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Mine Hill Franklin Sterling Mine Ogdensburg Mining History 1765 6 vols Books

$ 25.84

Availability: 90 in stock
  • Author: Pete J. Dunn
  • Condition: Volume 2 missing. Vol 3 has marks on front cover. The rest are in very good condition.
  • Publish Date: 2002

    Description

    pt. 1, v. 1. Iron processing and iron mining on and near Mine Hill in Franklin, and on and near Sterling Hill in Ogdenburg: 1765-1850. The zinc deposits at Mine Hill and Sterling Hill. The Ogden and Fowler families: lands, estates and mineral rights
    Pt. 1, v2 Missing
    Pt. 1, v. 3. Early mining companies at Sterling Hill. The New Jersey Franklinite Company, the Boston Franklinite Company, and the Franklin Iron Company at Franklin. The Great Franklinite Case. The New Jersey Zinc Company: 1862 to 1880. Moses Taylor and the arrival of the railroads
    pt. 1, v. 4. Complex deedings at Sterling Hill. John S. Noble and the Noble Mine. Charles W. Trotter's mine at Sterling Hill. Moses Taylor's pivotal lawsuit. The liquidation of the New Jersey Zinc Company. Moses Taylor and the New Jersey Zinc and Iron Company
    pt. 1, v. 5. The New Jersey Zinc Company and the New Jersey Zinc and Iron Company after 1880. The north half of Mine Hill Farm and the Trotter leases. Pennsylvanian interests in Franklin: August Heckscher, J. Price Wetherill, and the Lehigh Zinc and Iron Company. The travails of Charles W. Trotter and the great possession lawsuit
    pt. 1, v. 6. Charles W. Trotter and the. New Jersey Zinc Company: reformation lawsuit and final settlement. The great settlement: Trotter, Heckcsher, and the Lehigh Zinc and Iron Company. Richard Wayne Parker and his influence, the Parker Shaft, Parker Mine and Parker Mill: the Sterling Iron and Zinc Company. Final litigations and the great consolidation. Zinc towns: Franklin, Ogdensburg, & Palmerton
    pt. 1, v. 7. Post-consolidation activities. Loose ends and messy matters: the Parker contract and residual mineral rights. James L. Curtis: the architypical machinator. Sacred places and hallowed grounds: mines, miners, and mineral collectors. Addenda and appendixes. Index