New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - The Iron-Ores of Virginia and their Development

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Edmund C. Pechin
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
20
File Size:
822 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1891

Abstract

THE writer approaches this subject with a great deal of diffidence —first, because it is utterly impossible to treat it satisfactorily within the limits of a paper, and, secondly, because the larger development is of so comparatively a recent date as to make authoritative data on some interesting points unavailable. For over one hundred years small charcoal-fnrnaces have been in existence, at widely scattered points, making a few tons of iron daily, and then gradually increasing to a daily output of, say 10 to 12 tons, as the market widened. With the exhaustion of local supplies of wood, inaccessibility to market, and sharp competition, bringing lower prices, many were compelled from time to time to make temporary stops, and finally to cease altogether. During the first half of the century there were at different times in operation between 75 and 90 charcoal furnaces. The last Directory of the Iron and Steel Works of the United States (1890) gives 19 as the number of charcoal-stacks in Virginia. Of these several are cold, and, it is
Citation

APA: Edmund C. Pechin  (1891)  New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - The Iron-Ores of Virginia and their Development

MLA: Edmund C. Pechin New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - The Iron-Ores of Virginia and their Development. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1891.

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