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Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America
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BluLooperBluez
BluLooperBluez is starting
About half way through the Audiobook. Good book that provides non-bias context/history on how not only American steel but the discovery of steel and the refinement of the art changed the world and built America economically and culturally, in regards to business, to what is today.
Dec 12, 2024 11:35AM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

jimsgravitas
jimsgravitas is on page 252 of 304
Jul 21, 2023 01:58AM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

jimsgravitas
jimsgravitas is on page 236 of 304
Jul 20, 2023 08:38PM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

jimsgravitas
jimsgravitas is on page 214 of 304
Jul 20, 2023 05:46AM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

jimsgravitas
jimsgravitas is on page 180 of 304
Jul 19, 2023 04:04AM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

jimsgravitas
jimsgravitas is on page 162 of 304
Jul 18, 2023 10:04PM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

jimsgravitas
jimsgravitas is on page 146 of 304
Jul 17, 2023 10:05PM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

jimsgravitas
jimsgravitas is on page 137 of 304
Jul 17, 2023 06:14AM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

jimsgravitas
jimsgravitas is on page 102 of 304
Jul 16, 2023 04:57AM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

Ralph Conte
Ralph Conte is on page 150 of 304
Jan 27, 2021 08:14AM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

Jean Bonilla
Jean Bonilla is on page 188 of 304
I always thought it was because people stood in front of some massive open kind of fireplace, poking at the steel with an implement of some sort! That’s what the pictures look like!
Aug 15, 2020 04:30PM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

Jean Bonilla
Jean Bonilla is on page 188 of 304
I never knew why they were called “open hearth furnaces!” Apparently, liquid pig iron poured into the furnace rises no more than 3 feet from the lowest level of the floor and is exposed to 70 foot horizontal flames alternately roaring out of nozzles from either end wall - hence the name “open (exposed to flame) hearth furnace.”
Aug 15, 2020 04:28PM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

Jean Bonilla
Jean Bonilla is on page 182 of 304
Back on page 153 is an odd description of the L Blast Furnace: Larger than central downtown Baltimore itself, it rises 300 feet and peaks in a wave of pipes, gantries, ducts, blow off valves, and pressure lines that from a distance resemble a bride with flowers in her hair and a tumble of lace falling about her head.
Aug 15, 2020 09:39AM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

Jean Bonilla
Jean Bonilla is on page 165 of 304
When I went to Sparrow’s Point, I remember it being dark and depressing. Men stood around waiting for something to do, i.e., they could undertake their own task until the previous worker finished his. I have always described it as a classic example of workplace inefficiency.
Aug 15, 2020 08:26AM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

Jean Bonilla
Jean Bonilla is on page 147 of 304
Really interesting account of creating taconite pellets in Minnesota and shipping them to Cleveland. I knew that the Lakes were tricky for shipping, but didn’t realize how dangerous they are.
Aug 11, 2020 07:00PM 1 comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

Jean Bonilla
Jean Bonilla is on page 102 of 304
Aug 10, 2020 06:27PM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

Jean Bonilla
Jean Bonilla is on page 65 of 304
Post steel-making days, Carnegie went on to give away 90% of his wealth in the form of libraries, concert halls, church organs, foundations, and pension funds - even pensions for the strikers of 1892.
Aug 09, 2020 07:53PM 1 comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

Jean Bonilla
Jean Bonilla is on page 63 of 304
Carnegie called his rival, John D. Rockefeller, “Reck-a-fellow.”
Aug 09, 2020 07:44PM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

Jean Bonilla
Jean Bonilla is on page 61 of 304
Strike at Homestead steel works by Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel, and Tin Workers. Broken by the Pinkerton National Detective Agency and is the origin of “fink” as the term for industrial spy or strikebreaker. Corruption of “pink.”
Aug 09, 2020 07:42PM 1 comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

Jeff Renton
Jeff Renton is on page 215 of 304
Oct 21, 2017 11:12AM Add a comment
Steel: From Mine to Mill, the Metal that Made America

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