INDUSTRIAL PENNSYLVANIA - PAGE 3
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Fog rising over Johnstown, PA, a town whose economy was once dominated by Bethlehem Steel. Thirty years ago it would have been unthinkable that Bethlehem
would ever be anything less than an American industrial behemoth, and now it doesn't even exist anymore. Bethlehem's phasing out of their Johnstown operations lasted from the 1970s into the 1990s and
devastated the local economy. Still, Johnstown remains a very interesting town to visit.

These buildings in Johnstown, a blacksmith shop and machine shop, were part of the Cambria Iron Company. The company, which dates back to the 1850s, was a predecessor
to Bethlehem Steel's Johnstown mills.

Bethlehem Steel's mills and furnaces ran for 12 miles along the Conemaugh and Little Conemaugh Rivers. The concrete river enclosure dates back to the Johnstown flood of 1936.

The former Gautier rolling mills of Bethlehem Steel Corp. in Johnstown.

Another view of the Gautier mills. Some manufacturing is still taking place in them under the name Johnstown America corporation.

Former Bethlehem's wire mills in Johnstown.

The "hot end" of Bethlehem's Johnstown operations was in the Franklin section of Johnstown. It's hard to believe that iron ore
was once brought by train into Johnstown to make iron for steel. Anyway much of the structure in this photo is gone now. (March 2002 photo courtesy of Doug Foreback)

The Lower Cambria Works in Johnstown. (March 2002 photo courtesy of Doug Foreback)

The East Conemaugh section of Johnstown.

Suprisingly enough U.S. Steel once owned this facility in the Bethlehem stronghold of Johnstown. The Johnstown Works fabricated parts and
trackwork for streetcars and mine cars. By the 1960s the Johnstown Works supported other U.S. Steel facilities by fabricating rolls and ingot molds. U.S. Steel sold the plant in 1984 and it continues
to manufacture these items for the steel industry under the ownership of the Johnstown Corporation. Special thanks to Greg and Ivan Luther for giving me a guided tour of the historical industrial sites of Johnstown.

Intermodal railroad shops in Johnstown.(March 2002 photo courtesy of Doug Foreback)

Overall view of Vandergrift from the Armstrong County side of the Kiski River.

This is Allegheny Ludlum's stainless steel mill in Vandergrift. A local resident said that this facility was
previously operated by U.S. Steel. If true this is unusual, because a good number of of U.S. Steel's steel mills were in the Mon Valley, not the Kiski Valley. According to a former resident, this mill was
not built by Apollo Steel.

These pleasant looking homes in Vandergrift were probably built at the time of the town's construction. The town was a planned industrial community which would center around the Apollo Steel and Iron Company.
The homes were built, then workers were invited to move to Vandergrift, purchase a home, and work for Apollo. Vandergrift was layed out by Frederick Law Olmstead, the same famous land planner that designed Central Park in New York, New York.

These brick homes in Vandergrift overlooking the town's green space may have been reserved for management of Apollo Steel.

The Greek Orthodox Church in Vandergrift.

This interesting brownfields site in Vandergrift was the Vandergrift Foundry. At various times it was also operated by McLaughlin Steel and before them Wean United.

Vandergrift, PA, in Westmoreland County, is an example of a town that has retained its industrial core to provide good paying jobs and well kept homes to its residents.

Standard Steel in Latrobe, PA was a manufacturer of steel ingots for the railroad industry. The mill's owner went bankrupt in
2002, and the mill was idled in 2004. But as of 2006 part of it is being used by Lehigh Specialty Melting.

They don't make steel mills like this anymore - former Standard Steel in Latrobe.

Detail of former Standard Steel mill.

Another part of the old Standard Steel mill in Latrobe is a classic Rust Belt landscape.

Typical workers' housing in the Latrobe neighborhood surrounding the former Standard Steel mill. In the Rust Belt these types of
homes are called "mill houses".

Athletic Field across the street from Standard Steel in Latrobe.

These homes were probably occupied by management of Standard Steel at one time.

One Latrobe steel mill that is booming right now (2006) is the former Latrobe Steel Co., now Timken, a manufacturer of specialty alloy products.

A glimpse of the back side of the Timken Latrobe Steel mill. The historic plant can trace its history back to the World War 1 era, when it was a
pioneer among users of electric furnaces.

Looking between SWP engines in Scottdale, PA, with the large Duraloy plant in the background. Duraloy is a foundry of specialized alloys.

Train depot and industrial structures in Scottdale, PA, which once was home to one of the largest pipe mills in the USA.

One of the residential sections of Scottdale.

The Sons of Italy club, with vintage industrial structures behind it, in Scottdale, PA.

Ruins of the Westmoreland Glass Company factory along the old Pennsylvania Railroad mainline in Grapeville, PA. The factory closed in 1982 and must have burned and
fallen into ruin in the 1990s, as a 1989 photo of the plant shows it idle but still intact.