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By 1872 steel production became the main focus for the works using the new Bessemer process.
The Bessemer process was introduced at the end of the 1800s.
The Bessemer process was able to produce the first large scale manufacture of steel.
The solution was to turn to steel rails, which the Bessemer process made competitive in price.
This was the first steel mill using the Bessemer process in America.
Steel from the Bessemer process was made in open hearth furnaces.
Other major components of this infrastructure were the new methods for manufacturing steel, especially the Bessemer process.
Ward created steel rails beginning in 1865 for his railroads using the Bessemer process.
The Bessemer process took a couple of decades of development until it was able to produce quality steel.
Large amounts of steel had become available only after the invention of the Bessemer process in 1855.
Manufacturing using blast furnaces and the Bessemer process began April 12, 1881.
Anthony Hill, a later owner, adopted the Bessemer process.
Improvements to the Bessemer process and the development of the open hearth process removed this advantage.
Bessemer's name is chiefly known in connection with the Bessemer process for the manufacture of steel.
Ward took great interest in the first experiments of the apparatus for the Bessemer process of making steel.
With the advent of the Bessemer process, the first efficient method for mass steel production, architects moved away from iron.
Its owners would later produce the first Bessemer process steel in the United States after the war.
It was established to exploit the recent introduction of the Bessemer process for the manufacture of steel.
By 1859 Brown was producing rails for the quickly expanding railway industry using the Bessemer process.
A now-uncommon form is batch treatment of pig iron to produce steel by the Bessemer process.
But Scranton could not convince his business partners to adopt the Bessemer process.
He suggested using sodium nitrate instead of air in the Bessemer process for manufacturing steel but this proved to be too expensive.
Once the Bessemer process began to gain widespread use, other alloys of steel began to follow.
The Bessemer process was replaced by the open-hearth process in the early 20th century.
Though the Bessemer process was licensed in 1856, nine years of detailed planning and project management were needed before the first steel was produced.