Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Cleveland-Cliffs manages and operates four iron ore mines in Minnesota and two mines in Michigan, one of which, the Empire Mine, has been indefinitely idled. [3] These mines produce various grades of iron ore pellets, including standard and fluxed, for use in blast furnaces as part of the steelmaking process as well as Direct Reduced (DR) grade pellets for use in direct reduced iron (DRI ...
The tallest structure in Toledo, Ohio is the Cleveland-Cliffs HBI Furnace Tower, which is an industrial vertical shaft furnace reaching a height of 139 meters (457 ft.) [1] and is not designed for continuous residential or commercial occupancy. The 2nd tallest structure, and tallest occupied commercial building, is the 32-story, 125 meter (411 ft.)
Although it began as a company town, the direct involvement of Cleveland-Cliffs in the affairs of the Gwinn gradually decreased, and by the Great Depression the company had no hand in the operation of the town. [8] Cleveland-Cliffs began divesting itself of real estate in the town, and by 1946 had sold the last of the houses it owned. [8]
Confluence of East Branch Rocky River and West Branch Rocky River, between Cleveland and North Olmsted, Cuyahoga County, Ohio • coordinates 41°24′23″N 81°53′14″W / 41.40639°N 81.88722°W / 41.40639; -81
Cleveland-Cliffs ships Tilden ore by a wholly owned short-line railroad, the Lake Superior and Ishpeming, to Marquette for transport by lake freighter to steel mills in the lower Great Lakes. [ 7 ] The Marquette Iron Range was designated as a Michigan registered historic site in 1957, listed as S-0035. [ 4 ]
Cliffs Natural Resources (NYS: CLF) has a long, illustrious history, tracing its origins back 165 years to its formation as the Cleveland Iron Mining Company. With the discovery of iron ore in ...
CLEVELAND (AP) — Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. CLF) on Monday reported a loss of $242 million in its third quarter. The Cleveland-based company said it had a loss of 52 cents per share.
In 1906, the president of the Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Company, William Gwinn Mather, commissioned the well-known Boston landscape designer Warren H. Manning to design a residential community to support the mining operations. Manning designed a "model town," emphasizing Gwinn’s connection to the surrounding environment by preserving many of the ...