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Cornwall Furnace (Cedar Bluff, Alabama)

Cornwall Furnace
Cornwall Furnace (Cedar Bluff, Alabama).JPG
Cornwall Furnace
Cornwall Furnace (Cedar Bluff, Alabama) is located in Alabama
Cornwall Furnace (Cedar Bluff, Alabama)
Cornwall Furnace (Cedar Bluff, Alabama) is located in the US
Cornwall Furnace (Cedar Bluff, Alabama)
Location 2 miles (3.2 km) N of Cedar Bluff
Nearest city Cedar Bluff, Alabama
Coordinates 34°14′49″N 85°35′19″W / 34.24694°N 85.58861°W / 34.24694; -85.58861Coordinates: 34°14′49″N 85°35′19″W / 34.24694°N 85.58861°W / 34.24694; -85.58861
Built 1863
Architect Noble Brothers
NRHP reference # 72000158
Added to NRHP September 27, 1972

Cornwall Furnace is located near Cedar Bluff, Alabama in Cherokee County. It was built by the Noble Brothers to supply iron products to the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War.

The furnace is roughly pyramidal in shape, 30 feet (9 m) square at the base, 15 feet (4.5 m) square at the top, and 45 feet (14 m) tall. It is built of large hematite blocks quarried from Dirt Cellar Mountain and brought the three miles (5 km) to the site by ox cart. A half-mile (.8 km) long mill race was constructed from the Chattooga River through a tunnel under a hill to power a water wheel which provided the air blast to operate the furnace. A bridge, no longer extant, spanned from the hillside to the top of the stack, where iron ore was loaded into the furnace. A gristmill and sawmill were also located on the site.

James Noble, Sr., and his five sons began operating the Noble Brothers foundry in Rome, Georgia, in 1855. In 1862 the Confederate States of America commissioned the company to build two new furnaces, in exchange for cannons, caissons, and other products. Construction of the furnace began shortly thereafter, involving an estimated 1,000 Confederate soldiers and slaves from nearby plantations.

The furnace went into production in either late 1862 or early 1863. Charcoal was produced on nearby farms and plantations to fire the furnace, and water power from the Chattooga River was used to power the blast. The pig iron ingots manufactured at the furnace were sent to the Noble Brothers' foundry in Rome for the manufacture of war materials. The furnace was knocked out of production for the remainder of the war by Union troops in 1864.


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