Richmond Paper - Biographical Notice of James Wood Tyson

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
William Glenn
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
163 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1902

Abstract

Early in the last century, Isaac Tyson, Jr., of Baltimore, was a miner of ores of chromium, iron and copper, and a manufacturer of their products. He was first to erect in America, for the reduction of copper-ore, a German blast-furnace, which was copied largely, and the improved successors of which are now universally used in this country. Dying in 1862, he left his manufacture of alkali bichromates to his eldest son, Jesse, while his work in the departments of mining and smelting descended to his second son, James Wood Tyson, the subject of this notice. The father had mined chrome-ores in Maryland and Pennsylvania and manufactured their products at Baltimore; he had mined and reduced copper-ores in both these States; iron-ores at Tyson Furnace in SW. Vermont, and copper-ores in the northern and central parts of that State. Among his holdings was what later became the Ely mine, now called Copperfield. The son extended this work to central Georgia, and carried the family mining interests to the Pacific coast, where he took up chrome-mines in Oregon and elsewhere, as far south as southern California. On December 3, 1900, in the 73d year of his age, James Wood Tyson passed away, in his native city of Baltimore, charging his third son, James Wood Tysou, Jr., with the labors which, 38 years before, his father had resigned to him. Thus was the work of father and son in mining and metallurgy, continuing without interruption through almost
Citation

APA: William Glenn  (1902)  Richmond Paper - Biographical Notice of James Wood Tyson

MLA: William Glenn Richmond Paper - Biographical Notice of James Wood Tyson. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1902.

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