
Ulster Iron Works records, 1816-1874 (majority within 1825-1844)
Using These Materials
- Restrictions:
- The collection is open for research.
Summary
- Creator:
- Ulster Iron Works
- Abstract:
- The Ulster Iron Works records consist of documentation of the financial, management, and technical aspects of iron production during the 1830s and 1840s, and correspondence between the owners of the company and John Simmons, the on-site manager.
- Extent:
- 1 volume, plus 98 loose manuscript
- Language:
- English
- Authors:
- Collection processed and finding aid created by Rob S. Cox , 1992
Background
- Scope and Content:
-
The Ulster Iron Works records consist of two parts, a bound volume that includes retained copies of out-going correspondence, and a series of approximately 100 miscellaneous items, mostly consisting of correspondence between the owners of the company and John Simmons, the on-site manager. The collection provides documentation of the financial, management, and technical aspects of iron production during the 1830s and 40s, with particularly interesting information on governmental contracting and on technology transfer from English and Welsh mills.
Both the bound volume and loose manuscripts include sets of technical specifications, and some plans and figures for various aspects of refining and iron production. The owners of the iron works were keen on importing the latest English and Welsh technology to make Ulster more efficient in production, with a specific interest in improving the rolling operations, furnace technology, steam power, and -- as might be expected for a works situated not far from the coal regions of Pennsylvania -- integrating anthracite into the operation as a fuel source. Among the miscellaneous manuscripts at the end of the collection are yield estimates and statements of production costs for various manufacturing processes, some production records, price comparisons with products from other works in the United States and Britain, and tests and specifications for various iron products.
The collection contains a number of items relating to labor and labor relations at the Saugerties mills. Scattered throughout the collection is correspondence relating to the hiring of both skilled and unskilled hands, with some particularly items relating to efforts to locate highly skilled English and Welsh workers and persuade them to emigrate, both to fill labor needs and to bring workers experienced with new technologies. In 1839, when William Young was traveling in Britain to examine iron works, Simmons argued that compared to English mills, Ulster could offer higher wages for several positions for boys, and argued that this might be an effective tool for luring emigrants in the face of an expected shortage of labor. There are also a number of items relating to workmen's wages, including some vouchers, receipts, and labor contracts for individual workers. Of a more personal nature, the collection includes a subscription list forwarded by John Simmons to provide relief to the widow of a mill hand (1830 August 25), and a letter from a former mill employee, Walter Kearny, requesting a loan to help purchase the business of a deceased partner. There are several references, though none terribly substantive, to "disturbance and dissatisfaction" among the employees of the mill in 1831. An 1842 letter relating to the New Jersey Iron Works, another operation managed by the owners of the Ulster Iron Works, contains even greater evidence of labor unrest. The unidentified writer insists that the workers accept a 25% reduction in wages without negotiation, and concludes, "we have orders on hand to execute, which may take another month to complete. We shall then stop, until the Workmen submit to our terms" (1842 January 16). A few letters relate to Simmons' own dissatisfaction with his position at the iron works and his feeling that his authority was being undermined by the actions of the owners.
Like many "business" collections from the early Republic, the Ulster Iron Works Records contain some personal correspondence of the mill owners and executives, particularly of the supervisor, John Simmons. Among the most poignant letters in the collection is a letter from Simmons to a bar owner, Samuel Oaks, in which Simmons writes that his father had been frequenting Oaks' "works" and been seen "in Places and in Condition highly Discreditable to the humane race" (1834 August 8). Simmons professed to finding the situation "mortifying" and pleaded with Oaks to persuade his father to return home.
- Biographical / Historical:
-
The Ulster Iron Works Company was an iron foundry and manufactory situated on the Hudson River near the iron deposits of Ulster County, 100 miles north of New York City. The company was a financially successful and fairly long-lived operation having been established before the mid-1820's, and continuing in operation through at least the end of the Civil War. The works was involved in most phases of iron production, from smelting through the manufacture of wrought iron and cast iron products for industrial and military use.
Among the factors that contributed to the success of the Ulster Iron Works was the ability of the owners of the corporation to arrange for government contracts, especially contracts with the Navy, for providing iron products for use in rockets, ships, and other materials. In civilian applications, Ulster was an important purveyor of iron products for railroads and shipping. Also contributing to the success of the works was the unusual diligence of the owners in importing foreign technologies for use at Ulster, and in soliciting the emigration of highly skilled workmen from Welsh and English foundries to fill their employment demands, particularly during the 1830s when skilled labor was at a premium. The owners appear to have been quite successful at using high wages as a lure to skilled workers during such periods, but they were equally ruthless at cutting wages when labor was abundant. At the same time, there is some evidence for the persistence of a more patriarchal attitude on the part of the foundry owners toward their employees, and the on-site manager, John Simmons, at least maintained a personalized, face-to-face relationship with his workers.
- Acquisition Information:
- 1982. M-2010 .
- Processing information:
-
Cataloging funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the "We the People" project.
- Rules or Conventions:
- Finding aid prepared using Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)
Related
- Additional Descriptive Data:
-
Partial Subject Index
Alcoholism - 1834 August 8
Anchors - 1839 October 1
Anthracite - 1841 March 2
- 1841 March 18
- 1842 February 3
Anvils - 1831 March 16
Apprentices - 1829 April 17
- 1829 October 5
- 1837 January 30
- 1839 February 21
Blacksmiths - 1831 September 9
Blast furnaces - 1839 February 18
- 1841 March 18
- 1840
- 1840
Blenavon Iron Works, Wales - 1839 March 29
Blowers - 1840
Bolters-down - 1839 April 15
Bricklayers - 1831 February 3
Bricks - 1839 February 18
- 1840 August 13
Carriages - 1831 November 28
Cast iron - 1841 - 1842
Catchers - 1839 March 6
Charity - 1830 August 25
Child labor - 1839 February 21
- 1839 March 6
- 1839 April 15
Clay - 1840 August 13
Coal - 1831 July 20
Contract negotiation - 1839 December 25
- 1840 January 30
Contractors - 1843 September 26
- 1843 September 26
Contracts - 1834 September 23
- 1843 September 26
Death - 1830 August 25
- 1839 March 18
Debauchery - 1834 August 8
Debts - 1834 June 14
- 1834 June 17
- 1841 October 18
- 1841 October 18
Defense contracts - 1839 October 1
Delph Clay Works - 1839 February 18
Dowlais Iron Works - 1841
Employees - 1831 September 9
Employment - 1829 April 21
- 1829 October 5
- 1831 April 14
- 1839 February 21
- 1839 March 18
Family life - 1834 August 8
Fildsby & Simms - 1839 February 18
Fire - 1841 January 2
Floods - 1839 February 18
- 1839 March 6
- 1841 January 2
Foremen - 1840 March 11
Foster Co. - 1839 February 18
Freight - 1831 July 18
- 1831 September 26
- 1831 October 29
Funerals - 1830 August 25
- 1841 October 19
Furnacemen - 1839 March 6
Furnaces - 1841 March 2
- 1842 February 3
Greenwich Iron Works - 1842
Hinton, Lewis - 1830 August 25
Horses - 1832 January 11
- 1839 January 30
Industrial relations - 1831 September 10
- 1834 November 20
- 1836
- 1839 February 21
- 1840 March 11
- 1841 December 8
Iron and steel trade--New York - 1831 February 3
Iron and steel workers - 1836 January 30
- 1841 March 2
- 1841 December 8
- [1843]
- 1842 January 16
- 1835 August 17 - 1835 September 14
Iron and steel workers--New York - 1837 January 30
Iron founding - 1829 January 25
- 1831 August 23
- 1834 November 15
- 1841
- 1841 January 8
- 1836 - 1843
- 1839 October 1
Iron founding--Great Britain - 1840
Iron founding--New York - 1843 July 25
Iron industry and trade - 1839 December 25
- 1840 January 21
- 1840 January 30
- 1841 March 2
- [1843]
Iron industry and trade--Connecticut - 1842
Iron industry and trade--Great Britain - 1834 September 23
- 1839 February 18
- 1839 February 21
- 1839 March 6
- 1839 April 15
- 1839 April 18
- [1828]
- 1842 January
Iron industry and trade--New Jersey - 1842 January 16
Iron industry and trade--New York - 1831 August 10
- 1831 September 9
- 1831 September 10
- 1834 November 20
- 1836
- 1839 February 21
- 1839 March 6
- 1843 September 26
- 1843 September 26
- 1843 September 29
- n.d.
- 1831 - 1842
- 1837 September 30 - 1841 September 30
- 1835 - 1842
- 1836 - 1843
- 1843 July 25
- 1836 January and February
- 1842 January
- 1842 February 3
- 1833 June 30 - 1833 July 14
Iron industry and trade--Pennsylvania - 1841 March 18
- 1843 March 21
Iron industry and trade--Prices - 1833 March 30
- 1834 September 23
- 1840 February 7
- 1841 March 18
- 1837 September 30 - 1841 September 30
- 1836 - 1843
- [1828]
- 1836 January and February
- 1842
- 1842 January
- 1843 March 21
Iron industry and trade--Virginia - 1841 January 2
Iron industry and trade--Wales - 1839 March 29
- 1839 April 15
- 1839 April 18
- 1840
- n.d.
Iron--Analysis - 1829 January 25
- 1829 April 18
- 1831 November 28
- 1834 November 15
- 1841 - 1842
- 1836 January and February
Iron-works--Great Britain - 1839 February 18
- 1839 April 15
Iron-works--New Jersey - 1841 March 2
- 1842 January 16
Iron-works--New York - 1835 - 1842
Iron-Works--Wales - 1839 March 29
- 1841
Jenkins, George - 1839 April 15
Juniata Iron Works - 1843 March 21
Kemble, William - 1831 September 26
Labor disputes--Iron industry and trade - 1831 September 10
Labor relations - 1842 January 16
Laundry - 1843 September 23 - 1844 May 13
Lawsuits - 1831 September 19
Lightning rods - 1841 June 14
Loans - 1841 December 8
Lumber trade - 1831 November 1
- 1831 November 3
- 1831 November 21
- 1831 November 29
- 1834 November 2
Mammoth Iron Works - 1839 February 18
Management - 1831 August 10
- 1834 November 20
Masons - 1831 February 3
Metals--refining - 1841
Mills, Thomas - 1831 September 9
Mount Savage Iron Works, NY - 1840 August 13
New Jersey Iron Works - 1842 January 16
Physical plant - 1831 January 20
- 1831 March 16
- n.d.
Plant maintenance - 1834 December 22
- [1843]
Public contracts - 1834 November 15
- 1839 December 25
- 1840 January 21
- 1840 January 30
- 1840 February 7
Puddlers - 1829 April 17
- 1829 April 21
- 1829 October 5
- 1839 March 6
- 1839 April 15
- 1835 August 17 - 1835 September 14
- 1836 - 1842
Puddling - 1829 January 25
- 1835 - 1842
- n.d.
- 1835 August 17 - 1835 September 14
Puddling furnaces - 1841
- 1843 July 25
Railroad ties - 1841 January 8
Recruiting of employees - 1836 January 30
- 1839 February 21
- 1839 March 6
- 1839 March 29
- 1839 April 15
- 1839 April 18
Reheaters - 1839 April 15
- 1836 - 1842
Reheating furnaces - 1843 July 25
Richards, James - 1829 August 13
Road construction - 1834 May 31
Rockets - 1840 January 30
Roll turners - 1837 January 30
Rolling (Metal-work) - 1829 April 18
- 1839 April 18
- 1839 June 3
- 1841 March 18
- 1835 - 1842
- 1842
Scullion, Daniel - 1829 October 5
Shingles - 1831 November 1
- 1831 November 3
- 1831 November 29
- 1834 November 2
Shipping - 1831 July 18
- 1831 September 26
- 1831 October 29
Simmons, Ephraim - 1841 October 19
Simmons, Lewis - 1841 October 19
Steam engineering - 1841
Steam engines - 1839 February 18
- 1840
Steel industry and trade - 1839 June 3
Subcontracting - [1843]
Tariffs - 1842 January
Technology - 1831 August 23
- 1839 February 18
- 1841
- 1835 - 1842
- 1840
- 1840
- n.d.
Ulster Iron Works - 1831 January 20
- 1831 March 16
- 1831 September 1
- 1831 September 10
- 1833 March 30
- 1834 December 22
- 1841 January 2
- 1841 January 8
- [1843]
- n.d.
- 1837 September 30 - 1841 September 30
- 1835 - 1842
- 1836 - 1843
- 1843 July 25
- [1828]
- 1835 August 17 - 1835 September 14
United States. Navy - 1840 January 21
- 1840 January 30
- 1840 February 7
- 1839 October 1
Varteg Iron Works, Wales - 1839 March 29
Vice - 1834 August 8
Wage negotiation - 1843 September 29
Wages - 1829 April 17
- 1839 March 6
- 1843 September 29
Wages--Iron and steel workers - 1831 February 3
- 1839 March 6
- 1843 September 30
- n.d.
- 1836 - 1843
- 1842 January 16
- 1836 - 1842
Wages--Iron and steel workers--New York - 1831 September 1
- 1840 March 11
Wagons - 1832 January 11
Wales - 1840
Wine - 1831 August 25
Wire - 1829 April 18
Work schedules - 1835 August 17 - 1835 September 14
Young, William - 1831 September 10
Subjects
Click on terms below to find any related finding aids on this site.
- Subjects:
-
Apprentices.
Blast furnaces.
Debt.
Employees recruiting.
Industrial relations.
Iron--Analysis.
Iron and steel workers.
Iron founding.
Iron industry and trade.
Iron industry and trade--Prices.
Lumber trade.
Public contracts.
Puddling.
Rolling (Metal-work)
Shingles.
Technology.
Wages--Iron and steel workers. - Formats:
- Business records.
- Names:
- United States. Navy.
- Places:
-
Great Britain.
New York.
Wales.
Contents
Using These Materials
- RESTRICTIONS:
-
The collection is open for research.
- USE & PERMISSIONS:
-
Copyright status is unknown.
- PREFERRED CITATION:
-
Ulster Iron Works Records, William L. Clements Library, The University of Michigan