Sublime Explosive Pastoral
A Visit to Dupont on the Brandywine
The gates to the old powderworks on the
Brandywine Creek.
CLUI photo
In a picturesque valley near Wilmington, Delaware,
the romantic ruins of what was once America’s largest powderworks
has been preserved and maintained by the Hagley Museum, promoting
the legacy of the Duponts, whose company began here. Part park,
part memorial, part living history museum, the stone buildings
and ruins of the 19th century powderworks seem too old world to
have been in this country. The powderworks are a conflicted place,
a calm, bucolic European village where worker’s flesh once
dripped from the trees, following the frequent accidental explosions.
These dark Eleutherian Mills are one of the most remarkable and
moving corporate mythscapes in the nation, and their story is
an important key for understanding the American paradox.
America was built with explosives. In the 18th and 19th centuries,
gunpowder propelled the bullets that settled settler’s disputes
with the Indians, the British, the Mexicans, and, finally, amongst
ourselves, and bullets provided food in the form of meat. Explosives
cut the paths for the railways and canals, made the production
of cement possible, and allowed mining and the collection of the
minerals that form products to reach an industrial scale of production.
Though a few domestic powder plants existed in 18th century America,
most of it was imported. The French, sharing a dislike for the
British, and holding a claim on much of the North American continent,
furnished 90% of the powder that enabled America to gain independence
in the Revolution. After Pierre Dupont arrived in America with
his family auspiciously on New Years Day, 1800, fleeing growing
instabilities in France, the search for a business to support
the family eventually settled on explosives.
Rows of rebuilt remains of powder mills line
the creek.
CLUI photo
Pierre’s son, Eleuthere Irenee Dupont, had
studied powdermaking as a young man in France, and was impressed
at the lack of quality domestic powder in the young American nation.
Urged on by Thomas Jefferson, whom the family knew from Jefferson’s
tenure as ambassador to France, and who understood the importance
of domestic powder production to the country’s independence
from both the British and the French, Eleuthere Irenee established
the E.I. du Pont de Namours Company in 1802, and began construction
of the powderworks on the Brandywine Creek.
With the first contract coming from Jefferson’s government,
the Eleutherian Mills, as they were later called, opened in 1804,
and by the War of 1812 it was the largest powderworks in the nation,
a position it would hold for several decades. But not without
financial difficulties and personal tragedies. The first major
explosion, in 1818, was said to have been felt 40 miles away.
It killed 34 workers, and inflicted serious injury on Irenee’s
wife. In 1857, a series of fires and blasts accidentally triggered
by Alexis Dupont, killed him and six others. During 117 years
of operation, the Eleutherian Mills exploded hundreds of times,
and over 200 workers were euphemistically sent “across the
creek.” After each explosion, the damaged parts of the plant
were rebuilt, and production resumed.
A succession of Dupont men ran the company for the first 100
years, and members of the family lived and worked on the Brandywine.
It was a family business, an insular microculture combining personal
and family dynamics with gunpowder production. The Duponts lived
and died on this ground. In 1834, the plant produced a million
pounds of powder for the first time. In the Civil War it was protected
by Union troops, and was the largest supplier of powder for their
cause.
In 1867, Alfred Nobel patented Dynamite, a stable form of formerly
unstable nitroglycerine. The improvements this brought with it
changed not just the explosives industry, but industries of all
kinds. Gunpowder, or “black powder,” which is what
was made at Eleutherian Mills, is the combustible combination
of carbon (charcoal) and potassium nitrate (saltpeter -often imported
from other counties, but also available in forms like bat guano).
Though the mixture is catalyzed with sulphur, it only burns when
ignited. In order to detonate, it had to be contained. This works
fine for cannons and guns, but for tearing up the earth, it has
its limitations.
Dynamite detonates. Immediately following its introduction into
the US, transportation projects accelerated, mining projects multiplied
their output, and new materials, previously inextractable, became
available, creating new industries and products. Lammot Dupont,
grandson of the company’s founder Irenee, led the company
into Dynamite production, building a new plant for it in Repauno,
New Jersey. In 1884, an explosion at the plant killed Lammot and
five others. The plant remains.
At Hagley, even the interpetive plaques do
not intrude on the mood of the place.
CLUI photo
In 1902, with the death of Eugene Dupont, 100
years of dynastic family control ended, and the family partners
put the company up for sale. Though it was bought by a new group
of Duponts, the company began a drastic transformation, and was
reorganized into a more modern, diversified company. Research
facilities were established to investigate new product lines,
including the Experimental Station, which was built on the opposite
bank of the Brandywine, above the mills, and remains active to
this day. Dupont continued its acquisitions of competing explosives
companies, begun in the late 1800’s, and continued its reign
as largest of them all. But Dupont’s explosives monopoly
was one of the major American industrial trusts attacked by Roosevelt,
and in 1907, Dupont’s explosives businesses were separated
into the Atlas and Hercules Powder Companies.
As the 20th century progressed, industrialization changed, and
with it – and often by it - the Dupont company. The increasingly
antiquated Eleutherian Mills, still producing black powder, finally
became obsolete, and closed in 1921.
The company’s diversification and research continued,
largely based on compounds and materials related to those that
make up explosives, like nitrocellulose and cotton. Synthetic
plastics began to replace more organic plastic material, and Dupont
experimented with coatings, paints, shellacs, and plastics mixed
with fabrics. Further delving into organic chemistry and petrochemicals,
eventually the company invented and marketed successful products
like nylon, teflon, rayon, darcon, cellophane, and mylar. In WW2,
Dupont built dozens of major munitions and explosives plants for
the federal government, including, for the Manhattan Project,
the world’s first plutonium plant at Hanford, Washington.
By 1971, black powder was a very minor product in the world,
used mostly by historical reenactments, and Dupont stopped making
it altogether. The company was fully engrossed in pursuing, as
their motto of the time proclaimed, “Better things for better
living - through chemistry.” Part of the feeling exuded
by the restored ruins of the Eleutherian Mills is a nostalgia
for simpler times, when America was young and idealistic, when
families, not corporate boards, ran businesses, and when explosions,
while dramatic and tragic, were also kind of quaint - we hadn’t
yet figured out how to really blow stuff up.