The Woodstock iron works Carleton County, New Brunswick

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
R. R. Potter
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
3
File Size:
422 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1999

Abstract

"New Brunswick became a separate province in 1784, shortly after the influx of a large number of Loyalists from the United States. Many of these people settled along the Saint John River, including the area of excellent farmland near the present town of Woodstock. There were indications that some of these early settlers recognized iron formations in the vicinity of Woodstock about 1820, however the nature of the deposits was not known until 1836 when Dr. C. T. Jackson, a geologist commissioned by the State of Maine, investigated the mineral potential of the area. Jackson(1) described the ""ore"" as compact red hematite yielding 44 per cent pure metallic iron, and suggested that sizable tonnages may be present. It was about this time that an extensive limonite deposit was found in north-central Maine, near Mt. Katahdin. Other iron depostis were found in the Nictaux area of Nova Scotia, and a few years later at Londonderry* (Fig. 1). In 1837, Richard Ketchum of Jacksonville, on whose land iron ores had been found, petitioned the provincial government to incorporate a company. After much study, the York and Carleton Mining Company Bill was passed on March 15, 184 7. Several other petitions were passed permitting the company to construct roads, obtain woodland, etc. (2) . The first blast furnace was erected in 1848 on the west bank of the Saint John River near the mouth of Lanes Creek."
Citation

APA: R. R. Potter  (1999)  The Woodstock iron works Carleton County, New Brunswick

MLA: R. R. Potter The Woodstock iron works Carleton County, New Brunswick. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1999.

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