New York - Philadelphia Paper - The Effect of Re-Heating upon the Coarse Structure of Over-Heated Steel

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Frederick Görannsen
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
442 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1903

Abstract

McDuffie county, once a part of Columbia county, lies in the eastern part of central Georgia, about 20 miles west of the Savannah river, and bounded on the northtwest by Little river. Wrightsboro, now almost forgotten, was one of the principal towns of Georgia before the Revolutionary war, and much of the land hereafter described as belonging to one of the principal gold-bearing sections of the South had been taken up by the early agricultural settlers, and was already under cultivation. Indeed, some of the present mining companies can trace their chain of title back to the original grant of King George III., made in 1771. The first discovery of gold in Georgia, however, was not made until 1823, when two English miners, who had emigrated to this country and were traveling as peddlers through this section, discovered quartz, rich in gold, on what is now known as " the 40-acre lot," and owned by the Columbia Mining Go. These men had no money to buy the lands, and not being able to stake off a claim and begin work, as is the custom in other places, they were forced to seek the aid of the native farmers. In this we are told that they were for a long time unsuccessful; the farmers and land-owners not knowing or caring anything about gold mining. In 1826, Jeremiah Griffin, a wealthy farmer, became interested with them, and they did some prospecting and located several rich veins. Mr. Griffin soon became enthusiastic, and bought about three thousand acres of supposed gold-lands, lying along Little river.. This purchase was unfortunate for the mining industry, as it effectually shut out all other prospectors, and confined entirely to Mr. Griffin and his associates the mining development of the whole region. As a consequence, the ground was never covered, arid there are virgin lands in this section now, which offer to the prospector as
Citation

APA: Frederick Görannsen  (1903)  New York - Philadelphia Paper - The Effect of Re-Heating upon the Coarse Structure of Over-Heated Steel

MLA: Frederick Görannsen New York - Philadelphia Paper - The Effect of Re-Heating upon the Coarse Structure of Over-Heated Steel. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1903.

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