Brass
The
arms and machine-tool industries stimulated the new science of
metallurgy in the nineteenth century, and again Connecticut innovators
were significant. The economically most important metal produced
in Connecticut was brass. In 1926, two-thirds of the nation’s
brass was produced in and around Waterbury, and brass constituted
one-eighth of all Connecticut industrial product by value. Though
not a modern economic study, and though short on the consolidation
movement of the turn of the century, William G. Lathrop’s The
Brass Industry in the United States: A Study of the Origins and
Development of the Brass Industry in the Naugatuck Valley and
its Subsequent Extension over the Nation (Mount Carmel, Conn.:
the author, rev. ed., 1926) is a well-supported narrative-descriptive
account. It is not analytical or very critical, but it is full
of information and citations, with a bibliography and modest index.
Lathrop also wrote shorter works: The Brass Industry in Connecticut
(Shelton, Conn.: the author, 1909) and Tercentenary pamphlet
XLIX (1936), The Development of the Brass Industry in Connecticut.
This last work includes a chart showing the “genealogy” of the
Naugatuck brass industry—that is, which companies swallowed which
in the great consolidations at the end of the nineteenth century
that culminated in the formation of the American Brass Company
in 1899. Lathrop had a Ph.D. from Yale, but he spent his life
as a Congregational minister.
Another
short work is Charles H. Warren’s “History of the Brass Industry
in the Naugatuck Valley,” Papers of the NHCHS 10(1951):240-57.
The author. Dean of the Sheffield Scientific School, read this
paper in 1936. In 1981 the Mattatuck Historical Society staged
an exhibit, “Metals, Minds, and Machines: Waterbury at Work,”
and published a catalog of text and pictures that sheds much light
on the business, with special attention to the point of view
of the laborer. It was written and compiled under the direction
of Cecelia Bucki. The most recent major work on the subject is
Brass Valley: The Story of Working People’s Lives and Struggles
in an American Industrial Region, by The Brass Workers History
Project, compiled and edited by Jeremy Brecher, Jerry Lombardi,
and Jan Stackhouse (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1982).
Transcripts of interviews and more than a hundred photographs,
old and new, focus on workers’ lives and efforts at labor organization.
See also John A. Coe, “The Development of the Brass Industry,”
Annual Report of the Connecticut Society of Civil Engineers
(1939), pages 83-103. The author was president of the American
Brass Company. The focus of this piece is copper, the principal
alloy in brass.
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