Lucy Furnace
Lucy Furnace was a pair of blast furnaces in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on the Allegheny River in Lawrenceville. The furnaces were part of the Carnegie Steel Company, with the first furnace erected in 1871 by brothers Andrew and Thomas M. Carnegie, Andrew Kloman and Henry Phipps Jr. This furnace was the first one built new by the Carnegies. In 1877 a second furnace, Lucy No. 2, was built at the same site.
Lucy was named after co-owner Thomas M. Carnegie's wife.
History
Operation
The furnace entered blast in summer 1872, at the same time as the Isabella Furnace. Over the decades that they operated, the two furnaces developed a fierce rivalry. Prior to their construction, blast furnaces in the United States did not exceed about 50 tons of iron yield per day, and the prevailing attitude of operators was to follow "rule of thumb" methods and not to attempt anything beyond the rated capacity. Lucy and Isabella began an era of scientific refinement of the process, of relentless experimentation with ways of producing more iron output from a given amount of input ore, increasing throughput, and pushing the furnace beyond its design capacity. Owing to this approach and its large size, the Lucy quickly became a leader in volume of production. By the end of its first year, it was making about 72 tons of pig iron a day. In October 1874, it produced over 100 tons daily.The record-setting production brought attention to Carnegie, and to Pittsburgh. Andrew Carnegie's aggressive approach was known as hard driving, and was controversial within the industry. In 1890, English metallurgist Sir Lowthian Bell denounced operation of the Lucy as "reckless," with the practices wrecking the lining of the furnace such that it had to be replaced every three years. Carnegie's superintendent responded: "What do we care about the lining? We think a lining is good for so much iron and the sooner it makes it the better." Unusually, Carnegie employed a chemist in the administration of the furnace, and credited having "almost the entire monopoly of scientific management" in making Lucy "the most profitable branch of our business."
Due to the early success of the first furnace and an increasing need for pig iron at Carnegie's Edgar Thomson Steel Works, a second furnace was erected in 1877. Both furnaces had a 75 foot stack with a 20 foot bosh. In addition to their sheer size, a key to Lucy's prodigious output was their massive vertical steam reciprocating blowing engines, which provided 16,000 cfm of hot air at 9 psi. A typical furnace at the time provided only 7,500 cfm at 3 psi.