<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XIX </h2>
<h3> MAGNETIC ORE MILLING WORK </h3>
<p>DURING the Hudson-Fulton celebration of October, 1909, Burgomaster Van
Leeuwen, of Amsterdam, member of the delegation sent officially from
Holland to escort the Half Moon and participate in the functions of the
anniversary, paid a visit to the Edison laboratory at Orange to see the
inventor, who may be regarded as pre-eminent among those of Dutch descent
in this country. Found, as usual, hard at work—this time on his
cement house, of which he showed the iron molds—Edison took occasion
to remark that if he had achieved anything worth while, it was due to the
obstinacy and pertinacity he had inherited from his forefathers. To which
it may be added that not less equally have the nature of inheritance and
the quality of atavism been exhibited in his extraordinary predilection
for the miller's art. While those Batavian ancestors on the low shores of
the Zuyder Zee devoted their energies to grinding grain, he has been not
less assiduous than they in reducing the rocks of the earth itself to
flour.</p>
<p>Although this phase of Mr. Edison's diverse activities is not as generally
known to the world as many others of a more popular character, the milling
of low-grade auriferous ores and the magnetic separation of iron ores have
been subjects of engrossing interest and study to him for many years.
Indeed, his comparatively unknown enterprise of separating magnetically
and putting into commercial form low-grade iron ore, as carried on at
Edison, New Jersey, proved to be the most colossal experiment that he has
ever made.</p>
<p>If a person qualified to judge were asked to answer categorically as to
whether or not that enterprise was a failure, he could truthfully answer
both yes and no. Yes, in that circumstances over which Mr. Edison had no
control compelled the shutting down of the plant at the very moment of
success; and no, in that the mechanically successful and commercially
practical results obtained, after the exercise of stupendous efforts and
the expenditure of a fortune, are so conclusive that they must inevitably
be the reliance of many future iron-masters. In other words, Mr. Edison
was at least a quarter of a century ahead of the times in the work now to
be considered.</p>
<p>Before proceeding to a specific description of this remarkable enterprise,
however, let us glance at an early experiment in separating magnetic iron
sands on the Atlantic sea-shore: "Some years ago I heard one day that down
at Quogue, Long Island, there were immense deposits of black magnetic
sand. This would be very valuable if the iron could be separated from the
sand. So I went down to Quogue with one of my assistants and saw there for
miles large beds of black sand on the beach in layers from one to six
inches thick—hundreds of thousands of tons. My first thought was
that it would be a very easy matter to concentrate this, and I found I
could sell the stuff at a good price. I put up a small plant, but just as
I got it started a tremendous storm came up, and every bit of that black
sand went out to sea. During the twenty-eight years that have intervened
it has never come back." This incident was really the prelude to the
development set forth in this chapter.</p>
<p>In the early eighties Edison became familiar with the fact that the
Eastern steel trade was suffering a disastrous change, and that business
was slowly drifting westward, chiefly by reason of the discovery and
opening up of enormous deposits of high-grade iron ore in the upper
peninsula of Michigan. This ore could be excavated very cheaply by means
of improved mining facilities, and transported at low cost to lake ports.
Hence the iron and steel mills east of the Alleghanies—compelled to
rely on limited local deposits of Bessemer ore, and upon foreign ores
which were constantly rising in value—began to sustain a serious
competition with Western mills, even in Eastern markets.</p>
<p>Long before this situation arose, it had been recognized by Eastern
iron-masters that sooner or later the deposits of high-grade ore would be
exhausted, and, in consequence, there would ensue a compelling necessity
to fall back on the low-grade magnetic ores. For many years it had been a
much-discussed question how to make these ores available for
transportation to distant furnaces. To pay railroad charges on ores
carrying perhaps 80 to 90 per cent. of useless material would be
prohibitive. Hence the elimination of the worthless "gangue" by
concentration of the iron particles associated with it, seemed to be the
only solution of the problem.</p>
<p>Many attempts had been made in by-gone days to concentrate the iron in
such ores by water processes, but with only a partial degree of success.
The impossibility of obtaining a uniform concentrate was a most serious
objection, had there not indeed been other difficulties which rendered
this method commercially impracticable. It is quite natural, therefore,
that the idea of magnetic separation should have occurred to many
inventors. Thus we find numerous instances throughout the last century of
experiments along this line; and particularly in the last forty or fifty
years, during which various attempts have been made by others than Edison
to perfect magnetic separation and bring it up to something like
commercial practice. At the time he took up the matter, however, no one
seems to have realized the full meaning of the tremendous problems
involved.</p>
<p>From 1880 to 1885, while still very busy in the development of his
electric-light system, Edison found opportunity to plan crushing and
separating machinery. His first patent on the subject was applied for and
issued early in 1880. He decided, after mature deliberation, that the
magnetic separation of low-grade ores on a colossal scale at a low cost
was the only practical way of supplying the furnace-man with a high
quality of iron ore. It was his opinion that it was cheaper to quarry and
concentrate lean ore in a big way than to attempt to mine, under adverse
circumstances, limited bodies of high-grade ore. He appreciated fully the
serious nature of the gigantic questions involved; and his plans were laid
with a view to exercising the utmost economy in the design and operation
of the plant in which he contemplated the automatic handling of many
thousands of tons of material daily. It may be stated as broadly true that
Edison engineered to handle immense masses of stuff automatically, while
his predecessors aimed chiefly at close separation.</p>
<p>Reduced to its barest, crudest terms, the proposition of magnetic
separation is simplicity itself. A piece of the ore (magnetite) may be
reduced to powder and the ore particles separated therefrom by the help of
a simple hand magnet. To elucidate the basic principle of Edison's method,
let the crushed ore fall in a thin stream past such a magnet. The magnetic
particles are attracted out of the straight line of the falling stream,
and being heavy, gravitate inwardly and fall to one side of a partition
placed below. The non-magnetic gangue descends in a straight line to the
other side of the partition. Thus a complete separation is effected.</p>
<p>Simple though the principle appears, it was in its application to vast
masses of material and in the solving of great engineering problems
connected therewith that Edison's originality made itself manifest in the
concentrating works that he established in New Jersey, early in the
nineties. Not only did he develop thoroughly the refining of the crushed
ore, so that after it had passed the four hundred and eighty magnets in
the mill, the concentrates came out finally containing 91 to 93 per cent.
of iron oxide, but he also devised collateral machinery, methods and
processes all fundamental in their nature. These are too numerous to
specify in detail, as they extended throughout the various ramifications
of the plant, but the principal ones are worthy of mention, such as:</p>
<p>The giant rolls (for crushing).<br/>
Intermediate rolls.<br/>
Three-high rolls.<br/>
Giant cranes (215 feet long span).<br/>
Vertical dryer.<br/>
Belt conveyors.<br/>
Air separation.<br/>
Mechanical separation of phosphorus.<br/>
Briquetting.<br/></p>
<p>That Mr. Edison's work was appreciated at the time is made evident by the
following extract from an article describing the Edison plant, published
in The Iron Age of October 28, 1897; in which, after mentioning his
struggle with adverse conditions, it says: "There is very little that is
showy, from the popular point of view, in the gigantic work which Mr.
Edison has done during these years, but to those who are capable of
grasping the difficulties encountered, Mr. Edison appears in the new light
of a brilliant constructing engineer grappling with technical and
commercial problems of the highest order. His genius as an inventor is
revealed in many details of the great concentrating plant.... But to our
mind, originality of the highest type as a constructor and designer
appears in the bold way in which he sweeps aside accepted practice in this
particular field and attains results not hitherto approached. He pursues
methods in ore-dressing at which those who are trained in the usual
practice may well stand aghast. But considering the special features of
the problems to be solved, his methods will be accepted as those
economically wise and expedient."</p>
<p>A cursory glance at these problems will reveal their import. Mountains
must be reduced to dust; all this dust must be handled in detail, so to
speak, and from it must be separated the fine particles of iron
constituting only one-fourth or one-fifth of its mass; and then this
iron-ore dust must be put into such shape that it could be commercially
shipped and used. One of the most interesting and striking investigations
made by Edison in this connection is worthy of note, and may be related in
his own words: "I felt certain that there must be large bodies of
magnetite in the East, which if crushed and concentrated would satisfy the
wants of the Eastern furnaces for steel-making. Having determined to
investigate the mountain regions of New Jersey, I constructed a very
sensitive magnetic needle, which would dip toward the earth if brought
over any considerable body of magnetic iron ore. One of my laboratory
assistants went out with me and we visited many of the mines of New
Jersey, but did not find deposits of any magnitude. One day, however, as
we drove over a mountain range, not known as iron-bearing land, I was
astonished to find that the needle was strongly attracted and remained so;
thus indicating that the whole mountain was underlaid with vast bodies of
magnetic ore.</p>
<p>"I knew it was a commercial problem to produce high-grade Bessemer ore
from these deposits, and took steps to acquire a large amount of the
property. I also planned a great magnetic survey of the East, and I
believe it remains the most comprehensive of its kind yet performed. I had
a number of men survey a strip reaching from Lower Canada to North
Carolina. The only instrument we used was the special magnetic needle. We
started in Lower Canada and travelled across the line of march twenty-five
miles; then advanced south one thousand feet; then back across the line of
march again twenty-five miles; then south another thousand feet, across
again, and so on. Thus we advanced all the way to North Carolina, varying
our cross-country march from two to twenty-five miles, according to
geological formation. Our magnetic needle indicated the presence and
richness of the invisible deposits of magnetic ore. We kept minute records
of these indications, and when the survey was finished we had exact
information of the deposits in every part of each State we had passed
through. We also knew the width, length, and approximate depth of every
one of these deposits, which were enormous.</p>
<p>"The amount of ore disclosed by this survey was simply fabulous. How much
so may be judged from the fact that in the three thousand acres
immediately surrounding the mills that I afterward established at Edison
there were over 200,000,000 tons of low-grade ore. I also secured sixteen
thousand acres in which the deposit was proportionately as large. These
few acres alone contained sufficient ore to supply the whole United States
iron trade, including exports, for seventy years."</p>
<p>Given a mountain of rock containing only one-fifth to one-fourth magnetic
iron, the broad problem confronting Edison resolved itself into three
distinct parts—first, to tear down the mountain bodily and grind it
to powder; second, to extract from this powder the particles of iron
mingled in its mass; and, third, to accomplish these results at a cost
sufficiently low to give the product a commercial value.</p>
<p>Edison realized from the start that the true solution of this problem lay
in the continuous treatment of the material, with the maximum employment
of natural forces and the minimum of manual labor and generated power.
Hence, all his conceptions followed this general principle so faithfully
and completely that we find in the plant embodying his ideas the forces of
momentum and gravity steadily in harness and keeping the traces taut;
while there was no touch of the human hand upon the material from the
beginning of the treatment to its finish—the staff being employed
mainly to keep watch on the correct working of the various processes.</p>
<p>It is hardly necessary to devote space to the beginnings of the
enterprise, although they are full of interest. They served, however, to
convince Edison that if he ever expected to carry out his scheme on the
extensive scale planned, he could not depend upon the market to supply
suitable machinery for important operations, but would be obliged to
devise and build it himself. Thus, outside the steam-shovel and such
staple items as engines, boilers, dynamos, and motors, all of the diverse
and complex machinery of the entire concentrating plant, as subsequently
completed, was devised by him especially for the purpose. The necessity
for this was due to the many radical variations made from accepted
methods.</p>
<p>No such departure was as radical as that of the method of crushing the
ore. Existing machinery for this purpose had been designed on the basis of
mining methods then in vogue, by which the rock was thoroughly shattered
by means of high explosives and reduced to pieces of one hundred pounds or
less. These pieces were then crushed by power directly applied. If a
concentrating mill, planned to treat five or six thousand tons per day,
were to be operated on this basis the investment in crushers and the
supply of power would be enormous, to say nothing of the risk of frequent
breakdowns by reason of multiplicity of machinery and parts. From a
consideration of these facts, and with his usual tendency to upset
traditional observances, Edison conceived the bold idea of constructing
gigantic rolls which, by the force of momentum, would be capable of
crushing individual rocks of vastly greater size than ever before
attempted. He reasoned that the advantages thus obtained would be
fourfold: a minimum of machinery and parts; greater compactness; a saving
of power; and greater economy in mining. As this last-named operation
precedes the crushing, let us first consider it as it was projected and
carried on by him.</p>
<p>Perhaps quarrying would be a better term than mining in this case, as
Edison's plan was to approach the rock and tear it down bodily. The faith
that "moves mountains" had a new opportunity. In work of this nature it
had been customary, as above stated, to depend upon a high explosive, such
as dynamite, to shatter and break the ore to lumps of one hundred pounds
or less. This, however, he deemed to be a most uneconomical process, for
energy stored as heat units in dynamite at $260 per ton was much more
expensive than that of calories in a ton of coal at $3 per ton. Hence, he
believed that only the minimum of work should be done with the costly
explosive; and, therefore, planned to use dynamite merely to dislodge
great masses of rock, and depended upon the steam-shovel, operated by coal
under the boiler, to displace, handle, and remove the rock in detail. This
was the plan that was subsequently put into practice in the great works at
Edison, New Jersey. A series of three-inch holes twenty feet deep were
drilled eight feet apart, about twelve feet back of the ore-bank, and into
these were inserted dynamite cartridges. The blast would dislodge thirty
to thirty-five thousand tons of rock, which was scooped up by great
steam-shovels and loaded on to skips carried by a line of cars on a
narrow-gauge railroad running to and from the crushing mill. Here the
material was automatically delivered to the giant rolls. The problem
included handling and crushing the "run of the mine," without selection.
The steam-shovel did not discriminate, but picked up handily single pieces
weighing five or six tons and loaded them on the skips with quantities of
smaller lumps. When the skips arrived at the giant rolls, their contents
were dumped automatically into a superimposed hopper. The rolls were well
named, for with ear-splitting noise they broke up in a few seconds the
great pieces of rock tossed in from the skips.</p>
<p>It is not easy to appreciate to the full the daring exemplified in these
great crushing rolls, or rather "rock-crackers," without having watched
them in operation delivering their "solar-plexus" blows. It was only as
one might stand in their vicinity and hear the thunderous roar
accompanying the smashing and rending of the massive rocks as they
disappeared from view that the mind was overwhelmed with a sense of the
magnificent proportions of this operation. The enormous force exerted
during this process may be illustrated from the fact that during its
development, in running one of the early forms of rolls, pieces of rock
weighing more than half a ton would be shot up in the air to a height of
twenty or twenty-five feet.</p>
<p>The giant rolls were two solid cylinders, six feet in diameter and five
feet long, made of cast iron. To the faces of these rolls were bolted a
series of heavy, chilled-iron plates containing a number of projecting
knobs two inches high. Each roll had also two rows of four-inch knobs,
intended to strike a series of hammer-like blows. The rolls were set face
to face fourteen inches apart, in a heavy frame, and the total weight was
one hundred and thirty tons, of which seventy tons were in moving parts.
The space between these two rolls allowed pieces of rock measuring less
than fourteen inches to descend to other smaller rolls placed below. The
giant rolls were belt-driven, in opposite directions, through friction
clutches, although the belt was not depended upon for the actual crushing.
Previous to the dumping of a skip, the rolls were speeded up to a
circumferential velocity of nearly a mile a minute, thus imparting to them
the terrific momentum that would break up easily in a few seconds boulders
weighing five or six tons each. It was as though a rock of this size had
got in the way of two express trains travelling in opposite directions at
nearly sixty miles an hour. In other words, it was the kinetic energy of
the rolls that crumbled up the rocks with pile-driver effect. This sudden
strain might have tended to stop the engine driving the rolls; but by an
ingenious clutch arrangement the belt was released at the moment of
resistance in the rolls by reason of the rocks falling between them. The
act of breaking and crushing would naturally decrease the tremendous
momentum, but after the rock was reduced and the pieces had passed
through, the belt would again come into play, and once more speed up the
rolls for a repetition of their regular prize-fighter duty.</p>
<p>On leaving the giant rolls the rocks, having been reduced to pieces not
larger than fourteen inches, passed into the series of "Intermediate
Rolls" of similar construction and operation, by which they were still
further reduced, and again passed on to three other sets of rolls of
smaller dimensions. These latter rolls were also face-lined with
chilled-iron plates; but, unlike the larger ones, were positively driven,
reducing the rock to pieces of about one-half-inch size, or smaller. The
whole crushing operation of reduction from massive boulders to small
pebbly pieces having been done in less time than the telling has occupied,
the product was conveyed to the "Dryer," a tower nine feet square and
fifty feet high, heated from below by great open furnace fires. All down
the inside walls of this tower were placed cast-iron plates, nine feet
long and seven inches wide, arranged alternately in "fish-ladder" fashion.
The crushed rock, being delivered at the top, would fall down from plate
to plate, constantly exposing different surfaces to the heat, until it
landed completely dried in the lower portion of the tower, where it fell
into conveyors which took it up to the stock-house.</p>
<p>This method of drying was original with Edison. At the time this adjunct
to the plant was required, the best dryer on the market was of a rotary
type, which had a capacity of only twenty tons per hour, with the
expenditure of considerable power. As Edison had determined upon treating
two hundred and fifty tons or more per hour, he decided to devise an
entirely new type of great capacity, requiring a minimum of power (for
elevating the material), and depending upon the force of gravity for
handling it during the drying process. A long series of experiments
resulted in the invention of the tower dryer with a capacity of three
hundred tons per hour.</p>
<p>The rock, broken up into pieces about the size of marbles, having been
dried and conveyed to the stock-house, the surplusage was automatically
carried out from the other end of the stock-house by conveyors, to pass
through the next process, by which it was reduced to a powder. The
machinery for accomplishing this result represents another interesting and
radical departure of Edison from accepted usage. He had investigated all
the crushing-machines on the market, and tried all he could get. He found
them all greatly lacking in economy of operation; indeed, the highest
results obtainable from the best were 18 per cent. of actual work,
involving a loss of 82 per cent. by friction. His nature revolted at such
an immense loss of power, especially as he proposed the crushing of vast
quantities of ore. Thus, he was obliged to begin again at the foundation,
and he devised a crushing-machine which was subsequently named the
"Three-High Rolls," and which practically reversed the above figures, as
it developed 84 per cent. of work done with only 16 per cent. loss in
friction.</p>
<p>A brief description of this remarkable machine will probably interest the
reader. In the two end pieces of a heavy iron frame were set three rolls,
or cylinders—one in the centre, another below, and the other above—all
three being in a vertical line. These rolls were of cast iron three feet
in diameter, having chilled-iron smooth face-plates of considerable
thickness. The lowest roll was set in a fixed bearing at the bottom of the
frame, and, therefore, could only turn around on its axis. The middle and
top rolls were free to move up or down from and toward the lower roll, and
the shafts of the middle and upper rolls were set in a loose bearing which
could slip up and down in the iron frame. It will be apparent, therefore,
that any material which passed in between the top and the middle rolls,
and the middle and bottom rolls, could be ground as fine as might be
desired, depending entirely upon the amount of pressure applied to the
loose rolls. In operation the material passed first through the upper and
middle rolls, and then between the middle and lowest rolls.</p>
<p>This pressure was applied in a most ingenious manner. On the ends of the
shafts of the bottom and top rolls there were cylindrical sleeves, or
bearings, having seven sheaves, in which was run a half-inch endless wire
rope. This rope was wound seven times over the sheaves as above, and led
upward and over a single-groove sheave which was operated by the piston of
an air cylinder, and in this manner the pressure was applied to the rolls.
It will be seen, therefore, that the system consisted in a single rope
passed over sheaves and so arranged that it could be varied in length,
thus providing for elasticity in exerting pressure and regulating it as
desired. The efficiency of this system was incomparably greater than that
of any other known crusher or grinder, for while a pressure of one hundred
and twenty-five thousand pounds could be exerted by these rolls, friction
was almost entirely eliminated because the upper and lower roll bearings
turned with the rolls and revolved in the wire rope, which constituted the
bearing proper.</p>
<p>The same cautious foresight exercised by Edison in providing a safety
device—the fuse—to prevent fires in his electric-light system,
was again displayed in this concentrating plant, where, to save possible
injury to its expensive operating parts, he devised an analogous factor,
providing all the crushing machinery with closely calculated "safety
pins," which, on being overloaded, would shear off and thus stop the
machine at once.</p>
<p>The rocks having thus been reduced to fine powder, the mass was ready for
screening on its way to the magnetic separators. Here again Edison
reversed prior practice by discarding rotary screens and devising a form
of tower screen, which, besides having a very large working capacity by
gravity, eliminated all power except that required to elevate the
material. The screening process allowed the finest part of the crushed
rock to pass on, by conveyor belts, to the magnetic separators, while the
coarser particles were in like manner automatically returned to the rolls
for further reduction.</p>
<p>In a narrative not intended to be strictly technical, it would probably
tire the reader to follow this material in detail through the numerous
steps attending the magnetic separation. These may be seen in a diagram
reproduced from the above-named article in the Iron Age, and supplemented
by the following extract from the Electrical Engineer, New York, October
28, 1897: "At the start the weakest magnet at the top frees the purest
particles, and the second takes care of others; but the third catches
those to which rock adheres, and will extract particles of which only
one-eighth is iron. This batch of material goes back for another crushing,
so that everything is subjected to an equality of refining. We are now in
sight of the real 'concentrates,' which are conveyed to dryer No. 2 for
drying again, and are then delivered to the fifty-mesh screens. Whatever
is fine enough goes through to the eight-inch magnets, and the remainder
goes back for recrushing. Below the eight-inch magnets the dust is blown
out of the particles mechanically, and they then go to the four-inch
magnets for final cleansing and separation.... Obviously, at each step the
percentage of felspar and phosphorus is less and less until in the final
concentrates the percentage of iron oxide is 91 to 93 per cent. As
intimated at the outset, the tailings will be 75 per cent. of the rock
taken from the veins of ore, so that every four tons of crude, raw,
low-grade ore will have yielded roughly one ton of high-grade concentrate
and three tons of sand, the latter also having its value in various ways."</p>
<p>This sand was transported automatically by belt conveyors to the rear of
the works to be stored and sold. Being sharp, crystalline, and even in
quality, it was a valuable by-product, finding a ready sale for building
purposes, railway sand-boxes, and various industrial uses. The
concentrate, in fine powdery form, was delivered in similar manner to a
stock-house.</p>
<p>As to the next step in the process, we may now quote again from the
article in the Iron Age: "While Mr. Edison and his associates were working
on the problem of cheap concentration of iron ore, an added difficulty
faced them in the preparation of the concentrates for the market.
Furnacemen object to more than a very small proportion of fine ore in
their mixtures, particularly when the ore is magnetic, not easily reduced.
The problem to be solved was to market an agglomerated material so as to
avoid the drawbacks of fine ore. The agglomerated product must be porous
so as to afford access of the furnace-reducing gases to the ore. It must
be hard enough to bear transportation, and to carry the furnace burden
without crumbling to pieces. It must be waterproof, to a certain extent,
s, and, generally speaking, the business has been greatly
unified and b it necessary to be able to ship the concentrates to market i open coal
cars, exposed to snow and rain. In many respects the attainment of these
somewhat conflicting ends was the most perplexing of the problems which
confronted Mr. Edison. The agglomeration of the concentrates having been
decided upon, two other considerations, not mentioned above, were of
primary importance—first, to find a suitable cheap binding material;
and, second, its nature must be such that very little would be necessary
per ton of concentrates. These severe requirements were staggering, but
Mr. Edison's courage did not falter. Although it seemed a well-nigh
hopeless task, he entered upon the investigation with his usual optimism
and vim. After many months of unremitting toil and research, and the trial
of thousands of experiments, the goal was reached in the completion of a
successful formula for agglomerating the fine ore and pressing it into
briquettes by special machinery."</p>
<p>This was the final process requisite for the making of a completed
commercial product. Its practice, of course, necessitated the addition of
an entirely new department of the works, which was carried into effect by
the construction and installation of the novel mixing and briquetting
machinery, together with extensions of the conveyors, with which the plant
had already been liberally provided.</p>
<p>Briefly described, the process consisted in mixing the concentrates with
the special binding material in machines of an entirely new type, and in
passing the resultant pasty mass into the briquetting machines, where it
was pressed into cylindrical cakes three inches in diameter and one and a
half inches thick, under successive pressures of 7800, 14,000, and 60,000
pounds. Each machine made these briquettes at the rate of sixty per
minute, and dropped them into bucket conveyors by which they were carried
into drying furnaces, through which they made five loops, and were then
delivered to cross-conveyors which carried them into the stock-house. At
the end of this process the briquettes were so hard that they would not
break or crumble in loading on the cars or in transportation by rail,
while they were so porous as to be capable of absorbing 26 per cent. of
their own volume in alcohol, but repelling water absolutely—perfect
"old soaks."</p>
<p>Thus, with never-failing persistence and patience, coupled with intense
thought and hard work, Edison met and conquered, one by one, the complex
difficulties that confronted him. He succeeded in what he had set out to
do, and it is now to be noted that the product he had striven so
sedulously to obtain was a highly commercial one, for not only did the
briquettes of concentrated ore fulfil the purpose of their creation, but
in use actually tended to increase the working capacity of the furnace, as
the following test, quoted from the Iron Age, October 28, 1897, will
attest: "The only trial of any magnitude of the briquettes in the
blast-furnace was carried through early this year at the Crane Iron Works,
Catasauqua, Pennsylvania, by Leonard Peckitt.</p>
<p>"The furnace at which the test was made produces from one hundred to one
hundred and ten tons per day when running on the ordinary mixture. The
charging of briquettes was begun with a percentage of 25 per cent., and
was carried up to 100 per cent. The following is the record of the
results:</p>
<p>RESULTS OF WORKING BRIQUETTES AT THE CRANE FURNACE<br/></p>
<p>Quantity of Phos- ManDate<br/>
Briquette Tons Silica phorus Sulphur ganese<br/>
Working<br/>
Per Cent.<br/>
January 5th 25 104 2.770 0.830 0.018 0.500<br/>
January 6th 37 1/2 4 1/2 2.620 0 740 0.018 0.350<br/>
January 7th 50 138 1/2 2.572 0.580 0.015 0.200<br/>
January 8th 75 119 1.844 0.264 0.022 0.200<br/>
January 9th 100 138 1/2 1.712 0.147 0.038 0.185<br/></p>
<p>"On the 9th, at 5 P.M., the briquettes having been nearly exhausted, the
percentage was dropped to 25 per cent., and on the 10th the output dropped
to 120 tons, and on the 11th the furnace had resumed the usual work on the
regular standard ores.</p>
<p>"These figures prove that the yield of the furnace is considerably
increased. The Crane trial was too short to settle the question to what
extent the increase in product may be carried. This increase in output, of
course, means a reduction in the cost of labor and of general expenses.</p>
<p>"The richness of the ore and its purity of course affect the limestone
consumption. In the case of the Crane trial there was a reduction from 30
per cent. to 12 per cent. of the ore charge.</p>
<p>"Finally, the fuel consumption is reduced, which in the case of the
Eastern plants, with their relatively costly coke, is a very important
consideration. It is regarded as possible that Eastern furnaces will be
able to use a smaller proportion of the costlier coke and correspondingly
increase in anthracite coal, which is a cheaper fuel in that section. So
far as foundry iron is concerned, the experience at Catasauqua,
Pennsylvania, brief as it has been, shows that a stronger and tougher
metal is made."</p>
<p>Edison himself tells an interesting little story in this connection, when
he enjoyed the active help of that noble character, John Fritz, the
distinguished inventor and pioneer of the modern steel industry in
America. He says: "When I was struggling along with the iron-ore
concentration, I went to see several blast-furnace men to sell the ore at
the market price. They saw I was very anxious to sell it, and they would
take advantage of my necessity. But I happened to go to Mr. John Fritz, of
the Bethlehem Steel Company, and told him what I was doing. 'Well,' he
said to me, 'Edison, you are doing a good thing for the Eastern furnaces.
They ought to help you, for it will help us out. I am willing to help you.
I mix a little sentiment with business, and I will give you an order for
one hundred thousand tons.' And he sat right down and gave me the order."</p>
<p>The Edison concentrating plant has been sketched in the briefest outline
with a view of affording merely a bare idea of the great work of its
projector. To tell the whole story in detail and show its logical
sequence, step by step, would take little less than a volume in itself,
for Edison's methods, always iconoclastic when progress is in sight, were
particularly so at the period in question. It has been said that "Edison's
scrap-heap contains the elements of a liberal education," and this was
essentially true of the "discard" during the ore-milling experience.
Interesting as it might be to follow at length the numerous phases of
ingenious and resourceful development that took place during those busy
years, the limit of present space forbids their relation. It would,
however, be denying the justice that is Edison's due to omit all mention
of two hitherto unnamed items in particular that have added to the world's
store of useful devices. We refer first to the great travelling
hoisting-crane having a span of two hundred and fifteen feet, and used for
hoisting loads equal to ten tons, this being the largest of the kind made
up to that time, and afterward used as a model by many others. The second
item was the ingenious and varied forms of conveyor belt, devised and used
by Edison at the concentrating works, and subsequently developed into a
separate and extensive business by an engineer to whom he gave permission
to use his plans and patterns.</p>
<p>Edison's native shrewdness and knowledge of human nature was put to
practical use in the busy days of plant construction. It was found
impossible to keep mechanics on account of indifferent residential
accommodations afforded by the tiny village, remote from civilization,
among the central mountains of New Jersey. This puzzling question was much
discussed between him and his associate, Mr. W. S. Mallory, until finally
he said to the latter: "If we want to keep the men here we must make it
attractive for the women—so let us build some houses that will have
running water and electric lights, and rent at a low rate." He set to
work, and in a day finished a design for a type of house. Fifty were
quickly built and fully described in advertising for mechanics. Three
days' advertisements brought in over six hundred and fifty applications,
and afterward Edison had no trouble in obtaining all the first-class men
he required, as settlers in the artificial Yosemite he was creating.</p>
<p>We owe to Mr. Mallory a characteristic story of this period as to an
incidental unbending from toil, which in itself illustrates the
ever-present determination to conquer what is undertaken: "Along in the
latter part of the nineties, when the work on the problem of concentrating
iron ore was in progress, it became necessary when leaving the plant at
Edison to wait over at Lake Hopatcong one hour for a connecting train.
During some of these waits Mr. Edison had seen me play billiards. At the
particular time this incident happened, Mrs. Edison and her family were
away for the summer, and I was staying at the Glenmont home on the Orange
Mountains.</p>
<p>"One hot Saturday night, after Mr. Edison had looked over the evening
papers, he said to me: 'Do you want to play a game of billiards?'
Naturally this astonished me very much, as he is a man who cares little or
nothing for the ordinary games, with the single exception of parcheesi, of
which he is very fond. I said I would like to play, so we went up into the
billiard-room of the house. I took off the cloth, got out the balls,
picked out a cue for Mr. Edison, and when we banked for the first shot I
won and started the game. After making two or three shots I missed, and a
long carom shot was left for Mr. Edison, the cue ball and object ball
being within about twelve inches of each other, and the other ball a
distance of nearly the length of the table. Mr. Edison attempted to make
the shot, but missed it and said 'Put the balls back.' So I put them back
in the same position and he missed it the second time. I continued at his
request to put the balls back in the same position for the next fifteen
minutes, until he could make the shot every time—then he said: 'I
don't want to play any more.'"</p>
<p>Having taken a somewhat superficial survey of the great enterprise under
consideration; having had a cursory glance at the technical development of
the plant up to the point of its successful culmination in the making of a
marketable, commercial product as exemplified in the test at the Crane
Furnace, let us revert to that demonstration and note the events that
followed. The facts of this actual test are far more eloquent than volumes
of argument would be as a justification of Edison's assiduous labors for
over eight years, and of the expenditure of a fortune in bringing his
broad conception to a concrete possibility. In the patient solving of
tremendous problems he had toiled up the mountain-side of success—scaling
its topmost peak and obtaining a view of the boundless prospect. But,
alas! "The best laid plans o' mice and men gang aft agley." The discovery
of great deposits of rich Bessemer ore in the Mesaba range of mountains in
Minnesota a year or two previous to the completion of his work had been
followed by the opening up of those deposits and the marketing of the ore.
It was of such rich character that, being cheaply mined by greatly
improved and inexpensive methods, the market price of crude ore of like
iron units fell from about $6.50 to $3.50 per ton at the time when Edison
was ready to supply his concentrated product. At the former price he could
have supplied the market and earned a liberal profit on his investment,
but at $3.50 per ton he was left without a reasonable chance of
competition. Thus was swept away the possibility of reaping the reward so
richly earned by years of incessant thought, labor, and care. This great
and notable plant, representing a very large outlay of money, brought to
completion, ready for business, and embracing some of the most brilliant
and remarkable of Edison's inventions and methods, must be abandoned by
force of circumstances over which he had no control, and with it must die
the high hopes that his progressive, conquering march to success had
legitimately engendered.</p>
<p>The financial aspect of these enterprises is often overlooked and
forgotten. In this instance it was of more than usual import and
seriousness, as Edison was virtually his own "backer," putting into the
company almost the whole of all the fortune his inventions had brought
him. There is a tendency to deny to the capital that thus takes desperate
chances its full reward if things go right, and to insist that it shall
have barely the legal rate of interest and far less than the return of
over-the-counter retail trade. It is an absolute fact that the great
electrical inventors and the men who stood behind them have had little
return for their foresight and courage. In this instance, when the
inventor was largely his own financier, the difficulties and perils were
redoubled. Let Mr. Mallory give an instance: "During the latter part of
the panic of 1893 there came a period when we were very hard up for ready
cash, due largely to the panicky conditions; and a large pay-roll had been
raised with considerable difficulty. A short time before pay-day our
treasurer called me up by telephone, and said: 'I have just received the
paid checks from the bank, and I am fearful that my assistant, who has
forged my name to some of the checks, has absconded with about $3000.' I
went immediately to Mr. Edison and told him of the forgery and the amount
of money taken, and in what an embarrassing position we were for the next
pay-roll. When I had finished he said: 'It is too bad the money is gone,
but I will tell you what to do. Go and see the president of the bank which
paid the forged checks. Get him to admit the bank's liability, and then
say to him that Mr. Edison does not think the bank should suffer because
he happened to have a dishonest clerk in his employ. Also say to him that
I shall not ask them to make the amount good.' This was done; the bank
admitting its liability and being much pleased with this action. When I
reported to Mr. Edison he said: 'That's all right. We have made a friend
of the bank, and we may need friends later on.' And so it happened that
some time afterward, when we greatly needed help in the way of loans, the
bank willingly gave us the accommodations we required to tide us over a
critical period."</p>
<p>This iron-ore concentrating project had lain close to Edison's heart and
ambition—indeed, it had permeated his whole being to the exclusion
of almost all other investigations or inventions for a while. For five
years he had lived and worked steadily at Edison, leaving there only on
Saturday night to spend Sunday at his home in Orange, and returning to the
plant by an early train on Monday morning. Life at Edison was of the
simple kind—work, meals, and a few hours' sleep—day by day.
The little village, called into existence by the concentrating works, was
of the most primitive nature and offered nothing in the way of frivolity
or amusement. Even the scenery is austere. Hence Edison was enabled to
follow his natural bent in being surrounded day and night by his
responsible chosen associates, with whom he worked uninterrupted by
outsiders from early morning away into the late hours of the evening.
Those who were laboring with him, inspired by his unflagging enthusiasm,
followed his example and devoted all their long waking hours to the
furtherance of his plans with a zeal that ultimately bore fruit in the
practical success here recorded.</p>
<p>In view of its present status, this colossal enterprise at Edison may well
be likened to the prologue of a play that is to be subsequently enacted
for the benefit of future generations, but before ringing down the curtain
it is desirable to preserve the unities by quoting the words of one of the
principal actors, Mr. Mallory, who says: "The Concentrating Works had been
in operation, and we had produced a considerable quantity of the
briquettes, and had been able to sell only a portion of them, the iron
market being in such condition that blast-furnaces were not making any new
purchases of iron ore, and were having difficulty to receive and consume
the ores which had been previously contracted for, so what sales we were
able to make were at extremely low prices, my recollection being that they
were between $3.50 and $3.80 per ton, whereas when the works had started
we had hoped to obtain $6.00 to $6.50 per ton for the briquettes. We had
also thoroughly investigated the wonderful deposit at Mesaba, and it was
with the greatest possible reluctance that Mr. Edison was able to come
finally to the conclusion that, under existing conditions, the
concentrating plant could not then be made a commercial success. This
decision was reached only after the most careful investigations and
calculations, as Mr. Edison was just as full of fight and ambition to make
it a success as when he first started.</p>
<p>"When this decision was reached Mr. Edison and I took the Jersey Central
train from Edison, bound for Orange, and I did not look forward to the
immediate future with any degree of confidence, as the concentrating plant
was heavily in debt, without any early prospect of being able to pay off
its indebtedness. On the train the matter of the future was discussed, and
Mr. Edison said that, inasmuch as we had the knowledge gained from our
experience in the concentrating problem, we must, if possible, apply it to
some practical use, and at the same time we must work out some other plans
by which we could make enough money to pay off the Concentrating Company's
indebtedness, Mr. Edison stating most positively that no company with
which he had personally been actively connected had ever failed to pay its
debts, and he did not propose to have the Concentrating Company any
exception.</p>
<p>"In the discussion that followed he suggested several kinds of work which
he had in his mind, and which might prove profitable. We figured carefully
over the probabilities of financial returns from the Phonograph Works and
other enterprises, and after discussing many plans, it was finally decided
that we would apply the knowledge we had gained in the concentrating plant
by building a plant for manufacturing Portland cement, and that Mr. Edison
would devote his attention to the developing of a storage battery which
did not use lead and sulphuric acid. So these two lines of work were taken
up by Mr. Edison with just as much enthusiasm and energy as is usual with
him, the commercial failure of the concentrating plant seeming not to
affect his spirits in any way. In fact, I have often been impressed
strongly with the fact that, during the dark days of the concentrating
problem, Mr. Edison's desire was very strong that the creditors of the
Concentrating Works should be paid in full; and only once did I hear him
make any reference to the financial loss which he himself made, and he
then said: 'As far as I am concerned, I can any time get a job at $75 per
month as a telegrapher, and that will amply take care of all my personal
requirements.' As already stated, however, he started in with the maximum
amount of enthusiasm and ambition, and in the course of about three years
we succeeded in paying off all the indebtedness of the Concentrating
Works, which amounted to several hundred thousand dollars.</p>
<p>"As to the state of Mr. Edison's mind when the final decision was reached
to close down, if he was specially disappointed, there was nothing in his
manner to indicate it, his every thought being for the future, and as to
what could be done to pull us out of the financial situation in which we
found ourselves, and to take advantage of the knowledge which we had
acquired at so great a cost."</p>
<p>It will have been gathered that the funds for this great experiment were
furnished largely by Edison. In fact, over two million dollars were spent
in the attempt. Edison's philosophic view of affairs is given in the
following anecdote from Mr. Mallory: "During the boom times of 1902, when
the old General Electric stock sold at its high-water mark of about $330,
Mr. Edison and I were on our way from the cement plant at New Village, New
Jersey, to his home at Orange. When we arrived at Dover, New Jersey, we
got a New York newspaper, and I called his attention to the quotation of
that day on General Electric. Mr. Edison then asked: 'If I hadn't sold any
of mine, what would it be worth to-day?' and after some figuring I
replied: 'Over four million dollars.' When Mr. Edison is thinking
seriously over a problem he is in the habit of pulling his right eyebrow,
which he did now for fifteen or twenty seconds. Then his face lighted up,
and he said: 'Well, it's all gone, but we had a hell of a good time
spending it.'" With which revelation of an attitude worthy of Mark Tapley
himself, this chapter may well conclude.</p>
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