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Downtown in Trenton in Mercer County, New Jersey — The American Northeast (Mid-Atlantic)
 

The Trenton Steel Works

The Colonial Art of Making Steel

 
 
The Trenton Steel Works Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Beverly Pfingsten, August 18, 2014
1. The Trenton Steel Works Marker
Inscription.
Making steel in the 18th century was a challenge, especially in America. Steel was essential for making edge tools, such as axes and scythes, and other items like bayonets, knives and the mechanisms for guns and clocks; yet the science of making steel was poorly understood. Most steel used in the American colonies was imported from England. Only a few Americans attempted to make steel, often with little success. The Trenton Steel Works, located at this site, was a rare example of colonial American steel manufacturing. From the late 1740s to the mid-1780s, the furnace produced steel of variable and sometimes questionable quality at irregular intervals.

Making Steel by the Cementation Process
The Trenton Steel Works employed a cementation furnace. The brick-lined furnace enclosed a chest in which lengths of bar iron were layered and packed with powdered charcoal and capped with sand. A fire was then lit beneath the chest, gradually heating the furnace to between 1560°F and 1830°F. The hot gases from the fire circulated around the chest, heading the iron and charcoal, and then passing up a flue and out a stack.

Inside the cementation chest, the red-hot bar iron absorbed carbon from the charcoal. Once the furnace reached the desired temperature, the fire had to be tended night and day to maintain the necessary. After five

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days or more, the converted iron was removed.

The product of the cementation furnace was called "blister" steel, so called because of its raised blistery appearance. Blister steel fresh from the furnace as of no use: it had to be hot worked and reduced in sections by forging under a water-powered hammer, then rolled into bars that could be sold to artisans who made tools and machines.

The Trenton steel furnace may have been similar to this example recorded in Sheffield in the mid-1760s. A. Furnace wall, B. Fire Chest, C. Cementation Chest, D. Hot Gas Chamber, E. Chamber Arch, F. Flue, G. Stack (G. Jars, Voyages Metallurgiques, 1774).

The Furnace House and Base
The cementation furnace was contained within a building that measured 31 feet by at least 36 feet, roughly matching the dimensions of the "house" given in a sale advertisement of 1765. Archaeologists uncovered the remains of the outer walls of the furnace house, standing in places up to two feet high and composed of locally quarried rock.

In the northeast corner of the furnace house was discovered the stone and brick base of the furnace itself. Walls of mortared stone linked the furnace base to the north wall of the furnace house. These most likely buttressed the furnace structure, offsetting the risk of collapse from repeated firings. Compared to examples found in England, the furnace was rather

The Trenton Steel Works Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Bill Coughlin, December 1, 2018
2. The Trenton Steel Works Marker
small, measuring only 10.5 feet by 9 feet in plan. The Trenton furnace is thought to have resembled a type of single-chest furnace documented by French metallurgist Gabriel Jars in Sheffield, England in 1765-66.

Archaeologists found no steel on the site. This was too precious a commodity not to have made its way to market. Furnace brick was recovered in abundance, along with pieces of the cast-iron furnace grate that would have covered the ash pit at the base of the structure.

The furnace house probable resembled the structure shown in this sketch of the Blackhall Mill furnace in Derwent Valley, England, produced in the 1750s (R.R. Angerstein's Illustrated Travel Diary, 1753-1755).

Trenton Steel in the Colonial Period
The first steel furnace was erected at this site by Trenton blacksmith Benjamin Yard sometime between 1745 and 1750. It was one of only five steel works in the American colonies in this latter year, when the British parliament inventoried the American iron and steel industry, seeking to control its growth and protect English metalworking interests.

Yard and subsequent owners received their bar iron from the furnaces and forges of northern New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania. Andover iron was especially well suited to steel manufacture. The bars were shipped down the Delaware in Durham boats and offloaded at the falls just a few hundred feet from

Marker in Trenton image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Bill Coughlin, December 1, 2018
3. Marker in Trenton
The remains of the Trenton Steel Works can be seen behind the marker.
the steel works site. The manufactured steel was then transported to Philadelphia and other eastern seaboard markets, by boat or by wagon.

In 1762, Yard sold the furnace to a pair of young Philadelphia Quaker merchants, Timothy Marlack and Owen Biddle. Both Matlack and Biddle are best known for their support of the American Revolution. Matlack, as Secretary to the Continental Congress, inscribed the copy of the Declaration of Independence that is on display at the Nation Archives. Biddle, a trained clockmaker and founding member of the American Philosophical Society, would have had an appreciation of the use of steel in precision instruments.

In 1770, John Pemberton, another Philadelphia Quaker merchant, acquired a half share in the steel works and retained his brother-in-law, John Zane, a member of a well-known Pennsylvania iron-making family, to run the works. Zane sold steel behind Pemberton's back, ran up debts and eventually disappeared, turning up a few years later in the Caribbean as a penniless carpenter. During this period, despite being claimed as "quite equal if not better in quality than what is imported from England," Trenton steel was of questionable caliber and sold with some difficulty.

Trenton Steel During the War Years
During the American Revolution, the Trenton Steel Works operated intermittently. In March 1776, a half ton of Trenton steel was

The Trenton Steel Works Remains image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Bill Pfingsten, August 18, 2014
4. The Trenton Steel Works Remains
supplied to the Continental Army in Albany. The furnace may have been damaged in the fall of 1777 at the same time that American troops rendered the nearby plating mill inoperable in order to keep it from falling into the hands of the British.

In July 1781, following Trenton merchant Stacy Potts's successful attempt to revive the furnace, the Trenton firm of Potts & Downing secured a contract with the U.S. government to convert Andover iron into steel. Potts & Downing failed to deliver fully on this contract, and by 1783 were in debt to one of their main suppliers of bar iron. The furnace managed to stay in operation through at least mid-1783, but several years of legal wrangling led to Stacy Potts losing most of his assets and moving west to Harrisburg to start a new life.
 
Erected by Petty's Run Archaeological Site. (Marker Number 6.)
 
Topics and series. This historical marker is listed in this topic list: Industry & Commerce. In addition, it is included in the Quakerism series list. A significant historical year for this entry is 1740.
 
Location. 40° 13.217′ N, 74° 46.154′ W. Marker is in Trenton, New Jersey, in Mercer County. It is in Downtown. Marker is on West State Street. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: Trenton NJ 08608, United States of America. Touch for directions.
 
Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within walking distance of this marker. Petty's Run (a few steps from this marker); West Front Street

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(a few steps from this marker); Front Street Paper Mill (a few steps from this marker); a different marker also named Petty's Run (a few steps from this marker); Changing Landscapes Along Petty's Run (within shouting distance of this marker); State House (within shouting distance of this marker); The Story of Trenton (within shouting distance of this marker); Old Steel Mill (within shouting distance of this marker). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Trenton.
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on February 16, 2023. It was originally submitted on December 3, 2014, by Bill Pfingsten of Bel Air, Maryland. This page has been viewed 683 times since then and 75 times this year. Photos:   1. submitted on December 3, 2014, by Bill Pfingsten of Bel Air, Maryland.   2, 3. submitted on December 2, 2018, by Bill Coughlin of Woodland Park, New Jersey.   4. submitted on December 3, 2014, by Bill Pfingsten of Bel Air, Maryland.

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Apr. 25, 2024