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NORMANDALE, ONTARIO Historical Plaque. "NORMANDALE BLAST FURNACE" "One of Upper Canada's most important industrial enterprises, the Normandale ironworks and its blast furnace played a significant role in the early economic development of the province. Built in 1816-1817 by John Mason, and enlarged in 1821-1822 by Joseph Van Norman, Hiram Capron, and George Tillson, it produced the famous Van Norman cooking stove, as well as iron kettles, pots and pans, and agricultural implements. Up to 200 men were employed prior to the closure of the blast furnace in 1847, following the exhaustion of the local bog ore deposits.
Links: 1. Normandale, Ontario 2. Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada 3. Historical Sites, Canada 4. Timeline Norfolk County
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current | 02:37, 2 July 2007 | 2,272 × 1,704 (1.42 MB) | Marcus59 ( talk | contribs) | NORMANDALE, ONTARIO Historical Plaque. "NORMANDALE BLAST FURNACE" "One of Upper Canada's most important industrial enterprises, the Normandale ironworks and its blast furnace played a significant role in the early economic development of the province. Bu |
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Original file (2,272 × 1,704 pixels, file size: 1.42 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
NORMANDALE, ONTARIO Historical Plaque. "NORMANDALE BLAST FURNACE" "One of Upper Canada's most important industrial enterprises, the Normandale ironworks and its blast furnace played a significant role in the early economic development of the province. Built in 1816-1817 by John Mason, and enlarged in 1821-1822 by Joseph Van Norman, Hiram Capron, and George Tillson, it produced the famous Van Norman cooking stove, as well as iron kettles, pots and pans, and agricultural implements. Up to 200 men were employed prior to the closure of the blast furnace in 1847, following the exhaustion of the local bog ore deposits.
Links: 1. Normandale, Ontario 2. Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada 3. Historical Sites, Canada 4. Timeline Norfolk County
I, the copyright holder of this work, hereby release it into the
public domain. This applies worldwide. If this is not legally possible: |
This file is a candidate to be copied to
Wikimedia Commons.
Any user may perform this transfer; refer to Wikipedia:Moving files to Commons for details. If this file has problems with attribution, copyright, or is otherwise ineligible for Commons, then remove this tag and DO NOT transfer it; repeat violators may be blocked from editing. Other Instructions
| |||
|
This media file is either in the public domain or published under a free license, and contains no inbound file links. If this media file is useful, then it should be transferred to the Wikimedia Commons. If this media is not useful, then please propose it for deletion or list it at files for discussion. |
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
current | 02:37, 2 July 2007 | 2,272 × 1,704 (1.42 MB) | Marcus59 ( talk | contribs) | NORMANDALE, ONTARIO Historical Plaque. "NORMANDALE BLAST FURNACE" "One of Upper Canada's most important industrial enterprises, the Normandale ironworks and its blast furnace played a significant role in the early economic development of the province. Bu |
You cannot overwrite this file.