Saturday, February 9, 2013

Furnace Foundations, by Felicia Doughty Kingsbury (1951)

 Editor's Note:  Our good friend and History Advisory Board member Victor Rolando recently forwarded to our attention, a fascinating article written in 1951 by Felicia Doughty Kingsbury, who, that year, undertook a scholarly tour of the "Salisbury Iron District."  In 2011, historian Tyler Resch, uncovered Kingsbury's manuscript of that tour which included a spine tingling assessment of the Copake Iron Works.  We excerpt here the section on Copake Falls.  The entire article is available by clicking here.

Pictured, Felicia Doughty Kingsbury, photography contributed by Tyler Resch

"Furnace Foundations: A perceptive exploration of early blast furnaces in the Salisbury Ore District where Connecticut, Massachusetts and New York converge, conducted in the summer of 1951 by Felicia Doughty Kingsbury,  when working as curator of properties for the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities in Boston."

Foreword by Tyler Resch (excerpt):
                Felicia Doughty Kingsbury was my mother-in-law, whom I knew well in her later years, long after her professional involvement with architecture, or archaeology, or her work with the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities (now known as Historic New England). She was an authority on old houses, was curator of SPNEA properties, and she edited its quarterly journal, Old-Time New England. Among the tools of her trade was an ice pick she carried to test the integrity of ancient beams. I wish that I had known her in her prime, when she was a strong and self-sufficient independent woman.  It was at the bottom of a box of her long-neglected papers and family photographs that I happened recently upon this manuscript that describes her studious tour of the blast furnaces of the Salisbury Ore District in the summer of 1951.

[Kingsbury's study of Copake begins here:]

It was impossible to thank “our local historian” adequately for so much generosity of time and information, and I felt very solitary again and without guidance, as I turned north to find the furnace of the Copake Iron Co., now within Taconic State Park.
                                Another glance at a road map will show that the park covers a large area and is not marked clearly to show access or entrance. I had long heard it said that it is one of our most beautiful and best maintained state parks: a mountainous wilderness made into a playground. In such a place a blast furnace would be as a needle in a haystack, but Copake Falls is shown on the map, and this had been named as the general location of the furnace. I found it also to hold the main entrance to the park, and without difficulty reached the house of the park superintendent near at hand. He was a busy man, for several cars were already parked there arranging for camping privileges.  Park activities were much in evidence, for across the road a grove sheltered a small village of cabins and recreational buildings from which issued the clatter of dishes and the strains of community song. Just to the left, a gravel road crossed the main one and was lined with prim little white clapboarded Victorian houses. These apparently were occupied by park rangers and help. At the junction of the two roads the main road was closed off by stone posts with a chain across and a sign saying “Positively No Admittance.” Beyond the gateposts the road narrowed but led as straight as could the shortest distance between two points, to Copake Furnace itself.
                                The superintendent was a shrewd, firm man, hard-pressed with the responsibility of keeping the forest and the tenderfeet from doing each other any harm. Conditioned by summer campers who habitually think themselves the one exception to every rule, it was generous of him to take down the no-admittance sign, to trust me to park by the no=parking sign, and to leave me alone with his precious park tools and machinery, to study the furnace at will.
                                The furnace of the Copake Iron Company shows the most modern equipment of any in the Salisbury Ore District, partly because its operation did not cease until 1902, and party, it is said, because the company was exceptionally progressive in an industry noted for conservatism, and was always ready to adopt a new method. A modern flight of steps led to the top of the loading platform behind the furnace, and from there it was possible to survey the general plan of the works.
                                A narrow valley hardly more than a pocket is enclosed by steep and heavily wooded slopes. At each end of the furnace area and perhaps a mile apart, ravines block the level stretch of valley floor. Furnace activities occupied the entire stretch of miniature intervale and had been laid out in the orderly pattern of functionalism. The stream appeared at the upper ravine where an earth dam had a small gatehouse enclosed in walls of fine ashlar. It then skirted the base of the opposite slope and disappeared behind the barns and outbuildings of the superintendent’s house. Directly before me on the streambank a long brick building had probably contained company offices and possibly an engine house. Park officials were using it for much the same purpose now, though tractors and trucks parked near translated it to this century. A small brick building close to the road had the familiar scales outside, such as coal wagons use, and had been the weigher’s office. Looking back through the gate it was obvious from its size and location that the present superintendent’s house had always served such a use, and that the smaller house on the side road had been built for the furnace workers, probably foremen. The loading platform, on which I was standing, was approached from the woods by a worn old cart track, the ore road, which followed along its top to descend to the lower ground beyond the furnace toward the gate. Immediately behind the furnace, on the platform, an additional foundation a few feet higher but flush with the road had been the abutment for the loading bridge to the furnace top, and just equaled it in height.
                                Only a few feet away, the furnace itself looked ragged and infirm. The four brick gothic arches rest upon foundations of masonry, the three heavy courses rising about four feet above grade vertically before the spring of the two-centered arch begins. The arches are very deep – eight to ten feet – and in good condition. In fact, the arches are the only part of the furnace visible from outside, which give an indication of its original structural character. The ashlar bases are all that is left, of the fine masonry that covered the exterior prior to its recent removal by the park authorities. The pile of rubble that the furnace now exposes was originally only the fill between inner lining and outer casing, and its roughness gives a false impression of a furnace belonging to an earlier period.
                                The furnace interior, however, is striking in its contrast to early ones, and presented several features that I had not heretofor encountered. Most conspicuous of these differences is the greatly increased amount of iron visible within the arches. The crucible is entirely or iron, made of curved plates bolted together to form a short cylinder about three feet high. Inside the crucible a lining of a single thickness of firebrick extends from floor upwards through the shaft. Above the crucible an air space about a foot deep surrounds the brick lining and is enclosed by another layer of brick, this one supported at the boshes, or about five feet six inches above grade, by a system of three iron beams which, in cross section, would look like I-beams. These like the iron crucible held channels that permitted them to be cooled by circulating water. Gauges by which to judge the water level were provided by the short vertical pipes terminated at the top by cups standing at each side of the inner arch. It is probable that many of the furnaces that operated in the latter part of the nineteenth century or later were at one time provided with iron crucibles and water cooling-down devices. The last two wars, however, have stimulated scavenging to such an extent that all blast furnaces in the area are said to have been combed for scrap. This would account for the emptiness of many furnaces visited, and makes Copake unique in still possessing equipment that illustrates the most modern development of the blast furnace achieved in the Salisbury Ore District.



President’s Letter– 2012 in Review

 
Mibs head shot
Mibs Zelley
Editor’s Note:  In her review of 2012, Board President Milbrey “Mibs” Zelley reports to you on our progress during the past year and our plans for this coming year.  We are grateful for her guidance and enthusiasm which have helped us achieve so much, especially this past year.


February 2013

Dear Friends, Neighbors and Loyal Supporters,

This past year was eventful and event-filled for Friends of Taconic State Park.
FirstDayHikeQuinbycropped
First Day Hike 2012
We hosted garden lectures by Page Dickey and Ken Druse, and offered numerous hikes in and around the park including our first First Day Hike with Founding Board President Jane Peck, a Hidden Valley Ramble in connection with the Hudson River Valley Ramble, tree lover hikes with board member and #1 tree guy Jim Mackin and an invigorating hike with Claudia Farb from Sunset Rock to Catamount.
Hidden Valley Ramble Group Photo
Hidden Valley Ramble - Sept. 2012
Jim Mackin
Tree Hikes with Jim Mackin
  
First Day Hike 2013 at the state line cropped
First Day Hike 2013
SoupMeister
Soup for Everyone!
In June we hosted our first Pomeroy Party, celebrating our re-connection with the descendants of Lemuel Pomeroy, the founder of the Copake Iron Works.  Our participation was an important part of the Fifth Copake Falls Day, with informative tours of the historic Copake Iron Works led by History Advisory Board member Victor Rolando and Jim Mackin. We were also a popular participant in the first ever Copake Falls Winter Walk, offering homemade butternut squash soup and home baked popovers at the Iron Works.

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Furnace Cover- Finished!
Our major accomplishment, however, was the completion of the protective cover for the historic Copake Iron Works blast furnace. Ground was broken in the fall of 2011 when the four concrete footings were poured. During the ensuing winter months, the massive legs and cross beams were constructed off site by an able and devoted construction crew. Edgar Masters masterminded the project and contributed the expert labor of his employees Jim Conklin, and Tom Flaherty. Indispensable volunteer Bob Callahan worked tirelessly alongside Jim, Tom and Edgar.



Edgar Masters and Don Oestrander plan the move
Edgar Masters & Don Oestrander
Men at Work
Bob Callahan &Tom Flaherty
Tom and Bob
Tom &Bob
             



 In early spring and summer of 2012, the huge components were trucked to the site by equipment and drivers provided by Ed Herrington, Inc.
Delivery at the Iron Works IMG0435
Herrington's Moves Mountains...
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...and 50', 3 ton furnace cover pieces too.
   
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Lawrence D. Coon & Sons - many cranes make light work Aug. and Oct. 2012
Once the pieces were at the site, Lawrence D. Coon & Sons – the barn building firm of record in Columbia County - assembled the pieces, and with their four giant cranes carefully lifted and dropped them into place on the footings.

Ribbon Cutting Photo by Karen Melanson
Furnace Fest November 2012
Day by day, we saw our vision become a reality, and in November, at Furnace Fest, the big red ribbon was cut…project completed!
Now, the massive cover, which is the same height and shape as the original building, draws attention to all passing by on both Route 344, as well as Valley View Road!


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Tim Schroder

Grateful thanks to so many people for making this possible: to Ann and Doug Clark and Tim Schroder of Clark Engineering & Surveying, P.C. for their extraordinary pro bono contribution of time and talent.  To Don Oestrander, Mike Wheeler, Pete Stalker, and Richard and Ed Herrington of Ed Herrington, Inc. for numerous trips up and down High Valley Road in flatbed trucks; to the Hudson River Bank & Trust Company Foundation, the Rheinstrom Hill Community Foundation, the Society for Industrial Archaeology, and to the New York State Environmental Protection Fund for leadership grants awarded to this project; and to our many generous individual donors, both nearby and far away, whose willingness to give of their treasure helped make the project a reality.
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Margaret Roach

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Ray Doherty

Ribbon cutting Commissioner and NYS Chair Kristen
Rose Harvey and Lucy Waletzky

We  extend deepest thanks to Lucy D. Waletzky, Chair of the New York State Council on Parks and Rose Harvey, Commissioner of New York State Parks, whose enthusiasm for our work helped draw attention to our project from throughout the state; to Ray Doherty, former Taconic State Park manager and now general manager of the Taconic Region, whose early support made our work possible, to our neighbor Margaret Roach for her abiding support of and commitment to our efforts; and to the entire Board of Directors who worked tirelessly to bring the project to completion.
Board of Directors Friends of Taconic State Park July 2011
Board of Directors 2011/2012
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Edgar M. Masters

Last, but certainly not least, it was the can-do man with the vision, Edgar M. Masters, who imagined that such a project was possible and whose drive and energy throughout the long construction process brought the dream to reality!

IMG_2393Now to the future! First of all, we must stabilize the furnace itself. Long years of exposure to the wind, rain and snow, as well as the ravages of weeds and scavengers, have severely weakened the four arches of the furnace, as well as its interior. Unless we want our beautiful cover to be covering nothing but a pile of rubble, the work of stabilization must begin immediately. We have already begun to raise funds for this work, and will be actively seeking additional support to realize this goal by the end of the year.

LinkHouseFeb2012Remedial work is also desperately needed at two other important historic buildings at the site: both the machine/pattern shop, and the worker's cottage called the Link House must be stabilized. We cannot allow these buildings, which tell such an important part of the story of the Copake Iron Works, to deteriorate further.

Fish Pond Trail We also plan to complete a trail connecting the Copake Iron Works to the Bash Bish Falls along the south side of the Bash Bish Stream in early spring. The Fish Pond Trail will pass by a reconstruction of a charcoal hearth and the holding ponds which once supplied the water for the early water wheel, the first power source for the bellows which kept the furnace in blast. We hope that the completion of this trail will bring the many annual visitors to the Bash Bish Falls back to the Copake Iron Works and will provide an interesting additional piece to the story of the iron industry at Copake Falls.

Snowshoeing with Zena in Taconic State ParkWe will also be continuing our programs of lectures, and trail and nature hikes throughout 2013 beginning with our annual President’s Day “Snow or No” snowshoeing event on Monday, February 18th.



KenGreen.jpgOur third annual Welcome Spring event on March 23rd will feature a presentation by Ken Greene of the renowned Hudson Valley Seed Library; on April 20th, Brian Boom of the New York Botanical Garden (and an FTSP board member) will present ,"Earth Day Reflections on the Environment in Cuba," on May 11th, celebrated plantsman Lee Reich will present “Backyard Fruit Simplified,” and on June 8th, noted botanist Robert Naczi of the New York Botanical Garden will lead a wildflower walk in the park. Our contribution to Copake Falls Day, this year on August 17th, will include (and feature!) The Fabulous Beekman Boys – more to come on that event.

Our complete calendar is on our website with timely updates on our Facebook page.  The latter has become an essential resource for us.  We urge you to follow us there.
cart phot with detail from Gobrecht disk

And finally, we are delighted to be collaborating with our neighbors in Mount Washington (MA) who are creating a museum exhibit on the history of charcoal making in the 19th century. Their work will be exhibited at the Ironworks museum this summer.  More details on our website and via Facebook as they become available.

To keep abreast of our activities, please follow us on Facebook and check our website. Please also mark your calendar now for the Fifth Potluck Supper and Annual Meeting of Friends of Taconic State Park on July 25th.

But most important of all, please join or renew your membership in Friends of Taconic State Park. Your support is so essential in making our beautiful park an exciting place to visit.

Thank you!

Sincerely,
Milbrey Zelley, President
Friends of Taconic State Park