12 



NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



Production of cement in New York 



PORTLAND CEMENT 



Barrels 



Value 



NATURAL CEMENT 



Barrels Value 



1893 

 1894 



1895 

 1896 



1897 

 1898 

 1899 

 1900 

 1901 

 1902 

 1903 

 1904 



1905 

 1906 

 1907 

 1908 

 1909 

 1910 

 1911 

 1912 

 1913 



137 096 



117 275 

 159 320 

 260 787 

 394 398 

 554 358 

 472 386 

 465 832 

 617 228 

 156 807 

 602 946 

 I 377 302 

 117 822 



423 374 

 108 450 

 988 874 

 061 019 

 364 255 

 416 400 

 495 842 

 146 782 



5287 725 

 205 231 

 278 810 



443 175 

 690 179 

 970 126 

 708 579 

 582 290 

 617 228 



521 553 

 031 310 

 245 778 

 046 864 

 766 488 

 214 090 

 813 622 

 761 297 

 939 818 

 930 434 

 488 931 

 873 807 



597 758 

 446 330 

 939 727 

 181 918 

 259 186 



157 917 



689 167 



409 085 



234 131 



577 340 



2 417 137 



1 881 630 



2 257 698 

 I 691 565 

 I 137 279 



623 588 



549 364 

 292 760 



274 973 

 287 693 



193 975 



805 387 

 974 463 

 285 094 

 423 891 

 123 771 

 065 658 

 813 500 



045 451 

 117 066 



135 036 

 510 529 

 207 883 

 590 689 

 184 211 



757 730 

 441 136 

 361 605 

 147 202 

 134 900 

 142 165 

 95 565 



A further gain in the production of portland cement may be 

 anticipated for the immediate future. The plant of the Millen 

 Portland Cement Co at Jamesville, Onondaga county, ran only 

 a part of the past season, having been placed in operation for the 

 first time in the spring. The cement is made from limestone 

 quarried by the Solvay Process Co., nearby, who thus dispose of 

 the smaller sizes of stone unsuitable for use in their alkali plant. 

 The limestone, with the shale which is obtained from a local bank, 

 is fed directly into ball mills without any preliminary crushing. 

 From there it passes to tube mills and to the kiln. The plant 

 was designed for a capacity of 700 barrels a day, but will probably 

 exceed that figure when under full headway. 



The Portland cement mills in the State now use hard limestone 

 exclusively as the basis of the cement mixture. The use of marl 

 has been discontinued, and the last marl plant, which was operated 

 by the Marengo Portland Cement Co., at Caledonia, was sold 

 last year and dismantled. 



