Detroit’s Lost Stove Industry: From Open Hearth to Cast Iron

$24.99

Casting a legacy

Long before automobiles made Detroit the Motor City, the city boasted a flourishing and diverse industrial economy, albeit on a more modest scale. Among the myriad industries that defi

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  • Series: Lost
  • Author: Van Dusen, Gerald
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Page Count: 144
  • Publish Date: February 11 2025
  • ISBN10: 146715699X
  • Language: English

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Casting a legacy

Long before automobiles made Detroit the Motor City, the city boasted a flourishing and diverse industrial economy, albeit on a more modest scale. Among the myriad industries that defined the nineteenth-century city, none held greater significance or broader influence than stove fabrication. Three manufacturers–Detroit Stove Works, Michigan Stove Company and the Peninsular Stove Company–dominated this sector, collectively contributing more than 10 percent of all cast-iron stoves produced and distributed throughout North America. At the forefront of this triumph were Jeremiah and James Dwyer, whose vision and ingenuity played pivotal roles in shaping the industry’s success.

Historian Gerald Van Dusen explores the key role that this early industry played in laying the groundwork and facilitating the production of automobiles.

Author: Gerald Van Dusen
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: History Press
Published: 02/11/2025
Series: Lost
Pages: 144
Weight: 0.7lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.40d
ISBN: 9781467156998
Language: English

Author

Van Dusen, Gerald

Binding

ISBN10

146715699X

ISBN13

9781467156998

Page Count

144

Published Date

February 11 2025

Series

Lost

Language

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