History of the

Chateaugay Ore and Iron Company

Page 3

Blue Gray Line

              
 
              About 1880 the Company re-opened the 81 mine, which was located
         a short distance east of Williamstown (now Standish) , to supply ore to the
         forges located on the Saranac River, at Clayburg, a distance of approximately
         11 miles.  A separator containing the latest types of roasting; stamping, screen-
         ing and jigging equipment was built on the brook.  The concentrated ore from
         the mill was loaded into wagons and hauled over a plank road, which had been
         recently built for that purpose, to Clayburg.  However, within a year, the
         forges and equipment were moved to Williamstown (Standish), and in 1881
         the first forge began operations near the site of the Company's present modern
         blast furnace.
 
              The new location was ideal, for it was in the heart of what seemed to be
         an almost endless supply of wood for charcoal, and only four miles from the
         terminus of the Chateaugay Railroad.
 
              In this same year, 1881, the Chateaugay Ore and Iron Company was
         incorporated, and purchased the properties of the Chateaugay Ore Company,
         the Chateaugay Iron Company, a furnace at Plattsburg, and the Chateaugay
         Railroad Company. The Delaware and Hudson Canal Company became closely
         identified with the new Company at this time.
 
              By 1883 the mines and mills were producing concentrated ore for some
         60 forges in Clinton and Essex counties.  At Belmont, 20 forge fires were
         running, the largest Catalan forge in the country, besides a six-fire forge at
         Standish, and a charcoal blast furnace at Plattsburg.  Lyon Mountain had
         grown from a few shacks in the wilderness to a thriving community of some
         3,000 inhabitants, the busiest spot in Clinton county.  Nearly a million dollars
         had been expended in the purchase of machinery and equipment, for even then
         those dauntless pioneers, Williams and Weed, realized the wealth and future
         possibilities which lay in this wonderful bed of iron ore.
 
              Improved mining methods and machinery were constantly being introduced,
         and as the market demanded it, the output was rapidly increased.  This,
         of course, necessitated a like increase in milling capacity.  As a result, new mills
         were erected at strategic points on the most convenient brook.
 
                             Just below the Williams Pit, No. 3 Separator, with roasting, stamping
                        and jigging equipment, was built, and at Bradley Pond outlet, No.4 Separator,
                        complete with all equipment, was erected to handle the ore from Parkhurst
                        Shaft.  Every ton of ore was immediately turned into iron which, it seems, was
                        rapidly marketed.
 
                             The method of mining at this time, which was continued for some years,
                        was to sink shafts on the dip of the vein to a depth of about 300 feet, and at
                        intervals, along the strike (i. e., the general longitudinal direction of the vein)
                        of about 250 feet.  Levels were opened into the ore on both sides of each shaft
                        every 50 feet, leaving a small pillar to protect the shaft.  After the ore was
                        blasted, it was loaded into wheelbarrows, wheeled out to the shaft, dumped into
                        the skip and hoisted to the surface.  The rich lump ore was sorted out by hand
                        on the surface, and shipped direct to the steel mills for use in the open hearth and
                        puddling furnaces.
                             As the demand and production of iron increased, so it was with the con-
                        sumption of charcoal, and in the ensuing years it became necessary to tap still
                        further the forests in order to obtain an adequate supply of wood for the making
                        of charcoal.  In the year 1885, the Company began the erection of a blast
                        furnace at Standish, extending the railroad from Lyon Mountain to that point,
                        and later to Loon Lake, as a part of its plant facility, in order to reach the
                        furnace, charcoal kilns and woodlands that it owned.
 
                             In the year 1886, the Catalan forges at Standish were temporarily aban-
                        doned, and the making of pig iron commenced in the new blast furnace, using
                        charcoal as fuel.  This resulted in the development of an entirely new market
                        for this product, pig iron being an entirely different product from bloom iron
                        produced by the Catalan forges.  However, steel making by the Bessemer pro-
                        cess was gaining by leaps and bounds in this country, and the Chateaugay Iron,
                        being extremely low in phosphorus, was in great demand.  Many additional
                        houses, a merchandising store, a school house and a church sprang up in the
                        village, and Standish began to make industrial history.
 
                             The Company continued to make pig iron at Standish, and bloom iron
                        at Belmont, until the year 1893.  The major depression of that period having
                        gotten well underway by this time, the Company, in order to consolidate its
                        operations at one point and close to its railroad, moved the forges from Belmont
                        to Standish, so that both bloom iron and pig iron could be made at that point
                        and shipped to market by rail.
 
               The slump in the iron business continued for several years, due to the
         depression, and when the revival of industrial activity began to show itself in
         the late '90s, there came a great demand for the ore, as well as the iron.  A com-
         paratively new device for separating the ore came into the market about this time,
         known as the Ball and Norton Magnetic Separator.  With this machine, it was
         possible to make a concentrate running 60 per cent iron, with a tailing of only
         7 per cent iron, at the rate of ten tons per hour per machine.  The separator at
         Lyon Mountain was enlarged, and a number of these machines installed, with
         very good results.
 
              As steel making by the Bessemer process, and wrought iron making by
         the puddling process, increased, the demand for Catalan forge blooms decreased,
         not on account of quality, but because these new processes could make wrought
         iron and steel which would serve the purpose at the time for less than half the
         cost of Catalan forge blooms.  As a result, the American Bloomery, which for
         many years had been the backbone of the iron and steel industry of the country,
         was doomed.
 
              The Company subsequently abandoned its Catalan forge operations and
         continued making low phosphorus pig iron in the blast furnace, using charcoal
         as fuel, and also continued to ship concentrates and lump ore from its mines at
         Lyon Mountain,
 
              By now, it was obvious that the Chateaugay Ore Beds were very exten-
         sive, this having been proven by openings on the outcroppings for a distance of
         several miles, and to a considerable depth, all of the ore being of the same char-
         acter and purity.  Because of the exceptional quality of the ore and the iron, the
         demand continued to increase, and it became evident that the property should
         be operated on a much larger scale.
 
              At this time, The Delaware and Hudson Company had a considerable
         financial interest in the Chateaugay Ore and Iron Company.  After having
         a study of the property made, President Willcox, of The Delaware and Hudson
         Company, recommended to its Board of Managers that they take over the
         Chateaugay Company and operate it.  On July 29, 1903, the Board of
         Managers of The Delaware and Hudson Company authorized that procedure.
 
              The narrow gauge railroad, which meanwhile had been extended to
         Lake Placid, was promptly supplanted by a substantial, standard gauge road.
         At the same time, wherever possible, grades and curvature were reduced to make
         possible the heavy movements of iron ore which were contemplated from the
         property, and which subsequently took place.
 
              A large steam power plant was built, and two 500 K. W. electrical
         generators were installed to furnish electric power for the electric motors, which
         were installed in place of steam-driven engines, at isolated points, and also for
         additional electro-magnetic separators.  There were also installed two Laidlaw
         Dunn air compressors, to insure an ample supply of compressed air for the
         drilling machines in the mine.
 
              Because of the tremendous amount of charcoal used by the blast furnace,
         the increasing difficulty of securing a sufficient supply, and the fact that by this
         time coke had replaced charcoal in most of the blast furnaces in the country, and
         could be secured at a much lower cost, the Standish Furnace was changed from a
         charcoal to a coke furnace.
 
              Between the years 1903 and 1907, a great deal was done in the way of
         replacing much of the light equipment with heavier and more substantial equip-
         ment.  The output of ore and pig iron was considerably increased.
 
              Then, in 1907, came the new President, Mr. L. F. Loree, with many
         years of scientific engineering and practical experience behind him.  A new
         separator, which was badly needed, was completed in this year, equipped with
         the latest improved magnetic separators, crushing and screening equipment, and
         did excellent work.  Unfortunately, it was destroyed by fire the following year,
         which made it necessary to use the old No.2 Separator, which had been closed
         down.
 
              A well defined plan of study of the property was immediately put into
         action by the President.  This included a magnetrometric and geological survey,
         diamond drilling, chemical analyses, and surveying and mapping the mine
         workings.  The results of this study revealed that the Chateaugay Ore beds
         were tremendous in size, containing an almost endless supply of iron ore, prac-
         tically free from Sulphur and Phosphorus.
 
              It took several years to complete the above mentioned exploration work,
         during which time the Company's mines and blast furnace operated continually.
         In 1914, plans were made for the development of the ore body on a large scale,
         which included a new hoisting shaft, to be 1,600 feet deep, with steel headframe
         and modern electrically-driven hoisting equipment.
 
              This work was well under way, and the shaft down 900 feet, when the
         demands for Chateaugay iron and iron ore became so great, on account of the
         war, that it was necessary to postpone the development work, in order to con-
         centrate all activities on production.
 
              In 1917, it became necessary to build a new separator, because the old
         No.2 Separator was beginning to fail badly, on account of the many years it
         had been standing.  The new separator was completed and put in operation
         by the fall of 1918.
 
              In 1919, when the demands of the war had eased up considerably, it
         was decided to proceed with the development of the mine.  The No. 1 Shaft,
         which had been sunk to a depth of 900 feet, was extended to a depth of 1,685
         feet, with four compartments; one for pipe and ladderways, one for men and
         supplies, and two for hoisting ore, all enclosed in steel and concrete.
 
              Levels were opened east and west on the strike of the vein, at intervals
         varying from 150 feet to 300 feet, depending on the nature and character of the
         vein.  Stopes were opened up, and electric locomotives installed, and by 1924
         all of the mining operations were confined to the new No.1 Shaft.

                In 1921, it became necessary to make repairs and changes at the Standish
         Furnace, which included a new hearth and bosh, skip hoist and stock bins, pig
         casting machine, and a 25,000 cubic foot Turbo blower.  In this connection,
         a sintering plant was built at Lyon Mountain, in order to sinter the concentrates
         for the furnace, and also to make additional sintered ore to be sold.
 
              In May, 1924, the separator, which had been completed in 1918, was
         destroyed by fire.  It had been intended to make this separator building entirely
         fireproof, but due to the difficulty in obtaining materials on account of the war,
         and the urgent need of the new separator because of the failure of the old No.2
         Separator, it had become necessary to use considerable wood in the construction
         of the interior of the building.
 
              Plans were made, and work immediately started, on the building of a
         new and larger separator and concentrating plant, which was built entirely of
         steel and concrete, making it absolutely fireproof.  This was completed and put
         in operation in June, 1925.
 
              By the year 1925, the plants and equipment of the Company were
         modern in every way, including a well developed mine, with one main hoisting
         shaft, with steel headframe and concrete and steel hoist house; a large and
         modern concentrating plant, both built of steel and concrete, being absolutely
         fireproof; at the furnace, a skip hoist and bins, pig casting machine, turbo
         blower, a cooling system and a revolving distributor.  The subsequent years
         have been devoted entirely to operating the plant and marketing the products.
shaft34.jpg  pg 72 

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Rod Bigelow
Box 13  Chazy Lake
Dannemora, N.Y. 12929
rodbigelow@netzero.net
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