Supporters' iron will keep Sloss Furnaces' past alive

Sioss Furnaces curator Karen Utz helped produce a new pictorial history of Birmingham landmark that will be released Monday. The book will contain roughly 200 photos. (The Birmingham News / Bernard Troncale)
Sloss Furnaces cover.jpg

Fr

om its decades as a blast furnace that drove Bir­mingham's bus­tling industrial economy to its rebirth as a museum preserving the memories of that bygone era, the history of Sloss Furnaces is captured in a new pictorial history being re­leased Monday.

''Sloss Furnaces'' is the newest installment in the Images of America series of books from Arcadia Pub­lishing, a nationwide line that includes 68 books de­tailing different aspects of Alabama history and about 20 in the Birmingham area alone.

Past installments chroni­cled, among other subjects, Birmingham's broadcast television history, the city of Leeds, and Alabama's contributions to the ad­vancement of aviation.

Sloss Furnaces curator Karen Utz, who provided the text for the book, said she was approached about the project by Arcadia dur­ing the Southeastern Mu­seums Conference's annual meeting in Birmingham in October 2008.

Throughout the summer, her staff delved into the Bir­mingham
Public Archives
to compile the book's roughly 200 pictures. 'It was extremely revealing. I saw pictures I'd never seen before. I learned a great deal from doing this," Utz said.

The images show men working in the heyday of the iron and steel industry from the late 1880s through the 1950s, the furnace's de­cay as it stood dormant in the decade after it ceased operations in 1971, and the rallies of the late 1970s that led to its conversion into a museum in 1983.

"Everyone who lives here now very likely had a grandfather or uncle or someone in their families who worked at Sloss or one of the many other blast fur
naces or steel mills in the area," Utz said.

The book, Utz said, con­nects the dots from the era when Sloss was Birming­ham's lead employer to its second life as a place of learning and host to social and cultural events.

Since 1981, when it was designated a National His­toric Landmark, Sloss has held the distinction as the only 20th- century blast fur­nace in the U.S. preserved as an industrial museum.

The pictures capture the push in the late 1970s by citizens eager to see Sloss preserved that led to the conversion. Their efforts, Utz said, kept the furnaces from being sold for scrap and the land sold as an in­dustrial site, according to the book. Parades and pub­lic rallies, many of which are pictured in the book, persuaded city leaders to maintain the site.

"This is the true story of concerned citizens that met in homes and restaurants and, through their hard
work, managed to save Sloss," Utz said.

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