Hazard Powder
The story of the rise and fall of the Hazard Powder Company, one of the largest gunpowder manufacturing facilities in the country in the 1800s, is told in great detail from its inception to its death in a violent explosion.
I've been asked to attend the 199th meeting of the Enfield Society for the Detection of Thieves and Robbers...
Also ran into Gil Vasseur at the last market - he is the great grandson of Charles who was discussed in the last chapter of my book. Might consider a book to do with Hazardville, Thompsonville and the Society - have to see if there's enough meat there for a book.
06/28/2021
Did you know that North Central and Northwest CT was once a hot bed of smelting? Yes - they smelt it AND dealt it.
As early as 1719 the owners of the English Iron Works companies had tried, and failed, to shut down fledging operations in Massachusetts which had already constructed six furnaces and 19 forges for smelting ore and manufacturing iron implements, even though the House of Commons had passed a bill stating “'that none in the plantations (colonies) should manufacture iron wares of any kind out of any sows, pigs, or bars whatsoever”.
Clearly England considered America to be a land of consumers, and not manufacturers to challenge the Crown.
In 1728 Samuel Higley bought 143 acres of land from William Dement of Enfield, and dug two mining pits into the earth, removing hundreds of tons of iron ore which were shipped to England for smelting.
By 1732 Thomas Lamb purchased 5000 acres of land and water privileges on the Salmon Fell Kill in Lime Rock, 60 miles west of Enfield, successfully extracting and smelting iron at his forge at Furnace Hollow.
Two years later, in 1734, large deposits Limonite, also known as Brown Hematite, were discovered in Salisbury, a small town nestled in the northernmost left corner of the Nutmeg State. The iron smelted from this mineral was of such high quality that forge masters travelled great distances to purchase the ore, carrying the nuggets back in leather saddlebags or in horse drawn carts.
Ever independent, Connecticut blacksmiths mostly eschewed the furnace in favor of the simpler forge, as it gave them greater control when producing iron for horseshoes, hinges, hasps, latches, nails, tools, and any implement required to withstand bending or sudden shock.
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
Category
Contact the business
Telephone
Website
Address
46 Windsor Street
Enfield, CT