More About Star Glass Works
by Jack Roberts
Reprinted from "INSULATORS - Crown Jewels of the Wire", June 1972, page 16
I wrote you about six weeks ago about the Star Glass Co.
When I wrote you I also wrote New Albany. You sent me your
copies of C. J.'s and information that is contradictory to
the information of the past. I think we glass collectors
are faced with living without the true facts of the "star"
insulator.
What they sent me is pretty conclusive, that they didn't
make insulators. So we're right back where we started
from. I understand some collectors believe the "stars"
were made by all companies. I suppose I'll have to agree,
until there is factual evidence to the contrary.
(Following is copy of the letter Mr. Roberts received from
New Albany Floyd County Public Library.)
March 7, 1972
Mr. Jack Roberts
732 North Olive
Rialto, California 92376
Dear Mr. Roberts
Your letter was forwarded to us by the New Albany Chamber
of Commerce.
In the New Albany City Directories I found the following
glass manufacturers listed.
1868 |
Ford, J. B. and sons
|
1871-72 |
New Albany Glass Works and Star Glass Co.
|
1873-74 |
New Albany Glass Works
|
|
Star Glass Company
|
1877-78 |
Star Glass Company
|
1880-87 |
DePauw's American Plate Glass Works
|
1888-96 |
W. C. DePauw Company
|
1901-02 |
No glass companies mentioned
|
Glass manufacturing was important to New Albany's economy
from 1879 - 1893. The glass works employed from 1,500 to
2,000 men. With the discovery of natural gas in northern
Indiana, the glass works was moved in 1892, and the panic
of the 1890's brought bankruptcy to the industry. This
information came from several books which contain
information on New Albany's industries. There is no glass
works in New Albany at the present time.
Advertisements for the DePauw Co. mention polished and
rough plate glass, single and double strength window
glass, and mason fruit jars.
I am also enclosing several pages from The History of the
Ohio Falls Cities and Their Counties. You may be
interested in the information included about the Star
Glass Works. I found no mention of electrical insulators
in any of our sources.
Sincerely,
Mrs. Carla Baldwin
HISTORY OF THE OHIO FALLS COUNTIES.
STAR GLASS WORKS
John H. Ford probably has the honor of originating the manufacture of
glass in New Albany. Prior to his appearance in New Albany Mr.
Ford was a resident of Greenville, in Greenville township, where he
was prominently connected with various enterprises for the building
up of that village. His residence there being in close proximity to the
great sand bed that lies in Washington county near the Floyd county
line, probably led to inquiries by him concerning the manufacture of
glass from this sand, and culminating finally in the establishment of
the glass works of John B. Ford & Co. in 1865, He was a good talker
and succeeded in persuading some capitalists in New Albany that
this sand bed should be utilized, and that New Albany was a most
excellent point for the manufacture of glass. They secured
a block of ground on the river bank between Upper Ninth and Tenth
streets, upon which they erected a frame building and began the
manufacture of window glass The works were soon disposed of for
some reason to Messrs. Samuel Montgomery and Henry Hennegan
in whose hands they burnt down in 1866. This firm soon rebuilt the
works and resold them to Mr. Ford, taking the steamer Dexter in the
trade. The manufacture of glass at this time was not a success,
however, owing probably to lack of both experience and capital, and
the works were soon abandoned.
In February, 1867, Mr. Ford having secured help in the way of
capital again established the works on a very much larger scale than
before. These works were known as the New Albany Glass works.
John B. Ford & Co. purchased ground on the river bank between
Eleventh and Thirteenth streets, where the firm erected some very
extensive buildings. The following extract from a directory of New
Albany, published in 1868, gives a fair idea of the extent of these
works:
New Albany Glass works John B. Ford& Son, proprietors, were
established in February 1867, And occupy six building three of which
are brick, The one used in the manufacture of window glass is sixty-
five by eighty-five feet, another for cutting the same, is fifty by one
hundred and fifty-four feet; then there are two buildings each twenty
by one hundred feet, one used for a warehouse and the other for silvering and
finishing plate-glass mirrors; then another warehouse forty by one hundred feet.
and a bottle-house, sixty-five by eighty feet. which is entirely new. The firm
employs one hundred and twenty hands, four teams, and consumes in their
year's work (ten months) one
hundred and sixty-five thousand bushels of coal: 500 hundred tons or soda ash;
one thousand five hundred tons of sand, nine thousand bushels of lime and six
hundred barrels of salt. This does not include the stock in use in the
manufacture of hollow ware. Value of manufactured goods $300,000 per annum.
It will be seen from
the above that the New Albany Glass works were established on a somewhat
extensive scale. In 1873 Mr. Cottom thus writes of these works:
The New Albany Glass
works have suspended, and part of the buildings converted to the use of other
manufacturing companies. They were upon an extensive scale, and the last year
operated employed a capital of $100,000, gave employment to one hundred and
sixty-five workmen, paid in early wages $75,000, and turned out an annual
product of the value of $250,000.
In 1872 the
buildings and grounds of the New Albany Glass works passed into the hands of W.
C. De Pauw, and became a part of the Star Glass Works, which had been
established by Mr. DePauw. The Star works thus became the only glass
manufacturing establishment in the city, and so remains today. With the addition
of the grounds and buildings of Messrs. Ford & Co. it became one of the most
extensive establishments of this character in America. In 1873 Mr. Cottom thus
writes of these works:
They cover an area
of fifteen acres with their buildings and necessary grounds. and manufacture the
best quality of plate-glass, in all respects equal to the very best French and
English plate, and also window glass fruit jars and bottles. The manufacture of
plate-glass in America is yet an experiment so far as it relates to profitable
returns upon the very large investment or capital it requires to operate such
work. There can, however, be little doubt, that the
experiment now making in New Albany in the manufacture of first quality of
plate-glass will prove successful. inasmuch as the capital employed, the extent
of the buildings, and the amount and superiority of machinery used, will compare
favorably with the like conditions in the extensive plate-glass works of Europe.
The buildings of use
Star Glass Works are as follows: Main building 580 by 115 feet in dimensions,
containing eight smoothers and eight polishers, twenty-one furnaces, and ovens,
cutting and picking-rooms and offices; one building (in the course of erection)
300 by 124 feet in size, for a casting-house one building 40 by 50 for ovens for
roasting and calcining gypsum, and for crushing and pulverizing emery and
limestone, and a warehouse 260 by 40 feet The Plate-glass works have a capacity
for the production of 1,000 feet per day of the finest quality of polished
plate, 90 by 180 inches in size. The window glass houses, two in number are 60
by 80 feet in size. There are two bottle and fruit jar houses, each 60 by 80
feet, one flattening-house, 80 by 130 feet; cutting-house, 20 by 80 feet;
pot-house, 40 by 100 feet; mixing-house, 40 by 40 feet; sand-house 50 by 50
feet; house for grinding fruit jam, 20 by 30 feet; warehouse, 30 by 110 feet;
steam box factory, 70 by 130
feet; store-house, 16 by 16 feet; office 20 by 40 feet.
Four large steam engines. receiving power from eight large boilers, are
required to run the
machinery for this vast establishment. These extensive works have a capital $550,000; employ 250
operatives; annually pay $125,000 in wages, and the value of their products the past year was $720,000 and
will probably considerably exceed $1,000,000 for the year 1873. These works are the only ones of
importance in America at present engaged in the manufacture of polished plate-glass. W. C.
DePauw, the wealthiest and most enterprising capitalist in Indiana, is
president of the company.
Regarding the manufacture of glass at these works the following is taken from the
Ledger-Standard of 1877:
The Star Plate-glass works of New Albany, Indiana, is the most extensive and elaborate on the
American continent, embracing three divisions of glass-making, viz: Polished plate, window
glass, and fruit jars.
The works are established on what was originally supposed to be an abundantly large property upon
the bank of the river, but which has since been added to, until the present area--which is as completely
covered with buildings as is safe --includes about fifteen acres and even this has not proved sufficient,
but to use a common expression is still growing.
The plate-glass department, which includes the melting
furnaces and annealing ovens, the beds on which the glass is formed into plates, the ovens for re-calcining the plaster of
Paris, the owns for calcining and preparing the polishing material, the rooms for grinding and preparing the emery,
the grinding, smoothing and polishing emery, the cutting rooms and the plate-glass warerooms, are all contained in
the building.
Glass is the result of the combination by fusion of silex, pure sand with an alkali, and some
ingredients for purifying, coloring, or tempering. These materials are subjected to an intense heat in
fire-clay vessels called pots, which are placed in huge furnaces, where they can be closely
watched. When the fusion is complete the glass-blower inserts the lower end of a straight hollow
iron rod into the molten mass, to which a portion of the waxy material adheres. Now withdrawing the
rod, he blows a huge bubble of glass. By constantly twirling the rod and other manipulations only understood by the blowers, such as inverting it in the air, swinging in a circle,
etc., the brittle bubble assumes the shape of a long evenly formed cylinder, or huge bottle, the neck
being fast to the rod.
Now, by beating the other end, while the thumb closes the mouth-piece, the bottom of the bottle is
softened, the air in the cylinder is expanded, and the glass opens at the other end. A few more twirls
and the cylinder is ready to be separated from the rod. This is accomplished by rubbing the junction
of the glass and rod with a small bar of cold iron, the sudden, uneven contraction breaking the glass
at that point. Another separation is made at the shoulder or neck, by encircling the cylinder with
melted glass. A perfect cylinder or tube of glass is thus left, from ten to fourteen inches in diameter,
and from sixty to seventy-two inches in length. This is now split from end to end on the top, and
carried to the flattening oven, when it is placed upon a revolving table.
The heat softens the glass,
which soon assumes the form of a flattened sheet, and is carefully smoothed down by means
of a long-handled block of wood. It is then placed in a cooling oven or "Leer," where it gradually
cools, and it is then cut with diamonds into the required sizes for window panes.
The fruit jars are handled similar to window glass, except that it is blown into iron moulds. When the
bubble is of the proper size, the blower places it within the open mould, closes the latter by stepping
upon a lever, and blows with sufficient force to perfectly fill all the indentations of the mould, at the
same time withdrawing the pipe sufficiently to weaken its hold upon the jar. Removing the foot the
mould opens, and the jar is raised by the pipe. A V shaped receptacle lies near by, with an iron
edge at its farthest extremity, into which, with a dexterous movement, the jar is dropped, the thin
glass being broken by the iron edge. The assistant now steps forward with a rod, attached to which is
a metallic case, and this is slipped over the jar. The jar is now ready for the annealing oven, and from
thence is taken to the filers, who rasp off the tough edges from the top, when they are wheeled to
the grinding room and run through the grinders, than washed, and are ready for packing, preparatory
to shipment.
Plate-glass is properly poured, or cast glass. A smooth iron table with adaptable guides for size and
thickness receives the melted glass, as it is poured in mass from the pot. A huge, heavy roller then
travels the length of the table, and the mass is uniformly spread like dough under a rolling pin. It is
now pushed upon a traveling table, wheeled to and slid into the annealing oven, to remain until properly
cooled. It is now "rough plate." It then goes through the process of grinding smoothing, polishing, cutting,
etc. This completes it as polished plate. Many similar establishments started In this country have
failed in attempting, the manufacture of polished plate-glass. Man of large means and possessed of abundant brains, have experimented for a number of years and lost fabulous sums of money, and
after all were obliged to abandon the enterprise. The science is new in this country; but it has been left
to W. C. DePauw to demonstrate the fact that polished plate-glass can be made equally successful
here as in Europe. Mr. DePauw has invested fully a million dollars In his enterprise and it is
generally understood that he has at least succeeded after years of incessant toil and investment,
to make as good plate-glass as may be found in the world.
His employees are the most experienced men that can be found, his machinery and appliances the very
best, and with the same facilities (and in some instances better) than European manufacturers have to
make their polished plate, Mr. DePauw duplicates their glass and sells it to the American Market at a
cheaper rate than the imported glass is offered. The reward that the gentleman so richly deserves is
certainly not far off if it has not already arrived.
Important improvements are constantly going on about the glass works. A new dock his been built to
admit the large coal and sand barges that are being constantly unloaded to supply the furnaces. Over
two hundred and fifty men are employed about the different departments, each person moving under
the direction of experienced directors, a hive of industry that is seldom seen, even in cities of large
metropolitan proportions.
The following from the Courier-Journal of August 24, 1881, gives a picture of the present Star Glass
Works:
DePauw's American Plate-glass works of 1881 is not what it was a year ago. It has been increased
from year to year until now the buildings cover twenty-five acres of ground.
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