Rio Grande and Asarco

Rio Grande and Asarco

Photo: Rio Grande near Asarco in El Paso, Texas. ASARCO, originally known as the American Smelting and Refining Company, traces its origins to 1881, when Robert Safford Towne arrived in El Paso after touring the mines in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. Two years later he organized the Mexican Ore Company, a small plant that sampled and graded ore from the Mexican mines. In 1887 the ambitious Towne went to Argentine, Kansas, where he secured the backing of the Kansas City Consolidated Smelting and Refining Company for the construction of a major smelter in El Paso to process lead and copper ores from mines in Mexico and in the American Southwest. Towne bought 1,156 acres along the Rio Grande for $3,757, and within five months the El Paso Smelter, with a 100-foot high chimney and a workforce of 250, was ready to begin processing the high-grade Mexican ore. The community that grew up around the plant was called Smeltertown. In 1899 KSARCO and several other corporations merged into the newly organized American Smelting and Refining Company, which became known as ASARCO. In 1901 a fire destroyed about $100,000 worth of the new company's property and equipment, but ASARCO rebuilt and reopened in 1902 with seven new lead furnaces and the first copper smelter in El Paso. The new facility doubled production and expanded the local payroll to nearly 900 workers. During the 1920s ASARCO was the largest mining operator in Mexico, with twenty-four different units. In 1948 slag fuming facilitators were built for the recovery of zinc from the slag produced by the lead furnaces, and in 1951 ASARCO built a 612-foot smokestack to reduce ground-level concentrations of sulfur dioxide. In 1967 the company built an 828-foot stack, designed to help alleviate local air pollution. In 1969, however, El Paso still had a higher concentration of lead in the air than any other city in Texas. In the spring of 1970, the city of El Paso filed a $1 million suit, later joined by the State of Texas, charging ASARCO with violations of the Texas Clean Air Act. In December 1971 the El Paso City-County Health Department reported that the smelter had emitted 1,012 metric tons of lead between 1969 and 1971 and found that the smelter was the principal source of particulate lead within a radius of a mile. When lead was discovered in the soil of Smeltertown, the company removed the top foot and a half of soil and replaced it with fresh soil. When lead poisoning was suspected in the children living in Smeltertown, the company bought the land in Smeltertown and removed the residents. Following a 1975 injunction requiring ASARCO to spend $120 million on modernization and environmental improvements, the company by 1978 had reduced emissions of sulfur dioxide by nearly two-thirds from pre-1970 levels. Since that time, lead and zinc operations have been closed, and the smelting of copper has become the plant's principal function. The copper, which is shipped to the ASARCO refinery in Amarillo, is 98 to 99 percent pure. In 1990 an $81 million modernization program began, involving a smelting technology that improves operating efficiency and production while capturing 98 percent or more of the sulfur dioxide emissions. In the early 1990s ASARCO plant in El Paso employed nearly 1,000 people and produced almost a million tons of raw materials per year. In 1990 the El Paso and Amarillo plants had sales totalling more than $50 million each https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/dka02

Area: Central / Smeltertown

Source: EPMH

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

American Dam, 133

Pumping out the western cofferdam, as seen from the west bank.

American Dam, 134

The competed section and the western cofferdam as seen form the ...

American Dam, 135

Underpinning completed between sections 78 and 80 of the ...

American Dam, 136

The American Dam conduit section B forms and footing.

American Dam, 137

Placing the first concrete footings near station 81 of the ...

American Dam, 138

Conduit section B forms and steel for footing are seen near ...

American Dam, 139

Conduit section B forms for footing as seen from the north of ...

American Dam, 140

Rock Sub-grade with the concrete piles beyond are seen from ...

American Dam, 141

Forms and steel hold the concrete in the east footing of ...

American Dam, 142

Walls form around steel surrounding the conduit section "B" near ...

American Dam, 143

Placing concrete in the western footing using a Barber-Green ...

American Dam, 144

Workers pour the first section of the eastern side wall of ...

American Dam, 145

The western cofferdam shown partly excavated, preparing to drive ...

American Dam - Closing gap in lower dyke

American Dam - View west from east bank of river; closing gap in ...

American Dam, 146

4500 cubic square feet of water pass through the American Dam.

American Dam, 147

4500 cubic square feet of water pass thought the floodgates, as ...

American Dam, 148

4500 cubic square feet of water pass through the floodgates, as ...

American Dam - Dragline and excavators on coffer-dam

American Dam - View downstream from east end of foot-bridge. ...

American Dam, 713

From the canal levee we can see the completed section opposite ...

American Dam, 714

The view as seen downstream from the west end of the footbridge, ...

American Dam, 715

The dam as seen from the hill above the boundary near monument ...

American Dam - East bank Levee Sewer

American Dam - East bank Levee Sewer; Northwest dragline ...

American Dam, 716

The left bank of the Rio Grande is seen from stations 26 & 50.

home.search_collection