The Cement Industry's Age Of Reason - 1871 -1971: The One Hundredth Anniversary of the United States Portland Cement Industry

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 16
- File Size:
- 895 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1971
Abstract
HAPPY BIRTHDAY Not only is 1971 the Centennial Year of the AIME, but it also marks the One Hundredth Anniversary of the United States Portland Cement Industry. On September 26th in 1871 David O. Saylor of Allentown, Pennsylvania, received his patent Numbered 119,413 for the manufacture of portland cement. "Cement" had been used in the United States before that. This was, however, natural cement - a direct product of rocks as found in nature, usually burned at low temperatures in open kilns. During the early 1800s this natural cement played an important role in such projects as the building of the Erie Canal. It was only after the Civil War that small amounts of high priced portland cement was imported from Europe. The successful use of this material in construction led to Saylor's experiments and subsequent patent for the manufacture of a scientifically controlled product in this country. These one hundred years have witnessed four major "ages" of cement . . . three of them occurring in the last quarter century since World War Two. The first age was the "Age of Development", a seventy-year period which saw the growth of cement and its concrete end uses as major construction materials. Next followed a period called the "Age of Demand" when, after the war, cement became in short supply relative to large building requirements. In effect a cement shortage existed. The decade of the Sixties proved to be the "Age of Reaction", with its courses of action coming in response to the problems that arose when the industry's expansion programs provided too much capacity. Today cement, and the concrete industries, find themselves entering the "Age of Reason". Overcapacity, low price, rising costs, and poor returns are several of the reasons behind that name, As these industries face the construction challenge of the Seventies, and beyond, the application of basic management principles (otherwise known
Citation
APA:
(1971) The Cement Industry's Age Of Reason - 1871 -1971: The One Hundredth Anniversary of the United States Portland Cement IndustryMLA: The Cement Industry's Age Of Reason - 1871 -1971: The One Hundredth Anniversary of the United States Portland Cement Industry. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1971.