Pittsburgh Reduction Co
of USA
1888 Charles Martin Hall, with backing from Captain Alfred E. Hunt for his aluminium reduction process using electrolysis, incorporated The Pittsburgh Reduction Company and opened a pilot production facility on Smallman Street, Pittsburgh.
1891 The company moved its operations to New Kensington, PA, where it scaled up to produce aluminium ingots as well as fabricated aluminium products.
For many years, no other company in the world could match the breadth and depth of the company's aluminium production.
1902 The Northern Aluminum Company, the Canadian subsidiary of the Pittsburgh Reduction Company, was founded.
1903 The engine block and crankcase of the engine used by the Wright Brothers were cast from aluminium supplied by The Pittsburgh Reduction Company.
Works were erected at Niagara, where power was obtained from the Falls.
by 1904 the company was operating 3 works using the Hall process for electrolytic production of aluminium, with another under development at Massena[1]
1907 The Pittsburgh Reduction Company changed its name to The Aluminum Company of America (unofficially Alcoa)
See Also
Sources of Information
- ↑ The Engineer 1904