The Mining Towns

 


Each of these towns is made of wooden buildings, except for a central blockhouse and vault, which is of stone. The towns are governed by Governor-Mayors, appointed by Greyhawk's directors. These are lucrative posts, and thus are filled with qualified candidates who are not likely to succumb to corruption.

Each Governor-Mayor has proven service to the city. He, and his detachment of the watch garrison, is responsible for order in his town and the surrounding mines, protection of the area against bandits and monsters, and seeing that the mining operations run without a great deal of interference.

Then mines are owned by the city, but are leased to various individuals for life. These mine managers are usually industrious nobles who are responsible for the business of mining. Fully half of the product of each mine is the property of the city, but many mine managers, Governor-Mayors, and prospectors have made good fortunes on the other half.

Common buildings in the mining towns include large boarding houses for the miners, a large smoky smelting house, several smithies, wainwrights, carpenters, a large teamster yard with numerous heavy wagons and draft horses, small markets of expensive fresh food and low-quality dried goods shipped from the city, and of course inn, taverns, eating-houses, dance halls, and brothels--all the social accoutrements demanded by a well-paid, hard-working, and generally unmarried populace.

The mine managers maintain large houses in the towns, usually with their families and servants. The Governor-Mayor, his watch officers, and skilled artisans such as the Chief Smetler or Master Smith have individual houses as well, though with not so much finery or as many servants as the mine managers.

 

Steaming Spring

 

Steaming Spring within the Cairn Hills lies in a wider valley, and draws its name from the several geysers outside the town. These regularly spew hot water,steam, and occasionally mud into the air. The mines dig into the lower slopes of the hills to either side of the valley. Unlike Blackstone, which sits primarily on a stone foundation, Steaming Spring is built upon dirt that has long since turned to mud. The town is visible from miles away as a brown smudge across the bottom of a once verdant valley.

 

Diamond Lake

 

Diamond Lake is the smallest and most remote of the three towns. It services the largest number of mines, over a wider territory than then other towns, but these mines tend to be much smaller than those among the lower operations.

The town stretches along the shore of a lake whose clarity once must have inspired the community's ( and the lake's ) name. Now it is as stained and muddy as the water around the other towns, soiled with vast heaps of mine tailings and churned by the busy commerce along its shore.

 

Blackstone

 

Blackstone is nestled in a steep-sided canyon of dark gray granite. During wet weather, a slender waterfall, nearly 500 feet high, spills glittering water into the canyon to collect in a once-crystalline lake.

The mines of Blackstone bore into the canyon walls all around the town. Some of these tunnels entrances, several hundred feet up sheer walls of granite, are reached only by the most precarious of trails. Others, near the top of the wall, can only be entered by those first taking the steep switchbacks of the main trail up the side of the canyon. The miners then circle the rim to a point over their mine entrance. There they are lowered over the edge with huge cranes.

 


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