Engineers was inaugurated. This branch formed an important focus for local members of the IMinE, especially after the IMinE relocated its head quarters from London to Doncaster. The organisational strength of the branch has provided MinSouth with a solid foundation. Many senior figures in the coal industry have been its president. MinSouth carries on some of the key events, which the "branch" initiated, such as the Prestige/Special Invitation Lecture, started in 1982 and the joint meetings with the British Tunnelling Society.
The IMM, on the other hand, remained headquartered in London, and for many years ran regular ordinary general meetings, OGMs, at which professional papers were presented, generally papers that had been published in the IMM Transactions.
These OGMs, which were held in the late afternoon, were often followed by a dinner at which the speakers were guests. The dinners were open to members and their guests. After the meal, the president or in his absence the chairman would invite the diners to speak. Overseas visitors, in particular, were encouraged to report on interesting news on the industry in their country.
These meetings and dinners provided a focus for IMM Members in London and the South East of England and there was little motivation to form a section in the region like those elsewhere in the UK and Overseas.
However, during the 1980's, attendance at the OGMs fell away and they virtually petered out. To fill this gap, in 1994, the South East of England Section of the IMM was formed, SEESIMM.
On 18 March 1996, local representatives of the IMinE, the IMM and the Minerals Engineering Society met and formed the South East Minerals Association. From the beginning of 1997, the three organisations ran joint monthly meetings.
Then in July 1998, following the merger of the IMinE and the IMM, SEESIMM formed a joint council with the existing council of the long established Southern Counties Branch of the IMinE. Later that year the two groups became the Southern Counties Branch of the new IMM.
Then following merger of the IMM and the IoM to form IOM3, the branch changed to a local society, the London and Southern Counties Minerals Institute, and adopted the name MinSouth.
History: A sociable community: Alongside the learned society
activity, there has always been a social side to the mining industry community in London.
For many years when the offices of major companies were centred around Moorgate in the
City of London, there was the Mining Club, which was a favourite watering hole and
lunchtime venue for those in the industry. But with the demise of long lunches and
the rise of in-house catering and the moving away of mining company offices it
eventually closed. But it lives on in the Mining Club Award.
In the early 1970's, the directors of the consultancy firm, Mackay and Schnellmann,
decided to start a monthly early evening social drink. The Mining Club only had a lunchtime licence and so the "Last Wednesday of the Month" was started in the upstairs bar of the Old Red Lion in High Holborn, between the City and the West End. This continued up into the late 1980's, when Mackay and Schnellmann moved from High Holborn to Worship Street, to the east of the City.
However, after a gap of a few years, the session was reinvented as the
Mining Sundowner and subsequently
moved to the last Thursday of each month (except December) at a venue in the West End. For
many years, Emma Priestley (now de Borchgrave) organised the event; she has been a stalwart
member of the MinSouth committee and is a past president. Due to increasing commitments
elsewhere, Emma passed the baton on to Liv Carroll in 2007. Liv, a senior geologist with
Wardell Armstrong, has been a Councilor of MinSouth since 2004 and was President for
the 2008 - 2009 session; following Alan Baxter's retirement, she took up the role of
Honorary Secretary in 2009. Though not directly linked to the Institute, MinSouth wholly
endorses the Mining Sundowner.
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