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In the mid-19th Century, just after Clarion County formed, iron production became the area's largest economic factor. Within 75 years, however, the industry had dwindled to nothing.
From Caldwell's Illustrated Historical Combination
Atlas of Clarion Co., Pennsylvania, published by J. A. Caldwell, 1877.
The iron business was commenced here about 1830.
Shippen, Black, Hamilton,
Humes, and Judge Myers were the pioneers.
At one time twenty-seven or twenty-eight* furnaces
were in full operation, making nearly, if not entirely, 40,000 tons of
iron yearly. It was then called the "iron county." These furnaces
were all run with charcoal and made a superior quality of metal; but all
have ceased operations, and many have disappeared, so that no vestige
of them remains except large piles of cinders that centuries will hardly
obliterate.
The iron was sent down the Clarion
and Allegheny rivers to Pittsburgh.
The iron business in Clarion County
has permanently gone down; the furnaces in the east and west cannot be
competed with here. The business did not afford much profit to the
operators, as a rule, but it did much to clear out and bring population
to the county.
*At another point in the text, there is a list
that contains 34 furnaces. There is also a statement that the production
was about fifty-five thousand tons annually.
From "Christian Myers, Migrant Iron Master and Founder
of Clarion County,", published in the Western Pennsylvania Genealogical Society Journal, date not noted.
Christian Myers
migrated to Clarion County from his native county, Lancaster.
He purchased a tract of land from the Holland Land Company and
heard tales of "vast beds of underlying iron ore." Deciding
to view the tract, Myers left home in 1826, accompanied
by his friend, ironmaster Henry Bear. They travelled
by horseback and arrived on the Clarion River in 1828. Bear and Myers built
the first iron furnace in the county in 1828. They named it Clarion,
after the river. Bear designed
the furnace; subsequent furnaces followed his design.
The furnaces were "of rough stone, dressed at the
edges and keyed with wooden cross beams." They were 30 feet high,
and the stack measured 24 feet square at the base. The inside of
the furnace was lined with fire brick. Charcoal was used to fuel
the furnace; coke was later used.
"Ore was mined from drifts or banks. ... Furnaces
produced 15-25 tons of pig iron per week at the beginning"; later they
produced up to 50 tons per week. The iron was sent down river to
Pittsburgh on flat-bottomed boats. The boats were
not returned; they were sold in Pittsburgh.
Pigs (iron ingots) were loaded at Clarion,
Hahn's Ferry (Piney), Callensburg,
and Redbank. Hundreds of men were required to load
boats at each location.
"The larger furnaces, such as Lucinda,
Madison, and Shippenville, employed
from 75-100 hands. The smaller ones, such as Washington,
Wildcat, and Mary Ann, from 25-50. The
men were miners, teamsters, woodchoppers, charcoal burners, and furnacemen.
Their wages ranged from $20-26 per month. One quarter of a
man's wages was usually paid to him in cash; the balance in orders on
the company's store.
"Between 1845 and 1854, more than half of all the
iron made in northwest Pennsylvania was manufactured in Clarion
County."
From History of Clarion County. Unknown compiler;
published circa 1976.
[Most of it credited to Davis' History of Clarion County, published
1887.]
Clarion's
furnaces were, with few exceptions, of the "half-stack" size. They
were built from rough stone dressed at the edges and keyed with wooden
crossbeams. The interior of the stack was lined with fire brick,
which required replacement about every two years. For this purpose,
an entrance was left in front of the furnace. The entrance was kept
walled-up while the furnace was in blast. The "bosh" was the widest
part of the interior, or hearth.
Charcoal was the basis of iron manufacture in Clarion
County. Almost every wood except hemlock was available.
It was burnt in small clearings called "coalings" and "hearths." Chestnut
produced the most char to the wood employed; birch, the least. As
a medium, two hundred bushels of charcoal were consumed to each ton of
metal produced.
[Note: The use of charcoal was responsible
for the depletion of timber in the immediate vicinity of many furnaces.]
The ore was mined generally from drifts or banks.
Sometimes, when it lay near a level surface, open excavations were
called "strippings." It was hauled to the furnace yard, which lay
about on a level with the top of the stack. The furnaces were always
constructed at the foot of a little bluff or on a hillside, to facilitate
the conveyance of the ore to the tunnel-head. After a preliminary
burning by slack coal to free it from dross and dirt, the ore was wheeled
on a bridge to the mouth of the furnace, or "tunnel-head," and dumped
in with the necessary amount of flux.
After a proper interval of time, a layer of fuel was
placed on top of this, then another deposit of ore, and so on. These
alternate layers were called the "charges," and the supervisor was called
the "founder." The blast, cold or hot, was forced into one or more
apertures in the sides ("tuyeres") by means of pistons and drums operated
either by steam or water power. The molten metal percolated through
the fire and made its exit through four openings at the bottom, called
"notches" -- one at each side -- into the moulds.
Production of one ton of iron required three and one-half
tons of ore, using about 500 pounds of limestone as flux. The furnaces
at first produced from 15 to 25 tons of pig metal a week, but in later
years, by improved processes and larger and stronger blasts, the weekly
output often reached fifty tons.
St. Charles and Redbank were the first furnaces in
the county to employ coke as fuel. It was made in pits at their own yards.
The Sligo and Madison Company was the only one to
introduce "chills" (iron moulds). All the other furnaces ran their
metal into sand. [Note: the result produced a crude form
of glass as a by-product.]
The pigs (iron ingots) were transported to Pittsburgh
in flat boats, sided up. They were somewhat smaller than the present
boats and generally held from 75 to 100 tons. The lower bridge at
Clarion was one of the chief loading places. Here,
Clarion, Lucinda, Shippenville,
Washington, and Martha furnaces brought
their iron for transportation. It was the scene of much life and
bustle, for often 100 men were at work together, loading the boats.
Beaver Furnace and Madison loaded at
Hahn's Ferry at the mouth of Piney.
The wharf at Callensburg was the loading point.
Manufacturers in Clarion County were Jacob
Painter, Samuel F. Plumer, and Lyon, Shork &
Company. Still, the county in general was decidedly the gainer by
this industry. It may be said to have developed our resources. It
was the means of colonizing waste and rugged spots. It doubled the
population and, for some time, kept money in beneficial circulation.
The repeal of the tariff of 1842 in July, 1846, was
a severe blow to the industry, and one from which it never fully recovered.
The effects of the repeal were not fully felt until 1850, when a
number of Clarion firms succumbed in consequence.
From 1852 to 1854, in consequence of the mania for
railroad construction and the extraordinary demand for iron, there was
a general revival. In March, 1854, iron brought the fantastic price
of $42 per ton. The panic of 1857 again prostrated the business.
Many stacks were abandoned. Only those having the firmest
financial basis stood the ordeal. A second, but transitory, revival
was created by the war, and from 1862 to 1865 iron commanded "booming"
prices. In 1866 and 1867, the decay of furnaces survived until 1873.
Monroe Furnace continued making a little iron at intervals
until 1882, and Redbank Furnace went out of blast in
January, 1883.
The primary causes of the extinguishment of the iron
industry in Clarion County were
- the ill effects of the repeal of the tariff of
1842;
- decline in the price of iron by competition of
large coke and anthracite stacks;
- depletion of timber; and,
- increasing cost of ore from long drifts and hauls.
Of the 31 furnaces once flourishing here and maintaining
an industry, which immensely increased the population, prosperity, and
wealth of the county, all, except Redbank and Monroe
furnaces are now no more. Some have been leveled to the ground.
Others remain as ruins, their venerable walls resembling dismantled fortresses.
They are ivy-clad memorials of bright and busy days. |