Ruminski, Clayton J. (Author)
Mary Furnace was one of twenty-two blast furnaces constructed in the Youngstown, Ohio, district between 1845 and 1872. Its significance as the first iron furnace in the United States built intentionally to utilize bituminous coal as fuel and its subsequent technological development through 115 years of operation illustrates its transition from a merchant pig-iron producer through absorption by the Sharon Steel Corporation. Mary furnace and the Lowellville, Ohio, steel works provide an unusual example of an interdependent relationship between new steel works and old blast furnaces in the twentieth century. Moreover, the furnace retained manual charging using men and barrows rather than mechanical skip hoists, making it the only one of its kind in the United States by 1940. Geographic and output restrictions resulting from the furnace's mid-nineteenth century origins largely prevented further modernization in the twentieth century.
...More
Article
Malcolm R. Hill;
(2016)
Russian Iron Production from the Repeal of Serfdom to the First World War
(/isis/citation/CBB097114117/)
Article
T. Arron Kotlensky;
(2009)
From Forest and Mine to Foundry and Cannons: An Archaeological Study of the Blast Furnace at the West Point Foundry
(/isis/citation/CBB500435814/)
Article
Robert B. Gordon;
Michael S. Raber;
(1984)
An Early American Integrated Steelworks
(/isis/citation/CBB038241502/)
Article
William Sisson;
(1992)
A Revolution in Steel: Mass Production in Pennsylvania, 1867-1901
(/isis/citation/CBB136236915/)
Article
Dan Trepal;
(2009)
The Gun Foundry Recast
(/isis/citation/CBB613420081/)
Book
Clayton J. Ruminski;
(2017)
Iron Valley: The Transformation of the Iron Industry in Ohio’s Mahoning Valley, 1802–1913
(/isis/citation/CBB022226024/)
Article
Brian Schmult;
(2016)
Evolution of the Hopewell Furnace Blast Machinery
(/isis/citation/CBB866186796/)
Article
Donald J. Fraser;
(1995)
Introduction of American Bridge Technology into New South Wales, Australia
(/isis/citation/CBB442016378/)
Article
Ross F. Allen;
James C. Dawson;
Morris F. Glenn;
Robert B. Gordon;
David J. Killick;
Richard W. Ward;
(1990)
An Archeological Survey of Bloomery Forges in the Adirondacks
(/isis/citation/CBB516191123/)
Article
Bruce E. Seely;
(1981)
Blast Furnace Technology in the Mid-19th Century: A Case Study of the Adirondack Iron and Steel Company
(/isis/citation/CBB687584014/)
Article
Dennis J. De Witt;
(2012)
Conspicuous Iron and the Cochituate Aqueduct Gatehouses: The Earliest Extant American Wrought-Iron Roof and Roof Trusses, and the Earliest Extant Cast-Iron Staircases for Public Use
(/isis/citation/CBB654179466/)
Article
Edward S. Rutsch;
Brian H. Morrell;
(1992)
An Industrial Archeological Survey of the Long Pond Ironworks, West Milford Township, Passaic County, New Jersey
(/isis/citation/CBB907317175/)
Article
Victor R. Rolando;
(1992)
Vermont's 18th- and 19th-Century Blast Furnace Remains
(/isis/citation/CBB896077709/)
Article
Frances C. Robb;
(1993)
Cast Aside: The First Cast-Iron Bridge in the United States
(/isis/citation/CBB626251034/)
Article
Donald W. Linebaugh;
(2000)
Forging a Career: Roland W. Robbins and Iron Industry Sites in the Northeastern U.S
(/isis/citation/CBB759909351/)
Article
Nicholas Honerkamp;
(1987)
Innovation and Change in the Antebellum Southern Iron Industry: An Example from Chattanooga, Tennessee
(/isis/citation/CBB139477612/)
Article
David Landon;
Patrick Martin;
Andrew Sewell;
Paul White;
Timothy Tumberg;
Jason Menard;
(2001)
"... A Monument to Misguided Enterprise": The Carp River Bloomery Iron Forge
(/isis/citation/CBB135813963/)
Article
C. C. Cooper;
R. B. Gordon;
H. V. Merrick;
(1982)
Archeological Evidence of Metallurgical Innovation at the Eli Whitney Armory
(/isis/citation/CBB187006210/)
Article
David P. Staley;
Peter R. Mills;
Steven P. Lundblad;
(2012)
"I trust there will be no failure...": The Importance of Bricks and Brickmaking at the Adirondack Iron and Steel Company's Upper Works
(/isis/citation/CBB113832219/)
Article
Robert B. Gordon;
(1995)
Material Evidence of Ironmaking Techniques
(/isis/citation/CBB166077602/)
Be the first to comment!