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145:. John Porter gave up his position as manager, although he retained a role as "executive adviser" for several years after. Later in 1899 the company had been merged with the American Smelting and Refining Company, operating it with lower production numbers into the 1920s and eventually closing the smelter down in 1930.
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with his associate
William Bell convinced Porter that Durango would be a more ideal location for a smelter and asked him to return to the area, in order to move the Greene smelter and operate the new smelter location in Durango under their recently incorporated
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98:(the successor to the American Smelting and Refining Company) or damages to natural resources in 1983. Today the site is now the City of Durango's dog park and also considered a popular local hike.
138:, which was located west of Durango in Wild Cat Canyon. His company would later be purchased by the Union Pacific Coal Company on February 1, 1906, and moved the main offices to Omaha, Nebraska.
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John Porter, a mining engineer, first came to the
Southwestern Colorado area in 1875. Age 30 at the time, the Connecticut-born metallurgist and smelterman established the Greene Smelter in
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had made its way into the Animas Valley with its eyes set on serving the mining district of
Silverton. Once the railroad established the townsite of Durango, D&RG President
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127:. Starting operations in 1882, the Durango Smelter prospered under Porter's management; by 1887 it smelted over $ 1 million in Silver, Lead, Gold and Copper.
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Region generally serviced by railroad. It was later reinstated during World War II by the U. S. Vanadium
Corporation for production of large amounts of
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1968 view of the
Durango Smelter site taken across the Animas River from the D&RGW Railroad yard (Now the site of US Highway 160/550)
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John Porter would later go on to start other coal mines around the
Durango area to help fuel the Smelter, under the name of his
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cleaned up the site from 1985 to 1987 due to concerns regarding toxic mineral tailings/radioactive waste, as well as the
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In 1888 the San Juan and New York
Smelting Company had reorganized and leased the Durango Smelter to the
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from mines all over La Plata County, San Juan County, and elsewhere in the
Southwestern
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329:(HAER) documentation, filed under State Route 160, Durango, La Plata County, CO:
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Pioneers, Prospectors and Trout, A Historic
Context For La Plata County, Colorado
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302:"A brief history of The Porter Fuel Company from its antecedents to its demise"
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San Juan & New York Mining & Smelting
Company, Superintendent's House
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San Juan & New York Mining & Smelting Company, Smelter Stack
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336:", 8 photos, 10 data pages, 1 photo caption page
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From 1903 to 1904 the Durango Smelter played a role in
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Buildings and structures in La Plata County, Colorado
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Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment
304:. Center of Southwest Studies Fort Lewis, Colorado
86:. From 1963 on the smelter sat dormant until the
441:Historic American Engineering Record in Colorado
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426:Demolished buildings and structures in Colorado
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143:Omaha and Grant Smelting and Refining Company
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195:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
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253:"Smelter Mountain Trail – Durango Trails"
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31:American Smelting & Refining Company
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176:Seyfarth, Jill; Lambert, Ruth (2010).
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26:San Juan and New York Smelting Company
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327:Historic American Engineering Record
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241:The Daily Sentinel. August 13, 1987.
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374:. You can help Knowledge by
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215:"Paying for toxic smelter?"
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88:U.S. Department of Energy
339:HAER No. CO-38-B, "
332:HAER No. CO-38-A, "
277:"Smelter Mountain Trail"
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257:www.durangotrails.org
239:"Smelter Mountain..."
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227:on January 26, 2021.
185:. Durango, Colorado.
150:Colorado Labor Wars
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108:Silverton, Colorado
279:. Durango Outdoors
220:The Durango Herald
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39:") was a
436:Smelting
368:Colorado
308:18 April
76:Colorado
102:History
80:Uranium
44:smelter
41:mineral
283:6 June
96:ASARCO
94:suing
70:, and
68:Silver
64:Copper
366:This
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197:link
72:Gold
60:Lead
56:Coke
24:The
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