Chicago, Ill Paper - The Hydraulic Cement Works of the Utica Cement Company, La Salle, Ill

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Henry C. Freeman
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
11
File Size:
487 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1885

Abstract

During the early period of the construction of the Illinois and Michigan Canal, about 1838, in excavating for the canal, where the present town of Utica stands, hydraulic limestone was discovered, and its value was recognized. A kiln for calcining and a mill for grinding were erected, and the cement was used in the construction of the locks of the canal. This property was subsequently bought by the present owner, Mr. James Clark, and the work has been continued to the present time in much the same primitive manner as it was begun. The bed is exposed in the Illinois River valley by stripping off a few feet of the covering rock. It is from 4 feet to 6 feet 9 inches thick, and nearly level, dipping gently to the northeast. The Utica Cement Company's establishment, which is two miles west of Utica and two miles east of La Salle, was an outgrowth of the Illinois geological survey. The writer was in charge of the district which included La Salle county, and, in working out the details of the geology of that county, discovered, below the Utica bed, another workable hydraulic limestone, which makes its appearance in the northern bluff of the Illinois River valley, rising above the water level at the point where the company's works are established. This cement group, of which there are several thin beds, lies just below the St. Peter's sandstone, with a few feet intermediate of transition-rock, which appears to represent the Calciferous, and is exhibited in place, in concretionary form, at the top of the bluff. The hydraulic beds are very regular, and the one worked by the company is 10 feet thick; or, speaking more definitely, there are two beds, separated by 18 inches of sandstone, lying about two feet above the bottom, and the two beds are worked as one, the sandstone being first cut out and removed, to prevent mixture. In 1869 I was invited to join with a company, and to take charge
Citation

APA: Henry C. Freeman  (1885)  Chicago, Ill Paper - The Hydraulic Cement Works of the Utica Cement Company, La Salle, Ill

MLA: Henry C. Freeman Chicago, Ill Paper - The Hydraulic Cement Works of the Utica Cement Company, La Salle, Ill. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1885.

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