Edison Ore-Milling Company
|
Industry
| Mining
|
---|
Founded
| 1881
; 143 years ago
(
1881
)
|
---|
Founder
| Thomas Edison
|
---|
Defunct
| 1899
(
1899
)
|
---|
Products
| Iron ore
|
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The
Edison Ore-Milling Company
was a venture by
Thomas Edison
that began in 1881. Edison introduced some significant technological developments to the
iron ore
milling industry but the company ultimately proved to be unprofitable. Towards the end of the company's life, Edison realized the potential application of his technologies to the
cement
industry and formed the
Edison Portland Cement Company
in 1899.
History
[
edit
]
Beginnings
[
edit
]
Edison had recognized the scarcity of iron ore in the 1870s,
[1]
particularly in the east of the United States. His developments in the field of
electricity
meant that he had sufficient finances to invest in other projects. Discovering that beach
sand
contained relatively high deposits of
iron
,
[1]
he decided to form the Edison Ore-Milling Company in 1881.
[2]
He patented a method of extracting the metal using a large
electromagnet
after developing the process in an addition to his laboratory. The remaining deposits of iron in the eastern side of the United States were of poor quality, and the difficulty in separating it from the rock and other debris made it unprofitable. Edison believed that his method was a cheaper alternative, allowing him to keep costs down.
[3]
William Kennedy Dickson
had been put in charge of much of the laboratory and further refined the techniques along with mining expert
John Birkinbine
.
[1]
However, Edison's iron was competing with the rich iron ore of the
Iron Range
and sales were not sufficient to bring in a profit and the operation was closed down after just a few years.
[2]
[3]
Edison operated an iron mine in the Franklin-Sterling Hill Mining District
[4]
near
Ogdensburg, New Jersey
under the New Jersey and Pennsylvania Concentrating Co. The Edison mine exploited a large low-grade magnetite deposit which had been mined since the 1770s,
[4]
which Edison and his engineers ground and concentrated.
[5]
Refocusing
[
edit
]
After a short time away from the industry, Edison decided to return, adapting his methods to crush rocks brought up directly from a
mine
. He opened a plant in
Bechtelsville
,
Pennsylvania
near to existing iron mines as a trial before building one of the world's largest ore-crushing mills in the world at the time in
Ogdensburg
,
New Jersey
. Completed in 1889, the factory contained three giant electromagnets and was intended to process up to 1200 tons of iron ore every day. This mill pulverized the large chunks of ore that came directly from the mine. There was other equipment to re-refine what was left over to extract even more ore.
[6]
However, technical difficulties repeatedly thwarted production.
[3]
Edison formed the
Edison General Electric Company
in 1890 but it only lasted two years, merging in 1892 with the
Thomson-Houston Electric Company
to form the
General Electric Company
. He redirected his interest back to iron ore, having high hopes for what he could achieve: "I'm going to do something now so different and so much bigger than anything I've ever done before people will forget that my name ever was connected with anything electrical."
[1]
[3]
That year, he closed the Ogdensburg plant for upgrades, using the sale of stocks in General Electric to install new equipment that would be able to output even more iron ore. He made changes to the ore-crushing machinery, installing huge rollers capable of turning out much larger quantities of ore.
[6]
When it reopened, the earlier problems persisted and Edison once again had difficulties finding customers.
[3]
Sale and a change of industry
[
edit
]
Eventually, Edison realized that the company was a failure, shutting it down in 1899. Edison commented about the financial losses, "it's all gone, but we had a hell of a good time spending it."
[3]
The manufacturing process produced a large quantity of waste sand, which the company sold on to cement manufacturers. The properties of the sand were particularly suitable for cement, leading to a harder, more durable product.
[7]
Selling off the ore-crushing technology to mine owners,
[3]
Edison decided to switch to the cement business, reusing some of the technology he had developed for ore-milling.
[7]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
d
Woodside, Martin.
Thomas A. Edison: The Man Who Lit Up the World
. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc., 2007. pp. 73?74.
- ^
a
b
The Life of Thomas A. Edison
.
American Memory
. Accessed September 24, 2011.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
Edison and Ore Refining
.
IEEE
Global History Network. August 3, 2009. Accessed September 24, 2011.
- ^
a
b
"Ogden Iron Mine Ogdensburg, New Jersey"
. Retrieved
July 9,
2022
.
- ^
"Edison Mine, Sparta Township, Sussex County, New Jersey, USA"
.
mindat.org
. Mindat
. Retrieved
July 5,
2022
.
- ^
a
b
"Edison and Ore Refining"
.
ETHW
. 2017-04-12
. Retrieved
2023-03-05
.
- ^
a
b
Cement
,
The Edison Papers
. March 31, 2010. Accessed September 24, 2011.
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