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Blast furnace photograph

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@ Ohio History Connection

Ohio Federal Writers' Project

Description

Dated ca. 1935-1943, this photograph shows an unidentified man watching while white-hot molten metal is poured from a blast furnace into a ladle at an unidentified blast furnace in Ohio. A note on the reverse of the photograph reads "An awe-inspiring moment comes with the tapping of a heat in the open hearth, when, with a great flare, a hundred tons of molten metal plunges on its unobstructed way into the ladle." In the early nineteenth century, there were a number of furnaces in Ohio that processed iron. These small industries were made possible by local iron ore deposits in southern and eastern Ohio. In addition, some parts of Ohio also had coal deposits that could be used to fuel furnaces. Because of their proximity to the state's iron manufacturing, by the second half of the nineteenth century communities such as Cleveland, Akron, Canton, and Youngstown had begun to emerge as major industrial cities. Railroads also encouraged the growth of the iron industry. After the American Civil War (1861-1865), iron manufacturers in Ohio began to introduce new processes to refine iron ore. The resulting product was steel, which was much stronger and more versatile than iron. Ohio companies were quick to adopt new technology, and as a result, Ohio became the second largest producer of steel in the nation by the 1890's. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the rapid growth of some steel companies led to a wave of mergers that created big businesses like the United...
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