This is a list of 19th-century iron smelting operations in Australia.
The earliest commercial iron ore smelting took place in 1848. There was an increase in pig iron prices in the early 1870s, which led to the formation of a number of colonial-era iron-making ventures in Australia. A world-wide shortage caused the price of imported pig-iron to increase, from £4 10s per ton in 1870 to £9 per ton in 1873 [1] greatly advantaging locally manufactured iron. This period has been called, 'Australia's age of iron.' However, the high prices did not last long, as global iron-making capacity increased, and pig-iron was once again imported cheaply as ballast in sailing ships returning from England to Australia. After 1884, there was no commercial iron smelting in Australia, until William Sandford built a modern blast furnace at Lithgow in 1907.
Trial smelting took place in foundries, typically using existing cupola furnaces usually used to melt iron to manufacture castings. Such furnaces could be adapted to make pig iron if charged with iron ore, coke or charcoal, and some limestone as a flux.
Foundry location | Company / Foundry | Period of operation | Production achieved | Client / Source of ore |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mittagong | Fitzroy Iron & Coal Mining Company | Around July 1858 | 16 hundredweight trial smelting. Pig iron was made in a 'blast furnace' that was probably an adapted foundry cupola furnace. [2] [3] | Ore from Mittagong. |
Gawler | Phoenix Foundry, | c. 1871 | Small quantity of iron, some of which still survives in a commemorative fence in Murray St, Gawler. [4] [5] | Ore from Barossa |
131 King Street, Melbourne | Railway Foundry, owned by Drysdale and Fraser | November 1872 | Two bells, seven 'pigs' weighing 2-stone (12.7 kg) and one pig weighing 3-hundredweight (152 kg), [6] and "half-a-dozen 18lb. [8.2 kg] cannon balls". [7] A total of around 400 kg of iron was made. | Ilfracombe Iron Company, Tasmania |
October 1873 | Half a ton. [8] | Ore from near Maldon Victoria, almost certainly from Victorian Iron Company. | ||
June 1874 | Unknown quantity [9] | Ore from a location "within 70 miles of Melbourne, and not more than a quarter of a mile from a main line of railway"; almost certainly ore from Lal Lal Iron Company | ||
Victoria (Precise location uncertain) | (Uncertain, possibly the foundry as above.) | Late 1875 | Unknown quantity. [10] | From an ore deposit at Tarrengower, just west of Maldon, Victoria |
Ballarat | Union Foundry | November 1873 | More than one ton. [11] | Lal Lal Iron Company |
Mittagong | Brazenall and Son | Late 1889 | Local iron ore was smelted in a small furnace capable of smelting 5 hundredweight of iron. Made cast iron pipe samples and pigs. | Ore from Mittagong |
20 Erskine Street, Sydney | Halliday's Engine Works | July 1891 | Smelted half a hundredweight of ore, under the direction of William Brazenall. [12] | Ore from Tasmania |
Direct reduction furnaces operate at temperatures below the melting point of iron and make a semi-solid product known as sponge iron. with molten slag as the waste product.
Smelter Location | Company | Period of operation | Production achieved | Cause of end of production and fate |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mittagong, New South Wales | Fitz Roy Iron Mine | 1848 to 1851 | Small quantities. [13] [14] made in a small | Expansion of the works |
Fitz Roy Iron Mine Company | To September 1852 | 2 tons made in a Catalan forge. [16] | Tilt hammer used to make wrought iron broke ending production | |
Fitz Roy Iron & | 1855 - 1856 | 3 tons [17] made in a | Financial problems. Later became site of first blast furnace in Australia. | |
Andersons Creek, Northern Tasmania | Tasmanian Charcoal Iron Company | 18 April 1873 | Very small quantity | The direct-reduction furnace failed due to extreme heat. The venture became the British and Tasmanian Charcoal iron Company, and subsequently built a blast furnace at Redbill Point. |
Blast furnaces operate at temperatures above the melting point of iron and make molten pig iron, with molten slag as the waste product. In the 19th century, furnaces used either hot-blast technology—like modern blast furnaces, in which the blast air is preheated to a high temperature—or the older cold-blast technology.
There were both cold-blast and hot-blast furnaces in 19th-century Australia. With only one exception—British and Tasmanian Charcoal Iron Company—all the furnaces were originally built as cold-blast furnaces. A cold air blast made it more difficult—but not impossible—to achieve a furnace temperature that allowed molten pig iron and slag to be run from the furnace, avoiding what was known as a 'chilled hearth'. Cold-blast technology was used successfully in some colonial-era blast furnaces—notably the two furnaces at Lal Lal—but it could not be made to work reliably in others. Some furnaces that were initially designed as cold blast—the Fitzroy Iron Works, Tamar Hematite Iron Company, and Lithgow Valley Ironworks—soon switched, with relative success, to hot-blast technology. [20] [21] With the exception of the modified blast furnace at the Fitzroy Iron Works, none of the furnaces recycled furnace off-gas as a fuel source.
Blast furnace location | Company | Period of operation | Production achieved | Cause of end of production and fate |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mittagong, New South Wales | Fitzroy Iron Works Company | 30 July 1864 to January 1866 | 80 tons (cold blast) [22] 2,394 tons | Deposits, referred to as 'scaffolding', built up inside Australia's first blast furnace. It was modified and later used again in 1876-1877. |
Fitzroy Bessemer Steel, Hematite, Iron and Coal Company | 5 February 1876 to 16 March 1877 | 3,273 tons [24] made in a hot-blast furnace | Inability to compete with imported iron on price. | |
Near Bookham, New South Wales | Bogolong Iron Mining Company | 31 March 1874 to 20 May 1874 | 9 iron pigs made in a small cold-blast furnace (samples only) [27] [28] [29] | Failure of the furnace. Venture did not proceed beyond a trial. Abandoned furnace still stands on private land. |
Lithgow, New South Wales | Lithgow Valley Ironworks (later Eskbank Ironworks) | October 1875 to 1882 | 18,000 tonnes [30] mainly made in a hot-blast furnace. The furnace was converted to hot blast in 1877. | Iron-making was uneconomic at prevailing iron prices. The furnace was demolished in 1882. The rest of the ironworks continued in operation, rerolling scrap iron. [31] Became site of Australia's first modern blast furnace in 1907 |
Mount Pleasant, New South Wales | Patrick Lahiff, of lllawarra Coal Co. at Mount Pleasant Colliery | 1872 [32] to c.1882 (sporadically) | 10 tons, made in a small experimental blast furnace, using local clayband ore and coke made from local coal. [33] | The company changed its name to Mt. Pleasant Coal and Iron Co., in 1888 but, up to 1894, failed to obtain investment for a larger furnace, due to limited ore supplies and the unsuccessful outcomes of earlier iron-making ventures. [33] [34] |
Hindmarsh Tiers (near Mount Jagged) | South Australian Iron and Steel Company | 16 July 1874 to 5 Dec 1874. | 40 tons [35] made in a cold-blast furnace. | Inability to operate its furnace reliably. Land and assets sold in 1876. |
A tributary of Middle Arm Creek, Tasmania | Ilfracombe Iron Company | November 1873 to December 1873 | Possibly 12 iron pigs (total 2 tons), but more likely none. [36] | Inability to achieve reliable furnace operation. It remains doubtful that any iron at all was produced. Remains of the blast furnace still exist on private land. |
Middle Arm Cove, (near modern-day Beaconsfield) Tasmania | Tamar Hematite Iron Company | 2 January 1875 to July 1875 | 600 tons made in a cold-blast furnace that had been converted to hot-blast. [37] [38] [39] | Lack of economies of scale and price competition. Plans to build a larger furnace did not eventuate. Gold was found within the company's mining lease. Any remnants of the furnace were buried under gold mining tailings in 1980s. |
Redbill Point, (modern-day Beauty Point) Tasmania | British and Tasmanian Charcoal Iron Company | 27 May 1876 to August 1877 | 6,000 tons made in a hot-blast furnace. | Excessive chromium content of the iron ore and pig iron. Furnace and other equipment sold, in 1883 and 1885, and reused for other purposes. Slag can still be found near the furnace site. |
Battery Point, | Derwent Iron Company (Tasmania) | July 1874 and November 1874 | > 1.5 tons [40] made in a cold-blast furnace. | Initially, a mismatch in furnace capacity and blast capacity. Finally, lack of economies of scale, and uneconomic at prevailing iron prices. Furnace demolished. |
Maldon, Victoria | Victorian Iron Company | 1873 | Approximately one ton made in a small brick furnace. [33] [41] | Unknown. |
Lal Lal, Victoria | Lal Lal Iron Company | 19 October 1875 to January 1876 | 127 tons made in its first cold-blast furnace [42] | Equipment breakdown. Upgraded in 1878, including higher blast capacity. |
Lal Lal Iron Company (No Liability) | 18 October 1878 to 1879 | Unknown quantity made in the upgraded first blast furnace [43] | Furnace capacity too low to be economic. Demolished and replaced by second blast furnace. | |
Lal Lal Iron Company Limited | 20 March 1881 to June 1884 | 2260 tons made in the second cold-blast furnace [33] [44] [45] | Uneconomic at prevailing iron prices Remains of the second blast furnace still exist. |
These business ventures were established to smelt iron, but did not build furnaces.
Proposed location | Company | Dates of activity | Proposed operations that were never built | Reason for demise |
---|---|---|---|---|
Northern Tasmania | Swedish Charcoal Iron Company | c.1872 | Iron ore mine and blast furnace, in the same district as other similar iron smelting ventures of the same period. | Venture never went beyond issuing a prospectus.. |
Near Wallerawang, New South Wales | Great Western Iron Works / Great Western Iron & Coal Company / Partners including Enoch Hughes | c.1873 | Blast furnace and coke ovens to exploit the iron ore, coal and limestone deposits near Wallerawang. [46] [47] The site near Wallerawang was, in the eyes of experts at the time, a uniquely promising location for an iron and steelworks. Despite this and a later attempt (see below), nothing was ever built there. [48] [49] | The partners who held the mining leases fell out with Enoch Hughes. [48] |
Near Wallerawang, New South Wales | A syndicate of English capitalists, organised by Joseph Mitchell. | c. 1890 to 1897 | Large iron and steel works based on a contract for steel rails with the N.S.W. Government. [50] [51] [52] The Illawarra was considered as a site, but final plans were for a works near Pipers Flat railway station, using deposits of iron ore, coal and limestone, all located in the vicinity. [53] [54] | Death of its main backer, Joseph Mitchell. [55] |
A blast furnace is a type of metallurgical furnace used for smelting to produce industrial metals, generally pig iron, but also others such as lead or copper. Blast refers to the combustion air being supplied above atmospheric pressure.
Lithgow is a town in the Central Tablelands of New South Wales, Australia and is the administrative centre of the City of Lithgow local government area. It is located in a mountain valley named Lithgow's Valley by John Oxley in honour of William Lithgow.
Lysaght was founded in 1880 by John Lysaght as a subsidiary to the company John Lysaght and Co. The company pioneered modern steel coating technologies (galvanization). Its coated steel building products were sold under the 'ORB' brand and contributed to Australian architectural style.
William Sandford was an English-Australian ironmaster, who is widely regarded as the father of the modern iron and steel industry in Australia.
The Fitzroy Iron Works at Mittagong, New South Wales, was the first commercial iron smelting works in Australia. It first operated in 1848.
Thomas Brown was a Scottish-born Australian politician.
The Lithgow Blast Furnace is a heritage-listed former blast furnace and now park and visitor attraction at Inch Street, Lithgow, City of Lithgow, New South Wales, Australia. It was built from 1906 to 1907 by William Sandford Limited. It is also known as Eskbank Ironworks Blast Furnace site; Industrial Archaeological Site. The property is owned by Lithgow City Council. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999.
Lal Lal Iron Mine and Smelting Works were located close to the western branch of the Moorabool River, near the town of Lal Lal, Victoria, Australia, which lies on the Geelong-Ballarat railway line about 19 km from Ballarat. From 1875 to 1884, pig iron was made there in a blast furnace using iron ore mined at the site, locally produced charcoal, and limestone from a nearby deposit. The works ultimately proved to be uneconomic. It remains the only attempt to establish an iron smelting industry in Victoria.
Enoch Hughes was an English-born iron-master and pioneer of the iron industry in both Australia and New Zealand. Migrating to Australia, at a time when there was little technical knowledge of the iron industry in the colonies, Hughes became an influential figure, largely because he was self-confident in his own abilities, a tireless worker, and an avid self-promoter. While he was associated with many iron industry ventures—both successful and unsuccessful ones—he is remembered particularly for his time at the Eskbank Ironworks. He was also a significant figure in the brick-making industry of New South Wales.
The Onehunga Ironworks was a colonial-era iron smelting and rolling operation at Onehunga, on the Manukau Harbour,. It was at one time claimed to be the largest ironworks in the Southern Hemisphere. It is significant, both as the first large scale attempt to exploit New Zealand's iron-sand by direct reduction, and as a precursor of the modern steel industry of New Zealand.
The Bogolong iron mine and blast furnace is an abandoned iron mining and smelting site, near Bookham, New South Wales, Australia. Located in an area known best for sheep grazing and wool, it has been called Australia's 'forgotten furnace'. In 1874, the blast furnace produced a small amount of pig iron—sufficient to allow its testing—that was smelted from iron ore mined nearby. Plans to operate commercially did not eventuate. It is significant as one of the only three remaining ruins of 19th-Century iron-smelting blast furnaces in Australia, and the only one in New South Wales.
The British and Tasmanian Charcoal Iron Company (BTCIC) was an iron mining and smelting company that operated from 1874 to 1878 in Northern Tasmania, Australia. It was formed by floating the operations of a private company, the Tasmanian Charcoal Iron Company that operated between 1871 and 1874.
The Tamar Hematite Iron Company (THIC) was an iron mining and smelting company that operated from April 1874 to December 1877, in the area close to the location of the modern-day township of Beaconsfield, Tasmania, Australia.
The Ilfracombe Iron Company (I.I.C.) was an iron mining and smelting company that operated in Northern Tasmania in 1873 and 1874. The company's operations included a blast furnace, ore mine, water wheel, village, and jetty. The I.I.C. rebuilt a disused timber-haulage tramway, terminating at Ilfracombe—now the southern part of modern-day Beauty Point—which it extended at both ends to reach its iron ore mine and its jetty. The ruin of its blast furnace is significant, as one of the only three such ruins of 19th-Century iron-smelting blast furnaces in Australia and the only one in Tasmania. It is the only remaining ruin—in Australia—of a 19th-Century blast furnace that had an iron shell.
The Wundowie charcoal iron and wood distillation plant manufactured pig iron between 1948 and 1981 and wood distillation products between 1950 and 1977, at Wundowie, Western Australia.
Eskbank House is a heritage-listed former mine owner's residence, iron and steel works manager's residence, school and boarding house and now museum, event venue and community resource centre at 70 Inch Street, Lithgow, City of Lithgow, New South Wales, Australia. It was designed by an unknown architect and built from 1841 to 1842 by Alexander Binning, a stonemason, using convict labour. It is also known as Eskbank House and Moveable Collections and Esk Bank House; The Grange. The property is owned by Lithgow City Council. The residence was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 24 August 2018.
Charles Henry Hoskins (1851-1926) was an Australian industrialist, who was significant in the development of the iron and steel industry in Australia.
Australian Iron & Steel was an Australian iron and steel manufacturer.
Sir Cecil Harold Hoskins (1889–1971) was an Australian industrialist associated with the iron and steel industry. He is notable mainly for the establishment of the steel industry at Port Kembla, the company Australian Iron & Steel, and its subsequent merger with BHP in 1935. He was also on the board of the Australian Mutual Provident Society for many years and was its chairman from 1947 to 1962. He is less well known for his involvement in centre-right political organisations and the scouting movement, and his interest in landscape gardens.
The South Australian Iron and Steel Company, officially South Australian Iron and Steel Company Limited, was a colonial era iron-making venture, located in the Hindmarsh Tiers, near Mount Jagged, in the upper reaches of the Hindmarsh River Valley, South Australia. Its blast furnace operated intermittently, over the period from 16 July to 5 December 1874.
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