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Came across this image today, and wanted to ask for opinions. It was supposed to be an Iron Furnace. It probably was a furnace. Obviously the prominence, and quality of the structure stands out. What attracted my attention in addition to the arched structure, were those stone walls behind. What could they be for?
This image is supposed to represent its "construction", right?
The Oswego Iron Furnace, built in 1866 at the confluence of Oswego Creek and the Willamette River, was the first iron furnace on the Pacific Coast. Between 1867 and 1885, it produced 42,000 tons of pig iron, sold as "Oregon Iron" to foundries in Portland and San Francisco. Before 1867, all iron on the Pacific Coast was brought by ship around Cape Horn.
Allegedly, below is the same Furnace. What happened to the landscape?
Oswego Iron Furnace
The image below is representative of this "furnace's" state prior to some recent exploration. Nice stones they used back in the day, didn't they?
Any thoughts on this building?
This image is supposed to represent its "construction", right?
The Oswego Iron Furnace, built in 1866 at the confluence of Oswego Creek and the Willamette River, was the first iron furnace on the Pacific Coast. Between 1867 and 1885, it produced 42,000 tons of pig iron, sold as "Oregon Iron" to foundries in Portland and San Francisco. Before 1867, all iron on the Pacific Coast was brought by ship around Cape Horn.
The image below is representative of this "furnace's" state prior to some recent exploration. Nice stones they used back in the day, didn't they?
Any thoughts on this building?
Note: This OP was recovered from the KeeperOfTheKnowledge archive.
Note: Archived Sh.org replies to this OP are included in this thread.


