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History/Research

MiniGrated Steel video

At times it can be difficult to unearth new information about a business that folded 20 years ago. A little extra effort goes a long way and something may turn up. Or sometimes, you just get lucky.

I ran across a video simply titled ‘Acme Steel’ on YouTube recently and could hardly believe my eyes. Like the coke battery training video I found, this is a professionally produced product that outlines the continuous caster at the Riverdale mill that was launched in the 1990s. Any Acme information (not to mention a video!) is good information, but this is an especially important piece of the Acme history book as it was a bold (and costly) production improvement that came just before things really went south for the company and the coke plant folded in 2001 (with the furnace plant close behind).

I indulged the video’s uploader to reveal how he got a hold of such a thing – this explanation seems implausible and as such will remain yet another mystery of the Acme history.

I don’t know that it would warrant a post here based on that alone but a brief introduction at the beginning of the video does outline the overall process and shows a few images of the coke and furnace plants. I immediately recognized some of the footage from the battery training video but suddenly realized that some of this was new! I’ve taken screenshots of the critical pieces.

I do not believe this is included in the door cleaner portion of the training video – and what a shot!
I’ve seen a handful of photographs of the #4 coke conveyor that led from the wharf on Torrence to the furnace plant on Burley. But never a video!
Here, at the east end, the beginnings of the furnace plant are visable.
And here we have some of the only real footage of the furnace plant, with the skip car carrying a load to the top of the furnace!
Torpedo cars carrying molten iron to Riverdale, no doubt via the Chicago Short Line RR.

I found this video positively riveting – how exciting to find new information as I near the one year anniversary of my discovery of the coke plant. Not willing to allow the possibility that the video disappears from YouTube, I have STOLEN it and re-uploaded it here for posterity and to protect this priceless asset of a once great company, never to be forgotten.

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