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A DIAMOND FIELD IN CANTERBURY.

(by telegraph.) Chbistchuhch, November 18. Under the beading " A Diamond Field in Canterbury," the Telegraph last night sa y S: _"lt will be within the recollection of some of our readers that some two or three years ago Mr J. S. H. Jacobsen announced that be bad discovered a field in Canterbury, where crystals which he believed to be diamonds were plentiful. He has now brought the matter before the Industrial Association by urging that body to request the Government to offer a bonus for the discovery or , such a field. The association, though by no means eatisSed that the specimens held by Mr Jacobsen are diamonds, to some extent concur with the proposal. Several of the members have a large experience of the colony, and think it quite possible that diamouds may be found, if not in Canterbury in other places, and a committe has been appointed to confer with Mr Jacobsen on tbis subiect. Mr Rees stated at the meeting that a man with whom he was acquainted found a large crystal in a claim on the West Coast eotne years ago. Whether it was a diamond or not Mr Eees could not say, but the man who found it prized it so highly that he sent it Home, and had it cut aud mounted in gold. Mr Jacobsen has, it appears, been rery unfortunate in bis endeavors to have these crystals tested. Shortly after he found the field he sent some specimens Home to a firm of experts for their opinion oh them, but the only reply that he got was a request that he would send some more. This hardly suited Mr Jacobsen's idea, and he waited until a friend was goinc Home and sent bis best and largest specimens with him. That was two years ago, and he has heard nothing of it since. Mr Jacobsen declares that he will not disclose the field until a bonus is offered by the Government. His reason is that part of the field is private property aud part in the hands of the Government, and of course without a special permit he could work neither. He showed some of his specimens to Mr Kellar, of the Royal Illusionists, and that gentleman, who ie an old diamond digger, said that they were undoubtedly diamonds, but soft. At the association's meeting last evening Mr Sandstein said he had had some 35 years' experience of jewels, and though he had frequently seen diamonds broken in the setting he bad never heard of such a thing as a soft diamond, as everyone knew extreme hardness was one of the principal features of thia stone. ;He, however, would not like to say that these specimens were not diamonds, but if Mr Jacobsen liked he would send the specimens Home to his agents in London or to his brother and have them thoroughly tested, and if not Mr Jacobsen might send either to Dr. Hector or Professor Yon Haast, and probably either of those gentlemen could determine the nature of the crystals."

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DTN18821118.2.18

Bibliographic details

Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 3545, 18 November 1882, Page 4

Word Count
513

A DIAMOND FIELD IN CANTERBURY. Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 3545, 18 November 1882, Page 4

A DIAMOND FIELD IN CANTERBURY. Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 3545, 18 November 1882, Page 4