Mabel
Furnace, owned by Perkins &
Co., limited, have two stacks, each sixty-five feet high, and a bosh of
fourteen feet. No. 1 was built in 1872 by J.
W. Ormsby & Sons. No. 2 was built in 1880. Both
were rebuilt in 1883. They use as fuel block coal and coke, and have an
annual capacity of about 85,000 net tons of foundry and Bessemer pig
iron. The management consists of
Simon Perkins, Jr., chairman and manager; L. C. Hanna, secretary and
treasurer. M. A. Hanna &
Co., of Cleveland, are selling agents.
History
of Mercer County,
1888, page 195
The
Mable [Mabel] furnace
was built in Sharpsville in 1873 by J. W. Ormsby and others and
sold to Perkins and
Co., and now owned by the Shenango Furnace Co.
Twentieth Century History of Mercer County, 1909, page
357
Mabel:
This furnace was formerly known as the Ormsby Furnace, being built by J. W. Ormsby and Sons. No. 1
was built in 1873 and No. 2 in 1880.
W.
P. Snyder of Pittsburgh bought all three of them [Douglas,
Mabel and Spearman Furnaces] and later incorporated the Shenango
Furnace Company in 1906. Stack No. 1, which had been on the site of the
Douglas, was torn down in 1970. Stack No. 4 was torn down in 1924.
Stack No. 3 stands [in 1974] on the site of the old Spearman Furnace.
At this moment it is doubtful if No. 3 will ever operate again. For the
first time in over 125 years, Sharpsville will be without an operable
blast furnace.
Sharpsville
Centennial Commemorative Booklet, 1974, page 28