Tug, Barges and Carrie Furnace on the Monongahela River- Autumn Afternoon

After school I drove down the slopes to the flats and headed to Homestead to buy a special cable for an external hard drive so I could retrieve a summer photo for Erika.

I turned onto Waterfront Road towards Best Buy and saw the late afternoon light reflected and warm the rusting metal across the Mon. Pulled over and stood on top of a guard rail to capture the sinking light on the Carrie Furnace, remnants of Homestead Steel Works  and then I heard the tug and saw it pushing the barges up the river.  It was a mighty scene on the river and the limitations of photography or my ability to capture it thoroughly, the seeing and feeling it, became clear once again.

The Rivers of Steel Heritage Corporation sponsors tours but the last one was October 15th so will have to wait until 2012.

If you want to get a real feel for the Blast Furnaces and the incredible history, interviews with employees  and historical photographs I recommend watching at least video # 1 at this website.  I especially liked the man reading the last names of the workers he found in some type of log at the site. He spoke of reading obituaries of workers who gave 30-40 years of hard work for the Homestead Steel Works What a compilation of footage of Carrie Furnace.  Closed in 1986.

13 thoughts on “Tug, Barges and Carrie Furnace on the Monongahela River- Autumn Afternoon

  1. Interesting photo. Be careful Ruth. One of these days you’re going to hurt yourself getting the perfect shot!

  2. excellent picture – it’s who were. People don’t realize how those steel mills and glass factories helped this country grow.

  3. Great shot, Ruth on its own – but also brought back lots of memories of my sight of these mills in operation, when Pgh. was “hell with the lid torn off.” Thanks for both experiences.

  4. A steel mill along a river. Now that’s Pittsburgh! What a great photo! Having been raised in Detroit, the fortunes of our 2 cities were so intertwined for the greater part of last century. And as they went, so went the rest of the country.

  5. This scene looks like one that is powerful to feel. Good photograph; but likely an even better experience. Cool that you got them both. 🙂

  6. Pingback: Carrie Furnace Reflection in the Monongahela River « Ruth E Hendricks Photography

  7. Pingback: Carrie Furnace on the Monongahela River | Ruth E Hendricks Photography

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