"The best available history of the technology of American iron."--'Business History' "This long-needed book is the best one-volume work extant on how ferrous metals were manufactured before the industrial revolution swept across the United States in the late 19th century...The value of this informing study is enhanced by the quality of the maps, scale drawings and pictures."--'American Scientist' "A fascinating history of the iron industry...Gordon's strong interests in historic metallurgy and industrial archaeology provide a unique perspective that makes this a valuable addition to the literature."--Michigan Historical Review' "This book will, in many ways, stand alone. It gives broader coverage than any other work I know of, in terms both of the technologies and the geography of iron production; and it lays out the technologies in a manner that is better, more thorough, and more analytical than iron making treatises of the period. I particularly appreciate the way the author is capable of dealing with metallurgical and scientific data, as well as 'straight' historical information."--Larry Lankton, Science, Technology, and Society Program, Michigan Technological University
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1. Iron
Chapter 2. Ore, Fuel, and Other Natural Resources
Chapter 3. The Rise of American Iron, 1720-1860
Chapter 4. Smelting with Charcoal
Chapter 5. Converting Pig Iron to Wrought Iron
Chapter 6. Coal-Fired Blast Furnaces
Chapter 7. Steel
Chapter 8. Shaping Iron and Steel
Chapter 9. Iron Quality
Chapter 10. Ironmaking Eclipsed, 1860-1900
Chapter 11. The Industrial Archaeology of Iron
Appendix A. Metallography
Appendix B. Iron Production Data
Notes
Glossary
Essay on Early Treatises and Primary Sources
Index