Columbia Steel Company
The Columbia Steel Company was organized in 1909 with main offices at 503 Market Street, San Francisco. When formed the company had one plant in Portland, Oregon established in 1903 and a bigger plant in Pittsburg, California established in 1909-1910. The company's namesake is the Columbia River. In 1917 the Pittsburg plant (38.02664°N 121.86284°W) had a monthly output of 800 tons open hearth steel and employed 375.[1]
In February 1920 a new rolling mill was opened at the Pittsburg plant.[2] Open hearth furnace capacity reached 7000 tons per month.[3]
From 1918 to 1921 the short-lived Pacific Coast Shipbuilding Company ran a shipyard in neighboring Bay Point. Shipbuilding across the country declined rapidly in the early 1920s at the end of the World War I shipbuilding boom.
January 1923, the Columbia Steel Corporation was formed and acquired all property of the Columbia Steel Company. Dated 1 February 1923, $4,000,000 7% 15-year first mortgage bonds were offered to raise capital for the planned expansion of operations into Utah.[4]
On 1 April 1923, the Torrance, California plant of the Llewellyn Iron Works was acquired by the Corporation. The Iron Trade Review characterizes it somewhat differently than the Pacific Marine Review had done in 1919.[5]
- 2 35-ton open hearth furnaces
- 1 3-ton Heroult electric furnace
- 37,500 tons annual ingot and castings capacity
- 1 22-inch billet mill
- 1 14-inch intermediate mill
- 1 12-inch and 1 8-inch bar mills
Construction of the blast furnace at Ironton, Utah began in April 1923 and it became operational on 1 May 1924. The rated capacity was 120,000 tons/year. Coke was baked in 33 Becker-type ovens built by the Koppers Co., Pittsburgh, with a capacity for cooking 1000 tons of coal per day and production of 207,300 tons of coke per year. Coal was sourced from Columbia's own mines in Carbon County. Iron ore and limestone from Columbia-owned mines.[6]
The blast furnace went into continuous operation until at least 1927, its performance can be tracked during that time with available accurate data. Different recipes were tried in 4 distinct periods of operation. The furnace cycled between producing basic iron and foundry iron on a roughly monthly schedule.[7]
| Period | From | Until | tons basic iron | avg/day | tons foundry iron | avg/day |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1 May 24 | 28 Feb 25 | 45,988 | 314 | 43,986 | 280 |
| B | 1 Mar 25 | 31 Jan 26 | 54,175 | 376 | 65,000 | 387 |
| C | 1 Feb 26 | 30 Apr 26 | 13,596 | 348 | 17,249 | 345 |
| D | 1 May 26 | 31 Aug 27 | 83,046 | 360 | 100,250 | 396 |
A survey of the West Coast steel industry published in the Iron Trade Review in December 1928 listed only one blast furnace in operation on the Pacific Coast.[8]
- Provo
- One stack 83x19 feet
- 4 stoves
- 56 Koppers-Becker coke ovens (+23 contract to Koppers Construction Co. June 1927[9])
- a by-product recovery plant
- Koppers benzol plant
- Pittsburg
- 6 open-hearth furnaces
- Torrance
- 4 open-hearth furnaces (+2 from 1923 survey)
- 1 5-ton Heroult electric furnace (+ 2 tons)
- Portland
- 1 Tropenas 3-ton converter
- 1 Greene electric furnace
- for comparison, Pacific Coast Steel Company, biggest competitor at the time
- South San Francisco: 6 open-hearth furnaces
- Youngstown (Seattle): 4 open-hearth furnaces
In October 1925 Columbia acquired the Milner-Dear-Lerch iron ore holdings, 51 claims covering 921 acres at Iron Mountain, from the Milner Corp. of Salt Lake City.[10]
On 24 November 1926, the Pacific Sheet Steel Corp. of South San Francisco (a Metal & Thermite Corp. subsidiary) was acquired on a stock exchange basis.[11] The plant was to be moved to Torrance.[12] The 6-mill plant had been erected starting July 1923, adjoining the existing Metal & Thermite Corp detinning plant, had opened in April 1924 and was the second such plant on the West Coast, the other being Columbia's own 4-mill works in Pittsburg. Sheet bars were provided by the one-half mile distant plant of the Pacific Coast Steel Company. The principal equipment consisted of 6 stands of hot-rolled 30-inch finishing rolls and 3 stands of 30-inch roughing rolls, driven by a 1500hp motor at 30rpm. There was a 26-inch cold roll at both ends of the hot mill train.[13]
The Columbia Steel Corporation became a wholly-owned subsidiary of U.S. Steel in January 1930. The payment was made with 251,771 shares of Common stock of U.S. Steel. The assets were estimated by U.S. Steel to be of a total value of no less than $41,375,000. At the time of acquisition, Columbia Steel owned and operated steel-producing plants and rolling mills at Pittsburg, California and Torrance, California, a steel foundry at Portland, Oregon, a blast furnace and by-product coke plant in Provo, Utah, iron, coal, and limestone deposits in Utah,[14]
Almost simultaneously to the above expansion of U.S. Steel into the Far West, the first such acquisition of U.S. Steel west of Illinois and Alabama, Bethlehem Steel acquired the Pacific Coast Steel Company and the "independent" Consolidated Steel Corporation was formed by the merger of 3 Los Angeles based companies (the Llewellyn, Baker, and Union Iron Works).
In 1947 Columbia Steel planned to acquire the Consolidated Steel Corporation, its facilities to be supplied by the Geneva mill. The Justice Department objected, but The Supreme Court ruled in favor of U.S. Steel. Consolidated became a subsidiary of U.S. Steel on 31 August 1948, alongside Columbia.
Erection of a new $25,000,000 cold reduction mill in Pittsburg began in August 1946.[15]
A ceremonial opening on 21 October 1948 for 2000 industrialists, government officials, and civic leaders and on 22 October for 15,089 visitors of the general public of the new cold reduction mill in Pittsburg was attended by the U.S. Steel Board of Directors and broadcast coast-to-coast.[16] The new plant had an annual capacity of 325,000 tons of cold reduced sheets and tin plate. U.S. Steel had invested $120,000,000 since the end of the war in California and Utah. On 24.5 acres under the roof of several buildings, the production line consisted of:
- a continuous pickling line
- a 5-stand tandem four-high cold reduction mill
- 2 electrolytic cleaning lines
- 10 rectangular annealing furnaces, crane-moveable to 30 bases
- 2 2-stand tandem four-high temper mills
- 1 single stand four-high sheet temper mill
- side trimming and shearing lines
- Tin plate
- 14 hot-dip tinning lines
- 1 continuous electrolytic plating line
- 1 sheet galvanizing line
Effective 31 December 1951 in an internal restructuring of the corporate structure of U.S. Steel, the Columbia Steel Company and the Geneva Steel Company were merged into the Columbia-Geneva Steel Division of the United States Steel Company. Alden G. Roach became president of the division.[17][18]
References
- "Steel foundry on the Pacific Coast". Iron Trade Review. Vol. 61, no. 12. 20 September 1917. p. 597.
- "Here and There in Industry". Iron Trade Review. Vol. 66, no. 8. 19 February 1920. p. 576.
- "(unreadable title)". Iron Trade Review. Vol. 67, no. 1. 1 July 1920. p. 29.
- "Columbia Steel Corporation". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 116, no. 3004. 20 January 1923. p. 301.
- "Columbia Steel Purchases Torrance, Cal. Plant". Iron Trade Review. Vol. 72, no. 16. 19 April 1923. p. 1134.
- "New Utah Blast Furnace Now in Operation". Iron Trade Review. Vol. 74, no. 20. 15 May 1924. p. 1287.
- Kinney, S.P. (1930). Effect of Sized Ore on Blast-Furnace Operation, Technical Paper 459. U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Mines.
- "Steelworks and Rolling Mills on Pacific Coast". Iron Trade Review. Vol. 83, no. 26. 27 December 1928. p. 1643.
- "Enlarges Coking Capacity". Iron Trade Review. Vol. 80, no. 25. 23 June 1927. p. 1618.
- "Columbia Steel Corp., San Francisco". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 121, no. 3146. 10 October 1925. p. 1793.
- "Columbia Steel Corp". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 123, no. 3206. 4 December 1926. p. 2906.
- "Storms Hold Back Work". Iron Trade Review. Vol. 79, no. 24. 9 December 1926. p. 1522.
- "Build Sheet Mill at Golden Gate". Iron Trade Review. Vol. 74, no. 21. 22 May 1924. p. 1373.
- 28th Annual Report of the United States Steel Corporation. 1929. p. 7-8.
- "Construction Underway at Columbia's Pittsburg Mill". Organized Labor. 10 August 1946. p. 5.
- "The Doors Open at New Coast Mill". U.S. Steel News. Vol. 14, no. 1. U. S. Steel. January 1949.
- 50th Annual Report of the United States Steel Corporation. 1951. p. 19.
- 50th Annual Report of the United States Steel Corporation. 1951. p. 38.