Stay Connected!

Update your NCSEA user profile to receive tailored content and opportunities that matter most to you. Simply click "Login" to get started.

The story of the Sloss Furnace Company is more than a story about a historic manufacturing plant. Like most structures, the iron-producing furnaces were built to generate income for the owners by filling a product need produced at a competitive price that utilized locally available raw materials and human capital.

The Sloss Furnace Company also fits into the larger economic development framework of the post-Civil War South within a timeline that runs from before the Civil War through the early 1920s when poorer Southerners, including many formerly enslaved people or their descendants, moved North in search of better opportunities, through the 1950s. 

Topics:

Related News

View All
NCSEA News

New Videos Highlight the Critical Role of Structural Engineers

NCSEA has released two new videos designed to educate the public, government officials, and state

NCSEA Foundation

Scholarship Applications Due Feb. 16

The NCSEA Foundation is offering more than $50,000 in scholarships to support students from underrepresented

NCSEA Foundation

NCSEA Foundation Innovation in Structural Engineering – Quick Start Guide for Working with AI Models

The NCSEA Foundation AI Grant Team is excited to announce the release of a hands-on