Metallurgical developments at Deloro, Ontario: 1868-1919

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Roy T. Bowles
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
6
File Size:
1090 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1999

Abstract

This paper focusses on technological developments which occurred in the village of Deloro, Ontario between 1868 and 1919. These developments illustrate the manner in which improved metallurgical processes linked Ontario mineral resources to industrial expansion. Overview of Deloro The village of Deloro is in Hastings county, about 5 miles from the village of Marmora, the site of the old Marmora iron works and the more recent Marmoraton iron mine. In this area, the Canadian Shield meets the Great Lakes lowlands. The first settlement in the vicinity occurred in the 1820s and was associated with the Marmora iron works. Settlement grew around agriculture. Gold was discovered in Hastings county in 1868. Deloro - the name derives from gold - developed as a concentrated settlement in proximity to several gold mines and the related processing activities. By 1901, substantial smelting works were successfully producing gold and arsenic from local ores. The village was developing as a company town within the framework of benevolent paternalism. For reasons associated with markets and with local ore supplies, the Deloro mills were idle for a period beginning in 1902. Developments in later periods connected Deloro to world events. In 1903, silver was discovered at Cobalt, Ontario. By 1907, M.J. O'Brien, who owned mines at Cobalt, had purchased the Deloro works and was using them to process Cobalt-area ores*.
Citation

APA: Roy T. Bowles  (1999)  Metallurgical developments at Deloro, Ontario: 1868-1919

MLA: Roy T. Bowles Metallurgical developments at Deloro, Ontario: 1868-1919. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1999.

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