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All the United States Pennsylvania Pine Swamp Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site

Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site

A well-preserved example of an early industrial operation in the northeastern United States.

Pine Swamp, Pennsylvania

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The front of the furnace. Slag and molten iron were drawn out here.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Interior of one of the houses.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Looking toward the workers’ houses from the vicinity of the Cast House.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Looking toward Hopewell Village from the path to the workers’ houses. Cast house on the left; stables on the right. The ironmaster’s house is behind the stables.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Restored blacksmith shop.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Restored blacksmith shop.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Ruins of experimental anthracite kiln.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Broken slag pieces from the furnace.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The waterwheel that drives the pistons.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The air duct into the furnace.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Pig iron ingots, the raw product of the furnace in later years.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Artist’s conception of an iron draw from the furnace in operation.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Making pig iron.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Cross-sectional drawing of the furnace in operation.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Inside the Cast House.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Inside the Cast House.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The Cast House.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The Cast House from the front.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The ironmaster’s mansion.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The ironmaster’s mansion.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Cast stoves in the museum at the Visitor Center.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Hopewell cast stove in the museum at the Visitor Center.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Map of the site.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Entrance to the Visitor Center.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
View from above of the large pistons (in the barrels) driven by the waterwheel, for air flow.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
View of the Cast House. The thick brick chimney on the left is the top of the furnace. Note the tile roof, to forestall fires from cinders dropping on the roof.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Housing for some of the workers at the site.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
The Cast House from above. Again, note the tile roof.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Another view of the causeway, looking toward the furnace and Cast House.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Causeway connecting the top of the furnace (to left) with the storage area for limestone, charcoal, and ore to the right.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Restored interior of a worker’s house.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Charging port at the top of the furnace. Iron ore, charcoal, and limestone were loaded here.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
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About

The northeastern United States does not leap to mind when iron mining is mentioned. However, small-scale iron mining in this area was common from colonial times up into the 19th century. Many of the operations could be even considered a cottage industry, with iron being extracted for local use by an individual blacksmith.

Hopewell Furnace, by contrast, was a large operation, a so-called "iron plantation" almost at a proto-industrial scale. It was active from 1771 through 1883 and furnished iron for both the Revolutionary War and the American Civil War. Its heart consisted of a furnace around 32 feet high and 22 feet square that had a cross-section something like an arrowhead pointing up. 

The furnace was charged with iron ore, charcoal, and limestone from the upper "point" end. Air was blown in near the base of the furnace, at first by large bellows and later by a piston system driven by a water wheel. With this airflow, the temperatures in the wide middle of the furnace reached around 3,000°F, at which point the reactions to produce molten iron could proceed. The limestone also reacted with any impurities in the ore to produce molten slag, basically glass.

The liquids would fall and collect at the bottom of the furnace. Molten slag and molten iron act like oil and water, with the slag floating on top of the iron, so they can be drawn off separately. The slag was discarded, while the iron was drained out into molds. In the early years cast iron objects were made, iron stoves in particular. By the time the operation shut down, however, raw ingots of so-called "pig iron" were the only product, as casting iron objects was no longer competitive.

The furnace was run 24 hours a day except for a maintenance shut-down about once a year. Iron was typically drawn off twice a day, about a ton at a time—a substantial output in those days. The iron ore was high quality, obtained from metamorphic rocks in the area.

Indeed, some of these deposits were worked until the 1970s. Limestone was also abundant locally. The charcoal was made from the local hardwood forests by means of charcoal kilns at the site. In the 1840s, the operation tried making coke from anthracite as an alternative, but that experiment foundered due to poor design and high transportation costs.

Hopewell Furnace finally shut down completely in 1883, as it could not compete with the large-scale consolidation of iron mining and smelting made possible by rail transportation of both raw materials and finished products. Charcoal had also become an obsolete technology, with newer operations using coke made from coal.

Related Tags

Mining Technology History & Culture Engineering

Know Before You Go

Hopewell Furnace is a National Park Service Historic Site, complete with a visitor center where you enter the site itself. Check the website for current entry fees. The main entrance, which is well-marked, is to the west off Pennsylvania State Route 345 where it intersects Hopewell Road.

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March 13, 2023

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Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site
Pine Swamp, Pennsylvania, 19520
United States
40.206072, -75.768116
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