Site overview
The Mines de Rumelange, situated in the south of Luxembourg in the heart of the iron-ore region known as the Terres Rouges, centred on the Walert mine, which was worked from 1891 until its closure on 31 December 1963. The Walert mine extracted minette, the local oolithic iron ore characteristic of the Luxembourg–Lorraine basin, from two ore seams — the upper yellow layer and the lower grey layer — at depths exceeding seventy metres on two gallery levels. Mechanisation of the mine in the early 1960s proved impossible because the geological proximity of the two seams caused roof collapses whenever loading machines were deployed, leaving manual ore loading as the only viable method and fatally compromising productivity in an increasingly competitive market.
Closure was announced despite estimated remaining reserves of one million tonnes. The Walert surface buildings and installations dating from the 1900s to the 1930s survived the closure. In 1973 the mine was opened to the public as the Musée National des Mines de Fer du Luxembourg, occupying a four-hectare site that encompasses the underground galleries, the former locomotive shed, and open-pit mine faces that are gradually being reclaimed by nature.
Map
History
The iron-bearing geological formation of the southern Luxembourg basin, locally called the minette, consists of oolithic iron ore containing between 24 and 30 percent iron, laid down approximately 180 million years ago. Exploitation of near-surface and alluvial iron ores in the region has roots in Celtic and Gallo-Roman times. Systematic underground mining of the minette in Luxembourg began during the 1860s, when the introduction of the Thomas process for steel-making unlocked the value of the phosphorus-rich ore.
The Luxembourg mining law of 1870–1874 declared the subsoil the property of the state and required concessions for all extraction, while also mandating that one third of ore mined be processed locally, a provision that underpinned the growth of integrated steelworks in the south of the country. The town of Rumelange developed as an important mining centre. The Walert concession, covering 44 hectares and 50 ares, was granted to the Société des Hauts Fourneaux de Rodange and subsequently operated at the site bearing the Walert name.
Working of the mine began in 1891, with the Kirchberg tunnel entrance constructed by 1890 and the underground workings developed on two levels at depths exceeding seventy metres. A photograph of the mine operator at the Walert site in 1927 identifies it as operating under the ownership of Frascht-Cagnion. The ore extracted consisted of two distinct seams: the upper yellow layer and the lower grey layer.
Ore was transported from the mine by the internal underground railway system and brought to the surface through the Kirchberg gallery for dispatch. A further tunnel linking the site to Esch-sur-Alzette was dated to 1969 in local industrial heritage records, suggesting the mine's connection to the wider underground network of the Luxembourg basin. By 1905 Luxembourg's iron-ore industry had reached a peak with approximately 70,000 miners extracting seven million tonnes of ore per year across the country.
Peak steel production in the Minett region was achieved between the 1950s and the 1970s. At the Walert mine, attempts to mechanise extraction in the early 1960s failed because the two ore seams were too closely spaced; vibrations from new loading machines caused roof falls in the grey-layer galleries. With manual loading the only practicable method, the mine could no longer compete economically.
The mine closed officially on 31 December 1963, despite reserves estimated at one million tonnes. Rumelange suffered economic consequences, and the remaining mines in the town closed in succession, with the last mine in the area — an open-cast working on the Hutbierg — ceasing operations in 1978. The last iron-ore mine in Luxembourg, at Thillenberg in Differdange, closed on 27 November 1981.
The surface installations of the Walert mine, including buildings and machinery dating from the 1900s to the 1930s, were preserved on a four-hectare site. The mine was opened to the public in 1973 as the Musée National des Mines de Fer du Luxembourg. The museum is accessed via the former Kirchberg tunnel entrance, which was constructed in 1925 to serve the mine during its operational period.
Visitors travel by mine train through approximately three kilometres of gallery, including a passage through the former open-pit workings, before continuing underground on foot. The underground circuit extends to 900 metres at depths reaching over seventy metres and exhibits machinery, tools, and reconstructed scenes documenting the evolution of mining technology from the 1860s to the 1980s. The surface site contains the former locomotive shed, which houses a permanent exhibition, as well as loading docks, open-pit mine faces, and a brasserie housed in a former mine office building.
The museum is operated as the Musée National des Mines (MNM) and forms part of the Minett Trail industrial heritage route.
Timeline
Kirchberg tunnel entrance constructed
Musée National des Mines de Fer opens
Last remaining open-cast mine at Rumelange closes
Luxembourg mining law establishes state ownership of subsoil
Walert mine opens for iron-ore extraction
Kirchberg gallery entrance rebuilt or formalised
Failed mechanisation attempts and declining productivity
Walert mine closes officially
Sources and records
Wikipedia article (English): National Mining Museum, Luxembourg
ICOM Luxembourg entry: National Mining Museum
Showcaves.com entry: Mines de Kayldall, Rumelange
Orguerra.com: La mine de Rumelange
Académie de Nancy-Metz geological heritage database entry, dossier 290
Industrie.lu: Mine Walert, Rumelange / Entrées de Mine au Luxembourg
Rail.lu: Mine Walert, Rumelange
L'essentiel article: Il y a 35 ans, la dernière mine du pays fermait
Visit Luxembourg: Musée National des Mines de Fer
Petit Futé: Musée National des Mines de Fer Luxembourgeoises
Histoiresroyales.fr article: Guillaume et Stéphanie de Luxembourg visitent une ancienne mine