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  2. Messier 75 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Messier_75

    Messier 75 is part of the Gaia Sausage, the hypothesized remains of a dwarf galaxy that merged with the Milky Way. [10] It is a halo object with an orbital period of 0.4 billion years to travel around the galaxy on a very pronounced ellipse, specifically eccentricity of 0.87. The apocenter (maximal distance from Earth) is about 57,000 ly ...

  3. Portsmouth Steel Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portsmouth_Steel_Company

    An early site was the Portsmouth Iron Works, operated by Glover, Noel & Company (1831), purchased by Thomas G. Gaylord (1834), who sold to Benjamin B. Gaylord, John P. Gould, and Abram Morrell but still under management by Thomas G. Gaylord & Company. In 1869, Gaylord leased the site to the Portsmouth Iron & Steel Company through 1878.

  4. Youngstown Sheet and Tube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Youngstown_Sheet_and_Tube

    The home plant of YS&T was known as the Campbell Works, located in Campbell and Struthers, Ohio. This plant contained four blast furnaces , twelve open hearth furnaces , several blooming mills , two Bessemer converters , a slabbing mill , a butt-weld tube mill, a 79-inch (2,000 mm) hot strip mill , seamless tube mills, and 9-inch (230 mm) and ...

  5. Wagner Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wagner_Manufacturing_Company

    Wagner Manufacturing plant in Sidney, Ohio (1913) At first producing only cast-iron products, the company added nickel-plated ware in 1892. [1] In 1894 Wagner was one of the first to make aluminum cookware. [3] The company acquired their competitor Sidney Hollow Ware from Phillip Smith in 1897.

  6. Ohio Falls Iron Works - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohio_Falls_Iron_Works

    The capacity was 8,000 to 10,000 tons per year of finished goods. About 225 skilled iron-workers and laborers were employed, the payrolls ranging from $1,800 to $2,000 per week. [2] Ohio Falls sold its products all over North America. [2] In a circular to the trade the company say:

  7. Irondale, Ohio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irondale,_Ohio

    Irondale was originally known as Pottsdale, for Samuel Potts, who started a salt operation at Yellow Creek circa 1806. In 1869 Morgan & Hunter laid out the original plat of what was then called Hunterville which later was changed to Irondale after the discovery of iron ore and other minerals used in the manufacture of tin.

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