Quincy Smelter | |
Quincy Smelter site in July 2008 | |
Location | Ripley, Michigan |
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Coordinates | 47°07′31″N88°33′50″W / 47.12528°N 88.56389°W Coordinates: 47°07′31″N88°33′50″W / 47.12528°N 88.56389°W |
NRHP reference No. | 89001095 [1] |
Added to NRHP | February 10, 1989 |
The Quincy Smelter, also known as the Quincy Smelting Works, is a former copper smelter located on the north side of the Keweenaw Waterway in Ripley, Michigan. It is a contributing property of the Quincy Mining Company Historic District, a National Historic Landmark District. The smelter was built in 1898 by the Quincy Mining Company, operating from 1898 to 1931 and again from 1948 to 1971. The smelter was part of a Superfund site from 1986 to 2013.
The Quincy Mining Company incorporated in 1848. [2] Like other mines in the area, Quincy had its own stamp mills, but did not produce enough copper to justify the investment of operating its own smelter. Before 1860, when the Lake Superior Smelter opened in Hancock, copper was shipped out to be smelted in cities such as Boston or Detroit. [3]
By the late 1890s, the quantity of rock mined by Quincy justified the company building its own smelter. [4] In May 1898, the Quincy Mining Company started construction of the Quincy Smelter on the stamp sands of the old Pewabic mill; [5] Quincy had acquired the Pewabic Mining Company in 1891. [6] The shoreline was dredged and pilings were inserted for the loading dock. This was followed by laying foundations for the primary smelter buildings: the reverberatory furnace building and the cupola furnace building. By the end of 1898, over a dozen buildings had been built on the smelter site. [4] The smelter began operation on December 1, 1898. [5] The smelter was estimated to save the Quincy Mining Company approximately $100,000 per year. [7]
Aside from processing copper from the Quincy Mine, the smelter also did business with the Franklin, Adventure, Allouez, and Centennial mines. [8]
As a result of low copper prices and the onset of the Great Depression, the Quincy Mining Company ceased operations on September 22, 1931. [9] The company boarded up facilities including the smelter. [10] The mine itself remained closed from 1931 through 1936, until an increase in copper prices in 1937 prompted reopening the mine. [11] Instead of reopening the Quincy Smelter, smelting was handled by Calumet and Hecla. [12] Because prices remained elevated during World War II, in June 1942 Quincy built a reclamation plant on Torch Lake near its stamp mills to recover copper from the large volume of tailings in the lake. [13] The reclamation plant began operating in November 1943, [13] and made use of a floating dredge that vacuumed tailings from the lake. [12] With the end of the war, copper prices again decreased and the mine ceased operations permanently on September 1, 1945. [13] However, the reclamation project continued as it was very productive and less expensive than mining. [12] [13]
In June 1948, the Quincy Smelter reopened as Calumet and Hecla was no longer able to meet Quincy's needs. [12] Around the same time, the Copper Range Company closed the Michigan Smelter and contracted its smelting needs with Quincy. [14] Reclamation was interrupted twice: in January 1956 from the loss of one dredge in a storm, and for ten months in 1958. [12] After the loss of the first dredge, Quincy Dredge Number Two operated until the stamp sands were exhausted in 1967. [12] [14] Also in 1967, the last Copper Range mine, the Champion Mine, closed. [14] In 1968, natural gas burners were installed on the number 5 furnace for melting scrap copper until 1971. [15] In 1971, because of new environmental regulations from the state of Michigan, Quincy abandoned the smelter and transferred ownership to the Quincy Development Corporation. [16]
In 1986, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) placed the Torch Lake Superfund site on the National Priorities List, with the Quincy Smelter included as an Area of Concern. [17]
In 1999, Franklin Township acquired the smelter from the Quincy Development Corporation. [18] QDC had planned to build condominiums on the site and the township built a water tank for the project. However, QDC pulled out, and the township was given the smelter in lieu of payment for the tank. [19]
In 2004, the EPA took action to clean up and stabilize the smelter site. The agency removed laboratory chemicals and tested for asbestos. An 8-foot-tall (2.4 m) chain link fence was built around the site, and geotextile fabric and riprap were added to stabilize the shoreline. [20] In 2008, all the remaining asbestos from the site was removed (from a total of twelve buildings). [19] [20] One smokestack at the smelter was also removed in 2008 as it had become hazardous. [21]
Public tours of the smelter began as early as 2009. [22] In the first years, tours could not go inside the smelter buildings because of contamination and structure instability. [23]
As early as 2010, the National Park Service had plans to possibly move the mainland headquarters of Isle Royale National Park to the smelter site. [24]
In September 2010, a fire destroyed the carpentry shop and damaged a wood storage lean-to on the site. [18]
The Quincy Smelter was removed from the list of Superfund sites in 2013. [17]
In 2014, Keweenaw National Historical Park Advisory Commission purchased the smelter from Franklin Township. [25]
In late 2015, an ice house was demolished as it was affecting the pH of the surrounding groundwater. [26] [27]
In 2017, the National Park Service decided that it would not move the headquarters of Isle Royale National Park to the smelter site. [28]
The Quincy Smelter is the only remaining copper smelter in the United States from the early 20th century. [29] It is described by the EPA as the "best preserved copper smelter" in the United States, [30] and by the Keweenaw National Historical Park Advisory Commission as possibly the only remaining copper smelter in the world of its era. [29]
On February 10, 1989, the Quincy Mining Company Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and was named a National Historic Landmark District. [31] At the time of nomination, there were 25 contributing buildings and 15 non-contributing buildings in the historic district at the smelter site. [32] The smelter is also within the boundaries of the Keweenaw National Historical Park. [33]
In 2016, ASM International designated the Quincy Smelter as an ASM Historical Landmark. [34]
The Quincy Smelter site juts out from the shoreline of the Keweenaw Waterway, built on stamp sands from the former Pewabic mill. [35] [5] The smelter has two docks, a 350 feet (110 m) shipping wharf that was used for copper and a 250 feet (76 m) wharf used for coal deliveries. [8]
Most of the smelter buildings are built of Jacobsville Sandstone. [35]
Houghton is the largest city and county seat of Houghton County in the U.S. state of Michigan. Located on the Keweenaw Peninsula, Houghton is the largest city in the Copper Country region. It is the fifth largest city in the Upper Peninsula, with a population of 7,708 at the 2010 census. Houghton is the principal city of the Houghton micropolitan area, which includes all of Houghton and Keweenaw County.
Hancock is a city in Houghton County in the U.S. state of Michigan. It is located across the Keweenaw Waterway from the city of Houghton on the Keweenaw Peninsula. The population was 4,634 at the 2010 census. The city has been consistently ranked as the third-snowiest city in the United States by The Weather Channel.
The Keweenaw Peninsula is the northernmost part of Michigan's Upper Peninsula. It projects into Lake Superior and was the site of the first copper boom in the United States, leading to its moniker of "Copper Country." As of the 2000 census, its population was roughly 43,200. Its major industries are now logging and tourism, as well as jobs related to Michigan Technological University and Finlandia University.
The Quincy Mine is an extensive set of copper mines located near Hancock, Michigan. The mine was owned by the Quincy Mining Company and operated between 1846 and 1945, although some activities continued through the 1970s. The Quincy Mine was known as "Old Reliable," as the Quincy Mine Company paid a dividend to investors every year from 1868 through 1920. The Quincy Mining Company Historic District is a United States National Historic Landmark District; other Quincy Mine properties nearby, including the Quincy Mining Company Stamp Mills, the Quincy Dredge Number Two, and the Quincy Smelter are also historically significant.
Keweenaw National Historical Park is a unit of the U.S. National Park Service. Established in 1992, the park celebrates the life and history of the Keweenaw Peninsula in the Upper Peninsula of the U.S. state of Michigan. As of 2009, it is a partly privatized park made up of two primary units, the Calumet Unit and the Quincy Unit, and 21 cooperating "Heritage Sites" located on federal, state, and privately owned land in and around the Keweenaw Peninsula. The National Park Service owns approximately 1,700 acres (690 ha) in the Calumet and Quincy Units. Units are located in Baraga, Houghton, Keweenaw, and Ontonagon counties.
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Houghton County, Michigan.
The following is a list of Registered Historic Places in Keweenaw County, Michigan.
The A.E. Seaman Mineral Museum, currently located on the campus of Michigan Technological University in Houghton, Michigan, is the official mineral museum of the state of Michigan and is a heritage site of the Keweenaw National Historical Park. The museum is named for professor Arthur Edmund Seaman, who worked at Michigan Tech in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and was the museum's curator from 1928 until 1937.
The Calumet and Hecla Mining Company was a major copper-mining company based within Michigan's Copper Country. In the 19th century, the company paid out more than $72 million in shareholder dividends, more than any other mining company in the United States during that period.
Copper mining in Michigan became an important industry in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Its rise marked the start of copper mining as a major industry in the United States.
The Copper Country strike of 1913–1914 was a major strike affecting all copper mines in the Copper Country of Michigan. The strike, organized by the Western Federation of Miners, was the first unionized strike within the Copper Country. It was called to achieve goals of shorter work days, higher wages, union recognition, and to maintain family mining groups. The strike lasted just over nine months, including the Italian Hall disaster on Christmas Eve, and ended with the union being effectively driven out of the Keweenaw Peninsula. While unsuccessful, the strike is considered a turning point in the history of the Copper Country.
The Calumet Historic District is a National Historic Landmark District that encompasses most of the village of Calumet, Michigan. The district was designated in 1989 for the community's importance in the history of the region's copper mining industry.
The Calumet and Hecla Industrial District is a historic district located in Calumet, Michigan and roughly bounded by Hecla and Torch Lake railroad tracks, Calumet Avenue, Mine and Depot Streets. The district contains structures associated with the copper mines worked by the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company, located along a line above the copper lode, where railroad tracks connected separate mine heads. The Historic District is completely contained in the Calumet Historic District and the Keweenaw National Historical Park. It was designated a Michigan State Historic Site in 1973 and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.
The Quincy Mining Company Stamp Mills Historic District is a historic stamp mill located on M-26 near Torch Lake, just east of Mason in Osceola Township. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007.
The Quincy Dredge Number Two is a dredge currently sunk in shallow water in Torch Lake, across M-26 from the Quincy Mining Company Stamp Mills Historic District and just east of Mason in Osceola Township. It was constructed to reclaim stamping sand from the lake for further processing, and was designated a Michigan State Historic Site in 1978.
The Carnegie Museum of the Keweenaw in Houghton, Michigan, is a non-collecting museum that houses changing exhibits about local cultural and natural history. The building is so named as it was built with a 1908 grant from Andrew Carnegie. It served as the public library for Houghton, Michigan from its opening in 1910 until 2006. It is the former building of the Portage Lake District Library. The building was built in 1909, at the site originally occupied by the Armory Building for Company G of the Houghton Light Infantry, using a $15,000 grant from Andrew Carnegie. The museum opened in fall 2006 after the library moved to its new location.
The Scott Hotel is a former hotel located at 101 East Quincy Street in Hancock, Michigan, originally known as the Hotel Scott. As of 2009, it is also known as the Scott Building. The five-story building is in the Renaissance Revival style, constructed of tan brick and trimmed with Lake Superior Sandstone. The building is listed as a Michigan State Historic Site and is a contributing property of the Quincy Street Historic District.
Italian Hall was a two-story commercial and recreational building in Calumet, Michigan, built in 1908 and demolished in 1984. Two prior buildings known popularly as "Italian Hall" had stood on the site. The first floor housed commercial space with a large hall on the second floor. The building served as headquarters for the Società Mutua Beneficenza Italiana and hosted community events. The hall is notorious as the site of a disaster in 1913 in which over 70 people died after a false cry of "fire" at a Christmas party. Since demolition, the site has served as a memorial park. The property is a Michigan State Historic Site and the building was formerly on the National Register of Historic Places.
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