Stott, Roy G.2007-01-032022-02-032007-01-032022-02-03https://hdl.handle.net/11124/6587CC-52; Correct way of looking up man raise. Hard hat and goggles on, body to one side and protected, and light directed by hand. Negaunee mine, Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Company, Negaunee, Mich. April 1947 - R. G. Stott.Date scanned: 2002-6-26.Held in the Russell L. and Lyn Wood Mining History Archive, Arthur Lakes Library, Colorado School of Mines.Donor: United States Bureau of Mines.The Negaunee Mine was an underground iron mine near Negaunee, Michigan in the Marquette Range. The Mine opened in 1887 and was later operated by the Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Company. The Mine produced until 1949, when it was classified as exhausted. Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Company was formed with the merger of two major iron mining companies on Michigan in 1891. The Company had a number of mines operating in the Upper Peninsula by the outbreak of World War I. By the 1940s the high grade iron ores mined underground were becoming depleted. The Company developed a process to concentrate low grade ores into iron ore pellets in the 1950s, and C.C.I.C.'s last underground iron mine closed in 1979.Rights management statement available at: http://library.mines.edu/digital/rights.htmlCleveland-Cliffs Iron CompanyIron mines and miningMine safetyMinersScenes, undergroundUnderground miningCorrect way of looking up main raise, Negaunee MineStillImage