In 1820, a deposit of Albertite, variously described as "solid petroleum" or "asphalt" was discovered by Abraham Gesner, who understood its potential as an alternative to whale oil as a source of light.[1] After developing a process to distill the ore into what he would call kerosene (paraffin in Europe) the ore was mined between 1854 and 1881, yielding an estimated 200,000 tons of Albertite.[2] Mining disputes, including the nature of Albertite, were subject to legal action in the 1850s.[3] A section of the Albert Railway ran through the area beginning 1877 until the track was dismantled in 1955[4]
A century-old[4]gypsum quarry supplied a National Gypsum mill in nearby Hillsborough and ceased production in the 1980s when the mill closed.
Martin, Gwen L. (2003). Gesner's Dream: The Trials and Triumphs of Early Mining in New Brunswick. Fredericton: Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy, and Petroleum. ISBN1894475-46-1.
Further reading
Nancy Redmayne Ross, ed,. Diary of a Maritimer 1816-1901: The Life and times of Joseph Salter, St. John's: International Maritime Economic History Association, 1996. This work includes a description of the diarist's affiliation with the Caledonia Mining and Manufacturing Company (1859–1862), which was one of the companies that mined Albertite here.