Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company

Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company
Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company
Former type Public company
Industry

Steel milling

Coal and Iron Mining
Fate Became division of United States Steel Corporation
Successor Tennessee Coal & Iron Division: United States Steel Corporation
Founded 1852
Defunct 1952
Headquarters Birmingham, Alabama
Key people George Gordon Crawford
Products

Steels Integrated Steel Products

Rail Transport

Real Estate
Parent United States Steel Corporation (from 1907)

The Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company (1852–1952), also known as TCI and the Tennessee Company, was a major American steel manufacturer with interests in coal and iron ore mining and railroad operations. Originally based entirely within Tennessee, it relocated most of its business to Alabama in the late nineteenth century. With a sizable real estate portfolio, the company owned several Birmingham satellite towns, including Ensley, Fairfield, Docena, Edgewater and Bayview.

At one time the second largest steel producer in the USA, TCI was listed on the first Dow Jones Industrial Average in 1896. However, in 1907, the company was merged with its principal rival, the United States Steel Corporation. The Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company was subsequently operated as a subsidiary of U. S. Steel for 45 years until it became a division of its parent company in 1952.

Contents

History

Early history

The Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company was founded as the Sewanee Furnace Company,[1] a small mining concern established in 1852 by Nashville entrepreneurs[1] seeking to exploit Tennessee's rich coal reserves and the 19th century railroad boom. After losing money, the business was sold to New York investors in 1859 and reorganized as the Tennessee Coal and Rail Company,[1] but the outbreak of the Civil War the following year saw the fleeting company repossessed by local creditors. It became Tennessee's leading coal extractor over the next decade,[1] mining and transporting coal around the towns of Cowan and Tracy City in the Cumberland Mountains,[2] and soon branched out into coke manufacture.[1] This practice of both extracting and moving coal to market by building private rail tracks was not unusual at the time, as by owning the tracks that served their mines, businesses could undercut rivals at market by saving money on transportation. A Thomas O'Connor purchased the company in 1876 and expanded the business into iron manufacture in order to stimulate coke sales, building a blast furnace near Cowan.[1] The business was subsequently renamed the Tennessee Coal, Iron, and Railroad Company. TCI never again changed its name, despite a later expansion into Alabama following the 1886 purchase of the Birmingham-based Pratt Coal and Iron Company. Such was the industrial importance of Alabama to TCI that in 1895, the company relocated its offices to Birmingham,[2] relegating its native state to relative unimportance.

A coking plant of Pratt Co., TCI's first purchase in Alabama and the catalyst for its ultimate relocation there

Canny investments and the purchase of major competitors in 1888 and 1892 under the direction of financier Hiram Bond, TCI Corporate General Superintendent, saw the firm grow rapidly. The corporation was for several decades one of the few major heavy industries based in the largely agricultural Southern United States,[3] by a wide margin the largest blast furnace operator in the South and at one time the second largest steel producer on the continent.[2][3] Its 1900 asset sheet listed 17 blast furnaces, 3256 beehive coke ovens, 120 Solvay coke ovens, 15 red ore mines,[2] as well an extensive network of railroads, although following the panic of 1893 the company shifted its primary interests from railroads to steel.[1] TCI's largest industrial plant was located in Ensley, a company town founded in 1886 on the outskirts of Birmingham, Alabama, by company president Enoch Ensley. Ensley (map of) was served by the sizable Birmingham Southern Railroad, one of TCI's early acquisitions, and from 1899 contained four 200-ton blast furnaces. In 1906 two more furnaces were constructed, and 40,000 tonnes of steel were produced that year, feeding Ensley's integrated rail, wire and plate mills. The company was fiercely competitive with the larger Pittsburgh steel businesses to the north, owing to the remarkable fact that all the natural resources required to produce steel were located in abundance within a relatively small radius of the Birmingham mills.[4]

From forced labor to paternalism

View of Ensley worker housing and steel works in February 1937. Arthur Rothstein for the U. S. Farm Security Administration

The Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company was one of the largest users of convict leasing for coal mining labor in Alabama following Reconstruction.[5] The number of convicts employed increased after U.S. Steel acquired TCI in 1907, as did the brutality of the conditions in which they labored. In 1908, the first full year of U. S. Steel's ownership of TCI, almost 60 convict workers died from workplace-related accidents.[5]

In the 1910s, TCI undertook a comprehensive program to stabilize its labor force by developing rigorously-planned "model villages", thereby improving worker health, welfare and loyalty. This paternalistic approach carried with it obvious benefits for workers and their families, but also drew criticism for limiting the free movement and organization of labor.[6][7]

Listing on the Dow Jones Index and merger with U. S. Steel

1899 Certificate for 100 Shares in TCI issued to FW Gilley Jr. & Co.

The Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company's status was bolstered when it became one of the first 12 companies to be listed on the inaugural Dow Jones Industrial Average, compiled in May 1896.[8] However, it was not long before TCI was eclipsed by its principle competitor, the United States Steel Corporation, a huge conglomerate formed in 1901 out of the enormous Carnegie and Federal steel empires. By the time of the Panic of 1907, U. S. Steel felt confident enough to launch a takeover bid of its Southern rival. On the morning of Saturday November 2, banker and tycoon J. P. Morgan, one of the founders of U. S. Steel, convened a meeting in his library and there suggested that U. S. Steel purchase the stock of an insolvent Wall Street brokerage firm, Moore and Schley, which had secured huge loans against 6 million TCI shares.[9] This was not an entirely selfish gesture, as Morgan recognised that the failure of Moore and Schley would send investor confidence in the markets into a nose-dive. E. H. Gary, president of U. S. Steel, agreed in principle to this transaction, yet argued that without careful political maneuvering the deal would be seen by Congress as an effort to create a monopoly and thereby encounter troublesome federal anti-trust litigation. Morgan himself had been burnt by crusading Washington trust-busters in 1902 when his Northern Securities Company had been forcibly broken up by the government in a landmark test case.[10]

In response to his concerns, Morgan sent Gary on an urgent mission to Washington that Sunday so that the deal might be vetted by President Theodore Roosevelt himself before the stock exchange opened the next day. Convinced by Gary that U. S. Steel only wished to purchase Moore and Schley's stock in order to inject liquidity into the firm and thereby shore up investor confidence in the wider economy, Roosevelt granted the transaction antitrust immunity in November 1907, a decision for which he was later derided by critics as a hypocrite.[9] Indeed, in 1911 the federal government sought to undo what it perceived to be Roosevelt's mistake and (without success) sued U. S. Steel. In the mean time, Moore and Schley was saved from collapse, the panic soon subsided and U. S. Steel was rewarded with a valuable prize - a controlling stake in TCI. U. S. Steel immediately replaced the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company on the Dow Jones Index, where it remained until 1991.[11]

U. S. Steel

Ensley iron furnaces, 1908

TCI was not fully incorporated into U. S. Steel, and continued to operate as an extremely profitable[10] subsidiary of its parent company well into the 20th century. Immediately following the merger, a venture was launched to create a new, larger TCI plant to the west of Ensley and at the center of a new company town, and so in 1910 work on the planned community of Corey, Alabama began.[2] Named after an executive who later committed suicide, Corey was soon renamed Fairfield,[2] and the steel works there opened in 1917. With the discovery of new coking coal and ore deposits in the region, and with the aid of U. S. Steel's enormous capital, the Fairfield works were quickly expanded with the construction of new steel mills and rail links. Several rolling mills were completed in 1917,[2] which produced ship materials for the nearby shipbuilding plants in Chickasaw, Alabama, in support of America's sudden entry into World War I. In 1920 a direct rail line between Fairfield and Birmingport, the new port of Birmingham on the Warrior River was opened.[2] This was followed by the completion of the 'High Ore Line Railroad',[2] which connected the Red Mountain and the Fairfield works; trains literally rolled down the hill from mine to mill. In 1923 a merchant steel mill was completed,[2] followed by the opening of a sheet products mill in 1926.[2]

TCI proved to be so efficient at making cheap steel that a post-merger internal tariff (the 'Pittsburgh Tariff') was levied by U. S. Steel from 1909 on all steel coming out of the Birmingham region. This was an effort to negate the competitive edge of Birmingham steel over U.S. Steel's own Pittsburgh product.[4]

TCI's independence as a separate legal entity from its parent corporation ended in 1952, a century after the founding of the Sewanee Furnace Company, when the it became the Tennessee Coal & Iron Division of U. S. Steel.[2] The memory of the historic importance of TCI was not lost when a short book to celebrate the Tennessee Company's centenary was published by U. S. Steel in 1960: Biography of a Business.[2] Stagnation and decline began in 1962 when a majority of the mines in the Birmingham region were closed[2] as domestic ores and coal were superseded by cheaper foreign products, especially from Venezuela. The 1970s and 80s brought about a downsizing and eventual consolidation of the Fairfield and Ensley works,[2] mirroring the general decline of heavy industry in the USA throughout those decades.

Current operations

Three furnaces of the Fairfield Plant since superseded by the currently used No. 8 Furnace. Photo of unknown early date

The last relic of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company, the Fairfield Plant, continues to be operated by U. S. Steel as one of its five integrated steel mills in the USA. It is the largest steel-making plant in Alabama,[12] employing 2000[13] workers as of September 2006, down from a peak of 45000 during World War II. With a single blast furnace and three basic oxygen process furnaces,[14] amongst other various mills and production facilities, the plant produces 2.4 million tons of raw steel per annum[14] and 640,000 tons of seamless tubular and sheet products, mainly for purchase by the booming oil industry in the region.[14]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Hillstrom, Kevin; Laurie Collier (2005). The Industrial Revolution in America: Iron and Steel, Railroads, Steam Shipping. ABC-CLIO. pp. 71. ISBN 1851096205. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o John Stewart (2006-07-15). "Capital Improvements and Corporate Development Timeline for TCI with selected parallel local developments in the Birmingham District". http://www.bhamrails.info/TCI/TIC_timeline.htm. Retrieved 2008-05-10. 
  3. ^ a b Encyclopedia Britannica (2008-05-10). "Furnaces of the Tennessee Coal, Iron, and Railroad Company, Ensley, Alabama, 1906". http://www.britannica.com/eb/art-60932/Furnaces-of-the-Tennessee-Coal-Iron-and-Railroad-Company-Ensley. Retrieved 2008-05-10. 
  4. ^ a b John Stewart (2006-07-15). "Birmingham Rails, TCI & RR section, p2". http://www.bhamrails.info/. Retrieved 2008-05-10. 
  5. ^ a b Blackmon, Douglas A. (2009) Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II. Anchor Books
  6. ^ Rikard, Marlene Hunt (November 1981) “’Take Everything You Are … And Give It Away’: Pioneer Industrial Workers at TCI.” The Journal of the Birmingham Historical Society, Vol. 7, No. 2
  7. ^ Rikard, Marlene Hunt (1983) “An Experiment in Welfare Capitalism: The Health Care Services of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company.” Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Alabama
  8. ^ djindixes.com (2008-05-10). "What happened to the original 12 companies in the DJIA?". http://www.djindexes.com/mdsidx/index.cfm?event=showavgDecades&decade=1895. Retrieved 2008-05-10. 
  9. ^ a b Markham, Jerry W. (2002). A Financial History of the United States. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 0765607301. 
  10. ^ a b Brogan, Hugh (2001). The Penguin History of the USA. Penguin. pp. 737. ISBN 9780140252552. 
  11. ^ Global Financial Data (2008-03-28). "Dow Jones Industrial Average History". https://www.globalfinancialdata.com/articles/dow_jones.html. Retrieved 2008-05-11. 
  12. ^ "Report on the Fairfield Plant". 2008-05-10. http://www.steel.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Industry_News&TEMPLATE=/CM/ContentDisplay.cfm&CONTENTID=23438. Retrieved 2008-05-10. 
  13. ^ Paul V. Arnold (2006-09-01). "U.S. Steel's Fairfield Works". Archived from the original on October 16, 2006. http://web.archive.org/web/20061016162054/http://www.reliableplant.com/article.asp?articleid=2384. Retrieved 2008-05-11. 
  14. ^ a b c U.S. Steel (2006-07-25). "U.S. Steel Fairfield Works". Archived from the original on May 1, 2008. http://web.archive.org/web/20080501035611/http://www.ussteel.com/corp/facilities/fairfield.htm. Retrieved 2008-05-11. 

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