The History of Basic Steel Manufacture at Sydney, Nova Scotia

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
M. R. Campbell
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
9
File Size:
5422 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1952

Abstract

"IntroductionON THE LAST DAY of December, 1951, a half-century of steel production was completed in the open hearth department of Dominion Iron & Steel, Limited, in Sydney, Nova Scotia.During that period, almost every known variation of basic steel making practice was used in working out a steel making process which would overcome the difficult metallurgical problems imposed by the use of Cape Breton coal and Wabana ore.This paper is presented as a brief review of these steel making practices, setting forth the fundamental metallurgical factors involved in their success or failure.Establishing the IndustryThe story of steel production at Sydney is closely interwoven with that of coal. The steel industry owes its inception to a desire on the part of the Dominion Coal Company, which was incorporated in 1893, to improve its marketing position by increasing sales of slack coal and providing a year-round demand for its product. Accordingly, the Dominion Iron and Steel Company, Limited, was incorporated on March 30th, 1899, with Mr. H. M. Whitney -who was President of the Dominion Coal Company -as its first President. The new Company was given powers to manufacture and process iron and steel, and to mine all minerals, including coal.A strong inducement to the industry was the bounty offered by the Dominion Government for the production of both iron and steel."
Citation

APA: M. R. Campbell  (1952)  The History of Basic Steel Manufacture at Sydney, Nova Scotia

MLA: M. R. Campbell The History of Basic Steel Manufacture at Sydney, Nova Scotia. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1952.

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