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Charcoal/Iron Industry
The trees that posed a major obstacle to the settler were of extreme
value to the burgeoning industrial revolution. The production of
charcoal was a major enterprise employing over 300 woodcutters and
consuming timber from 11,000 acres of company land during peak years
(1859-1885). Charcoal fueled the Catoctin Iron Furnace which separated
out the iron from the raw iron ore. Approximately 80 bushels of
charcoal were burned for every ton of iron manufactured. It took
a cord of wood to manufacture 6 bushels of charcoal.
The woodcutters entered a forested area and cut every live standing
tree. One or two trees were left to re-seed the forest. The resulting
logs were carried downhill by horse or mule drawn sleds to the hearth
where the wood was charred.
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Charcoal Sled
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Charcoal Hearth Site
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The hearth was a flat circular area, about 30 feet in diameter,
that had been raked and leveled. The collier, the man who tended
the fire, preferred to reuse an old hearth site to take advantage
of it's level, rock free surface. Old hearths were common since
the forest was cut every 30 years during the 96 years that charcoal
was used at the Catoctin Iron Furnace.
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Stacking wood - inside the Hearth
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Completed Hearth
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The collier supervised the orderly stacking of the wood. First
a chimney was built in the center of the hearth; then 30 to 50 cords
of four foot logs were stacked around this chimney in concentric
circles. The finished stack was covered with leaves and dirt. This
controlled the amount of air that reached the fire. Hot empers were
dropped into the chimney on a cool, humid night. Tending the fire
was a round-the-clock job so the collier lived nearby in a simple
hut. He watched up to seven hearths that smoldered for two weeks
until charring was complete.
The charcoal was raked into small piles so that it could cool.
This way any fires that would flare up would destroy only a portion
of the finished product insted of the entire stack. The collier
was responsible for the charcoal unit until it was delivered to
the furnace. Since he was paid by the bushel, any charcoal that
accidently burned was his personal loss.
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