Stirling Iron Works

Stirling Iron Works

Stirling Iron Works

The Stirling Iron Works owned by Peter Townsend was one of the first steel and iron manufacturer in the American colonies and the first steel producer in the colony of New York. The company was most famous for forging the Hudson River Chain that kept the British Navy from sailing up the Hudson during the American Revolution, and served to protect the strategically important fort at West Point. The works were operational from 1761 to 1842.

Initial ore discovery

In 1750 the first discovery was made of a rich superficial deposit of iron ore at the south end of Sterling Mountain, in the town of Monroe, New York. In the following year, Ward & Colton erected at the outlet of mine and Sterling Pond, in the extreme southern part of Warwick, near the Monroe line, a charcoal blast-furnace, which was the first in Warwick. These works were called the Sterling Iron-works, honoring General William Alexander, Lord Stirling, the owner of the land, and later an officer in the Revolutionary army. They were built for the manufacture of anchors, including for the United States frigate, USS Constitution. A second Sterling furnace was built in 1777.

Additional mines opened

Several other veins of magnetic ore were later opened in the vicinity of the Sterling mine, which itself covered about 30 acres. The Forest of Dean mine, a very extensive bed six miles west-northwest of Fort Montgomery, as early as 1756 supplied a furnace, and was abandoned twenty-one years later. The vein is over 30 feet thick and 150 broad, and made good cold short iron.

The Long Mine, belonging to the Townsends, was discovered in 1761 by David Jones and supplied about 500 tons of ore annually to the Sterling Works over the next 70-80 years for an aggregate production of about 140,000 tons. It was the only mine at which systematic mining was attempted in that time, and was worked to the depth of 170 feet on a single vein 6 feet thick. The ore yielded 62 per cent, of strong tough metal, from which cannon, muskets, wire, steel, fine malleable Iron, and harness-buckles were made.

The Mountain Mine, half a mile southwest of Long Mine, was found in 1758 by a hunter, in consequence of a tree having been blown up by he roots. The Iron from this mine was remarkable for its strength and fine polish, and was in consequence chiefly exported to England to be tinned.

First metal produced in New York

Mr. Peter Townsend, who became the owner of Stirling Iron before the Revolutionary War, made iron anchors in 1773, and in 1776 produced the first steel in New York, at first from pig and afterward from bar iron. The first blister steel made in the State was made by his son, Peter Townsend, Jr., in 1810, from ore of the Long Mine on the Stirling estate. In the manufacture of edge-tools it was considered equal to the famous Dannemora mine Swedish Iron.

The first cannon made in the State were cast at Stirling for the government, in 1816. They were from six to thirty-two pounders.

The Hudson River Chain

At the close of 1779, West Point was the strongest military post in America. In addition to the batteries that stood menacingly upon the hill tops, the river was obstructed by an enormous iron chain. The iron of which this chain was constructed was wrought from ore of equal parts, from the Stirling and Long Mines, in Orange county. The chain was manufactured at the Stirling Iron Works about 25 miles from West Point. The general superintendent of the work, as engineer, was Captain Thomas Machin, who afterward assisted in the engineering operations at Yorktown, when Cornwallis was captured. The project took place under the supervision of Colonel Timothy Pickering.

The chain was completed in the middle of April, 1778, and on the 1st of May it was stretched across the river and secured. It weighed 186 tons, and was made and delivered in six weeks. This chain was forged at Stirling, hauled piece by piece to New Windsor, and put together at the military smithy of Capt. Machin. It was then floated down the Hudson as a whole, and placed in position. It remained unbroken during the war although others at Fort Montgomery and on the lake above were broken by the British. Links of these chains, weighing 140 lbs. each, are preserved at the Military Academy at West Point.

In front of this chain was a heavy boom of logs. Each winter the chain and boom were un-moored, taken up to the beach, in the cove now crossed by the railroad tracks, and piled up out of reach of the moving ice until ready to be replaced in the spring.

The chain was instrumental in the discovery of Benedict Arnold, when Peter Townsend's cousin, Sally Townsend, whose brother Robert was a member of Gen George Washington's Culper Ring of spies, allegedly intercepted information at the family home in Oyster Bay, Long Island which occupied by British officers. The intercepted message from Arnold indicated that he had weakened the chain and contained instructions on how the Royal Navy could breech its defenses and take the fort at West Point. When he realized he had been discovered, Arnold escaped to the British and the chain remained intact throughout the war.

References

cite book
last = Hatfield
first = Henry Rand
coauthors =
title = Lectures on Commerce Delivered Before the College of Commece and Administration of the University of Chicago
publisher = University of Chicago Press
date = 1904
location = Chicago
pages = 168-169
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=CWcvAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=Lectures+on+Commerce+Delivered+Before+the+College+of+Commece+and+Administration+of+the+University+of+Chicago&as_brr=0#PPA168,M1

cite book
last = Ingersoll
first = Ernest
coauthors =
title = Rand, McNally & Co.'s Illustrated Guide to the Hudson River and Catskill Mountains
publisher = Rand McNally & Co.
date = 1912
location = New York
pages = 99
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=SPBLAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=Illustrated+Guide+to+the+Hudson+River+and+Catskill+Mountains&as_brr=0#PPA99,M1

cite book
last =
first =
coauthors =
title = The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge
publisher = Encyclopedia Americana Corp.
date = 1919
location = New York
pages = 371
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=VWAMAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA373&dq=%22sterling+iron+works%22&as_brr=1

cite book
last = Thurston
first = Robert Henry
coauthors =
title = Materials of Engineering
publisher = J. Wiley & Sons
date = 1903
location = New York
pages = 52
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=EZdBAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA52&dq=%22sterling+iron+works%22&as_brr=1

cite book
last = Bishop
first = John Leander
coauthors = Edwin Troxell Freedley, Edward Young
title = A History of American Manufactures from 1608 to 1860
publisher = E Young
date = 1861
location = Philadelphia
pages = 528-529
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=L2UFAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA1-PA528&dq=%22sterling+iron+works%22&as_brr=1

cite book
last =
first =
coauthors =
title = Popular Science Monthly
publisher = D. Apleton
date = 1891
location =
pages = 326
url =


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Stirling Smith Museum and Art Gallery — [http://www.smithartgallery.demon.co.uk Stirling Smith Art Gallery and Museum] is an institution based in Stirling, Central Scotland, dedicated to the promotion of cultural and historical heritage and the arts, from a local scale to nationally… …   Wikipedia

  • Works inspired by J. R. R. Tolkien — After Tolkien Reception of Adaptations of Works inspired by The works of J. R. R. Tolkien have served as the inspiration to painters, musicians, film makers and writers, to such an extent that Tolkien is sometimes seen as the father of the entire …   Wikipedia

  • S. M. Stirling — Infobox Writer name = S. M. Stirling imagesize = caption = pseudonym = birthdate = birth date and age|1953|9|30 birthplace = Metz, France deathdate = deathplace = occupation = Writer nationality = America period = 1980s– present genre = Science… …   Wikipedia

  • List of steampunk works — Following is a list of steampunk works in the science fiction and fantasy genres. In literature Modern steampunk Novels with an unclear setting: * Automated Alice by Jeff Noon (1996) * L équilibre des paradoxes by Michel Pagel * The Grand Ellipse …   Wikipedia

  • Solomon Townsend — Infobox Person name = Solomon Townsend image size = caption = Solomon Townsend by Ezra AmesOil on Canvas 1808 birth name = birth date = 1743 birth place = Oyster Bay New York death date = 1811 death place = death cause = resting place = resting… …   Wikipedia

  • Tuxedo, New York — Infobox Settlement official name = Tuxedo, New York settlement type = Town nickname = motto = imagesize = image caption = image |pushpin pushpin label position = pushpin map caption =Location within the state of New York pushpin mapsize = mapsize …   Wikipedia

  • Timothy Pickering — Infobox US Cabinet official name=Timothy Pickering order=2nd title=United States Postmaster General term start=August 12, 1791 term end=January 1, 1795 president=George Washington predecessor=Samuel Osgood successor=Joseph Habersham order2=2nd… …   Wikipedia

  • Hudson River Chain — The Hudson River Chain may refer to any of several chains used as a blockade across the Hudson River between New York and New Jersey, intended to prevent British naval vessels from entering the river during the American Revolutionary War.The… …   Wikipedia

  • Henry Townsend (Oyster Bay) — Infobox Person name = Henry Townsend image size = caption = birth name = birth date = 1649 birth place = Norwich, Norfolk England death date = Circa 1695 death place = Oyster Bay, Long Island, NY death cause = resting place = resting place… …   Wikipedia

  • Robert Townsend (Captain) — Captain ’’Robert Townsend’’’ (1819 1866) was a Civil War era ship Captain in the United States Navy. He served twice, once before the war then again during the war. He saw active combat while serving aboard three ships, most notably as commander… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”