Gambar halaman
PDF
ePub

$25,000. Number of hands, 20. Hours of labor, 10. Average wages, $7.50 per week. Value manufactured, $25,000.

CROCKER'S WIRE WORKS AND ROLLING MILLS were erected in 1844, for the manufacture of iron and copper wire. The establishment has sixteen large, and 120 small wire blocks, rolls, &c. Number of hands, 48. Hours of labor, 10. We understand there is only one other establishment in the United States which employs the same machinery.

COLUMBIAN DISTILLERY.-The Columbian Distillery is the most extensive in the State, and owned by William M. Johnson & Sons. It is located between 9th and 10th avenues, and extends from 15th and 16th street, covering 100 lots, 25 by 100 feet. Active capital invested, $100,000. Number of hands, 50. Manufactures, annually, 1,800,000 gallons of rye whiskey, at the average value of 25 cents per gallon.

ARCHIMEDES IRON WORKS.-These works comprise two establishments, located respectively at 96 North Moore street, and foot of 33d street, North River, the former occupying six lots of ground, and the latter eighteen. Owners, Messrs. H. R. Dunham & Co., who commenced operations in 1833. Capital invested, $125,000. Number of hands, 220. Average wages, $75,000 per annum. Material consumed, $110,000 per year. Amount manufactured, $235,000. Articles manufactured-engines, sugar mills, improved dredging machines, and iron vessels of various descriptions.

THE ALLAIRE WORKS were erected in 1816, and occupy an area of 38 lots on Cherry street, near its junction with Grand. This establishment, by act of incorporation, is under the superintendence of three managers. President, J. P. Allaire, Esq. Capital, $300,000. Number of hands, 250. Average wages, $1.25 per day. Hours of labor, 10. Material consumed annually-bar-iron, $15,000; sheet-iron, &c., $14,000; lumber, $4,500; bituminous coal, $2,500; copper, $6,500; anthracite coal, $4,500; pine wood, $500; pig iron, $19,000; charcoal, $600; boiler iron, $27,000. Manufacture-sugar mills and steam engines, to the annual value of $200,000.

NEW YORK IRON FOUNDRY, PRINTING PRESS AND SAW MANUFACTORY.-This establishment is owned by Messrs. Noah, Joseph H., & Wade B. Worrall, and erected in 1816, by Henry Worrall, the father of the present proprietors. Capital, $80,000. Number of hands, 90. Hours of labor, 10. Average wages per year, $27,500. Consumes $52,000 worth of raw material annually, and manufactures machinery, printing presses, and various descriptions of cast steel saws, to the yearly amount of $90,000.

HOGG & DELAMATER'S IRON FOUNDRY commenced operations in 1835, for the manufacture of steam engine boilers and machinery. Capital invested, $80,000. Number of hands, 150. Average wages per day, $1.38. Hours of labor, 10. Material consumed per annum, $100,000. Value manufactured, $250,000.

COLUMBIAN FOUNDRY AND BURR MILL STONE MANUFACTORY.-This establishment was formerly known as McQueen's, and is the oldest of the kind in the United States. Capital invested, $45,000. Material consumed per year, $35,000. Value manufactured annually, $60,000. Number of hands, 60. Average wages, $1.25 per day.

THE WORKS OF THE NEW YORK AND SAUGERTIES WHITE LEAD COMPANY are situated in the village of Saugerties, on the west bank of the Esopus Creek, about a quarter of a mile above its mouth or entrance into the Hudson River. The main building is of stone, 200 feet by 50, four stories high, in addition to which there is a stone storehouse, and several frame buildings connected with the works. The factory was erected in 1829, is at present owned and carried on by an incorporated company, the capital of which is $90,000. They manufacture 1,500 tons of white lead annually, a part of which is ground, consuming in the latter process, 20,000 to 25,000 gallons of linseed oil. The water power by which the machinery is driven is supplied by the Esopus Creek, and has never been known to fail, even in seasons of the greatest drought. They employ about 60 hands, exclusive

of those employed in the making of kegs and casks, the yearly cost of which, for material and labor, is from $8,000 to $10,000. Labor paid $1 per day. The white lead manufactured by this company stands high in the market. James McCullough, 159 Front street, New York, is president of the company, and agent for the sale of the white lead.

THE IRON MOUNTAINS OF MISSOURI,

IRON MOUNTAIN, MISSOURI, November 17, 1846.

TO FREEMAN HUNT, ESQ., Editor of the Merchants' Magazine :

DEAR SIR,-Having promised you a few lines from some point of my journey, I think the present gives me sufficient inducements to send you this hasty sketch, for I can assure you that any man, without being a great enthusiast, like myself, and without having so great a predilection for studying nature's works and admiring them, cannot help being struck with surprise and awe at her stupendous deposit of one solid mineral,-the iron,which, for several miles, may be seen on the surface, and which, in one mountain, has been penetrated two hundred and fifty feet, and on the other ten feet, but to a much larger extent. Really, it is my opinion, that the Iron Mountain proper, and the Pilot Knob have enough material in their bowels to supply the world for a century. It is here that a furnace has been erected since last year. I then saw but one house, and now there are more than thirty already built, and the people in the neighborhood are flocking in for employment. The Iron Mountain is about six miles distant from the Pilot Knob, which is twice as high as the Iron Mountain proper, and I cannot help coming to the conclusion that both these mountains, although at present separated by a large valley or gulley, were at a remote period but one mountain, and that great volcanic actions have revolutionized this particular part of the country. On the side of the hill, or where at present the furnace stands, I observed, last year, at the depth of fifty feet, a bed of decomposed granite; but, on travelling towards Mine la Motte, I perceived many small and large boulders, or erratic blocks of granite, some as large as twenty-five feet, scattered all over the wild forests, and some of them forming small mounds, with the moss and grass grown over them, and the iron itself presents to the eye of the observer irregular and angular pieces, very smooth on the surface, as if it were once passed through the fire, and having an external fused appearance, and burnished black on the outside, but of a steel-grey color on the inside,the lumps varying from two inches to four feet, but not above, scattered promiscuously all over the surface of the mountain. On examining to the depth of ten feet, a little distance from the furnace, and more than half a mile from the summit, is found the same iron, of a smaller size, lying quite loose in the gravel. There cannot be found, in my view, a better example than this spot of the truth of the theory of Poulet Scrope, lately reproduced in the "Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation," (p. 34,) that the former shape of our globe being oval, and formed of granite, and that by the centrifugal fire the interior fused mass protruded and formed the volcanoes, and threw out with force most metals along with the granite, and were the first volcanic actions produced. I shall bring home with me some specimens of the iron ore and the granite, as I found them, lying separately in the loose grounds, and you will no doubt agree with me on this point.

Now, this Iron Mountain and Pilot Knob have enough material, as stated before, and furnish a better product than I have seen any where else. I perceived near the furnace, a pile of magnesian lime-stone, and a great quantity of round baskets, filled with charcoal, which are required with the ore in the furnace, for producing the fusion into pigs; and I aw two kinds of metal lying before the furnace, one kind is a solid white mass, equal to white metal, which is intended for forging purposes; and the other, a black heavy mass, for the use of foundries and machinery. The first is produced by an overcharge of mineral in the furnace, making it more compact; the latter by an increased heat. The material in

the Pilot Knob has never been used for casting purposes, but, some few years ago, edgetools were manufactured and forged from the crude ore. The quantity of pig iron produced at present is about ten tons per day, performed by four discharges in twenty-four hours, but the present furnace having given way, it must be replaced by a more substantial and larger one, which is estimated to produce twenty tons per day. The distance from the Iron Mountain to the landing on the Mississippi River, is 40 miles, and it costs but one-quarter of a cent per pound for transportation. I met twelve wagons, loaded with pig metal, each having four thousand pounds, and performing the trip in four days, at an expense of ten dollars each.

The Iron Mountain proper is about a mile and a half long, and about one mile broad,— or rather more than a section of land; while the Pilot Knob is twice as high as the Iron Mountain, but has not so much surface. Here you travel upon nothing but iron lumps as far as the eye can reach; there you see the whole top of the mountain forming one sheet of iron. Here they have penetrated but ten feet into the ground-the surface iron being all too large lumps-while, at the Pilot Knob, they have penetrated, on the summit and at the base, at least two hundred and fifty feet. The iron ore found here is of the richest kind, it yields at least 60 per cent of pig metal, and I saw but very few slugs lying about the furnace. At St. Louis, they prefer the pig iron from the Iron Mountain, to that of Tennessee. The company intend making, in a short time, 20 tons per day, or 7,500 tons per annum. It would pay a profit to export the ore to other States for smelting, where fuel is more abundant. The supply of the ore in this region is inexhaustible.

The Iron Mountain is one mile broad, four hundred and forty-four feet high, and three miles long. The lumps of iron increase in size ascending towards the summit. The Pilot Knob is the highest peak of mountains in the whole neighborhood, and cannot be less than fifteen hundred feet high; it is said to be a mile from the base to the summit, but this appears highly incredible. The iron ore is a micaceous oxide of iron, but not a magnetic oxide, as some former writers have called it.

From a careful calculation which I have made of the cubic feet of ore imbedded in the mountains, the quantity of pig iron may be put down at six hundred millions of tons. I have examined all the lead districts, and several copper mines; have seen cobalt, nickle, zinc, calamine, manganese, barytes, and a great many valuable minerals which this State produces, which I may refer to in a future communication.

I am, in haste, your friend,

LEWIS FEUCHTWANGER.

AUSTRALIAN COPPER ORE.

A vessel arrived in London, from Port Adelaide and the Cape of Good Hope, respectively, brought, in addition to a very extensive cargo, the large quantity of 600 tons weight of copper ore from the Australian port first mentioned, the production of the place. It is stated that there is a conical hill of copper near Mount Arden, in South Australia, which is reported to be literally a mass of copper that it would take ages to remove.

EXTRACTING SILVER FROM LEAD.

The mines of Wanlockhead, in Scotland, the property of his Grace, the Duke of Buccleuch, are now wrought with spirit and enterprise by the noble proprietor. At the smelt mills, refining apparatus for separating the silver from the lead ore has been erected. It was set in motion on October 12th, 1846, for the first time, when a plate of silver, 104 pounds weight, was extracted from the lead. The yield averages from 7 to 13 ounces of silver to one ton of lead, and the ore that yields the latter quantity may be considered among the richest specimens in Scotland.

ROCHESTER FLOUR MANUFACTURE AND TRADE.

The Rochester Daily Democrat furnishes the following statement of the quantity of flour shipped East from the city of Rochester, on the Erie Canal, for three seasons, as follows:—

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

The increase of the shipments in 1846 over 1845, is 21,814 barrels ; over 1844, 139,854 barrels. The quantity sent forward by railroad before the opening of navigation, and the amount that will go forward between the 1st of December and the 1st of January, together with the quantity consumed by 27,000 inhabitants, will show an aggregate of over 600,000 barrels manufactured in Rochester during the year.

Eighteen flouring-mills, containing 92 run of stone, were employed in the season of 1846. This force will be increased in 1847 by the addition of two new mills, and eight run of stone. Horace P. Smith has nearly completed a new mill, 65 feet by 45, and four stories high, on the site of the old Smith mills-which were destroyed by fire two or three years ago—which will be ready for operation early in the Spring of 1847. Mr. Thorn has commenced the erection of a new flouring-mill on the river, in rear of Barton & Belden's edge-tool factory, which will also be ready for business in the Spring. The amount of capital invested, and used directly in the flour business, cannot be less than $3,500,000. The State derives an annual revenue from this branch of manufactures of over $135,000. The following is a list of the mills, with the names of their occupants:

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

LEAD MINES AND TRADE OF THE WEST.

Dr. Owen, who was appointed by the government to make an examination of the mineral lands of Iowa and Wisconsin, states, as the result of his inquiries, that the region produces at this moment nearly as much lead as the whole of Europe, with the exception of Great Britain, and that it has indisputable capacities of producing as much lead as all Europe, Great Britain included.

The arrivals at New Orleans, annually, have been as follows, viz:

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

The lowest price obtained for lead sold in New York, within ten years, was 24 cents, twelve months' credit, and the highest 8 cents, sixty days-the former in 1830, and the latter in 1836.

MANUFACTURE OF RAILROAD IRON IN THE UNITED STATES.

It is stated in the Miners' Journal, that during the year 1844, the first bar of railroad iron was manufactured in the United States. We also learn, from the same source, that the following establishments are in operation, or almost completed :—

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

"Of the above-mentioned works, all are in operation, except four or five, which are now in process of construction, and nearly finished. It will be seen that they are of sufficient capacity to make 119,000 tons of railroad iron per annum, equal to 2,288 tons per week, or 382 tons per day. For a mile of railroad, with a heavy track, about ninety tons of iron are required. It will be seen, therefore, that iron enough can be manufactured in the United States to lay four miles per day, or twelve hundred miles per year. When we reflect that only two years have elapsed since the first ton of railroad iron was made in this country, it seems almost incredible that so much has been accomplished in so short a time.

"In producing the amount of railroad iron mentioned above, 300,000 tons of iron ore are used. It is impossible to state accurately the number of hands employed in manufacturing the iron from the time the ore is dug, until the rails are finished at the rolling mill. "Many thousands, however, are engaged in this department, and its prosperity is intimately connected with that of a large portion of the laboring classes in the State, and while it is estimated that five tons of coal are used in the manufacture of every ton of railroad iron, giving an aggregate of 595,000 tons of coal used for this purpose, nearly all of which is anthracite, the fact is sufficient to show the important relation which this branch of the iron business holds to the anthracite coal trade of Pennsylvania, and how disastrous would be the effects upon that trade, if these establishments should, from any cause, be compelled to suspend operations."

[blocks in formation]
« SebelumnyaLanjutkan »