America turns 250 this year, and the steel that built the modern nation was forged on the banks of the Monongahela. In Part 2 of our three-part series on 250 years of American manufacturing, Scott Paul tours the Carrie Blast Furnaces in Pittsburgh with Ron Baraff of Rivers of Steel. They trace how the region’s last pre-WWII blast furnaces poured thousands of tons of iron a day for Carnegie’s Homestead Works across the river; how the Bessemer converter made steel cheap and scalable enough to raise skyscrapers, lay railroads, and float a navy; how steel jobs forged the American middle class and drew Black workers north in the Great Migration; and why the lessons of this “man-made volcano” still matter as America fights to bring manufacturing home.
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Guest Resources
Rivers of Steel: https://riversofsteel.com
Carrie Blast Furnaces -Tours & Visiting: https://riversofsteel.com/experiences/tours/
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