Last updated: November 19, 2025
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Revere Copper and Brass Company
Library of Congress, accessed Nov 19, 2025.
While RCB produced many wartime products, it also had a secret task for the Manhattan Engineering District — to extrude pure uranium billets into rods.
The uranium, referred to as “tuballoy,” was heated for 90 minutes to 1,680 °F in a furnace. Once hot, the metal could be forced through a circular shape, called a die, and shaped into rods in a process called extrusion. Forming a rod took only 90 seconds. Extruded rods were quickly quenched to cool and solidify the metal. To preserve secrecy, the company only processed uranium on weekends.
In 1946, President Truman signed the Atomic Energy Act, transferring management of the Manhattan Project’s work to the civilian Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). AEC continued contracting RCB until 1954 for nuclear materials development. The company extruded a mixture of uranium and thorium known as “myrnalloy” for research purposes as well as other alloys from uranium and non-radioactive metals.
After the contract with the AEC ended, the RCB returned to making metal cookware until it filed for bankruptcy in 1982. The plant closed in 1984. By 1989, all the structures had been demolished.
The U.S. Department of Energy Office of Legacy Management’s Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program maintains an online Considered Sites Database that provides digital access to some 1,500 key documents related to sites that supported the Manhattan Project and the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, including Revere Copper and Brass Co.