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Julius Eckhardt Raht

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move copper to the nearest railroad. Raht had hidden some copper in the mines during the war, and he managed to produce more than a million pounds of copper during the first year of peace. He also built new smelters using innovative methods developed by his brothers, including steam engines and diamond and compressed air drills. Nevertheless, falling copper prices, lower quality ore, and the lack of a rail connection culminated in the temporary closing of the mines in 1878. As the local mining industry was dying, shareholders of the United Consolidated Mining Company unsuccessfully sued Raht believing that his great wealth must have been created from their loss. "The truth was much simpler. He made his fortune legally by running a commissary business to supply food and sundries to the miners, and then by making shrewd investments of his profits throughout Ducktown and eastern Tennessee."
108:, in the extreme southeastern corner of the state. After a brief trip to Germany to marry Mithilde Dombois, Raht became "captain" of a mining operation. Six years later he was chief of operations of all the mines and smelting works at Ducktown and had already purchased a farm and mule teams for copper hauling. He also engaged in what was to become his most profitable enterprise, running commissaries for the miners. As his biographer has written, Raht was "spirited, methodical, ambitious, honest...no less a stern taskmaster in his own behalf than he was a loyal employee of those in whose interests he served." Soon he was wealthy enough to lend money to his erstwhile employers. 20: 115:, the Confederate government effectively confiscated the Ducktown mines. Raht at first continued to operate them in an attempt to protect the investments of the owners in New York and New Orleans; but in 1863, after he was forced to purchase a Confederate army substitute and Federal troops destroyed the rail facilities and copper rolling mill in nearby 130:
Raht and his wife had twelve children, six sons and two daughters surviving to maturity. Raht made numerous donations to charitable causes, especially churches and schools. Officially a Republican, he was "more interested in politics as a science of attaining desired ends than in politics as the term
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Following the war, Raht once again operated the Ducktown mines, personally financing much of the necessary repairs, but he maintained his home and office in Cleveland. He founded the Cleveland National Bank and became manager of the Ocoee Turnpike and Plank Road Co., a transportation route needed to
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is more commonly understood." Though a nominal Lutheran, he was not a church goer. A lover of the table, Raht's "voracious appetite transformed his stocky and powerful figure into one of commanding rotundity." He died suddenly of a heart attack on August 15, 1879.
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Barclay, 247. Two months earlier he had boasted in a letter of his good health and expressed concern about the poor health of his brother, August, who survived him by 38 years. Raht is buried in Fort Hill Cemetery,
163:(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina, 2011), 32; Barclay, 186. Eventually three of his brothers also made their way to the United States, including the noted architect Edward E. Raht. 321: 296: 301: 70: 311: 316: 326: 217: 306: 97: 220:; Maysilles, 33. When the railroad reached Ducktown in 1890, more than a decade after Raht's death, the mines were reopened. 291: 35: 181:
Barclay, 189-91. In 1859 he bought a slave named Edom, who was sold with a mule team, but Raht soon freed him.
104:. By 1854, he decided that the best opportunity to make his fortune lay in the copper mining industry near 81: 286: 281: 116: 66: 105: 89: 112: 85: 62: 120: 54: 50: 31: 101: 58: 39: 34:, entrepreneur, and businessman who pioneered the mining and smelting of copper in the 275: 77: 19: 161:
Ducktown Smoke: The Fight over One of the South's Greatest Environmental Disasters
69:, 1845–47, where he studied "chemistry, mineralogy, etc. etc." After the failed 46: 73:, Raht immigrated to the United States in 1850 and became a citizen in 1853. 93: 18: 119:, Raht crossed the lines to live out the remainder of the war in 150:(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina, 1946), 186. 61:). The son of an appellate judge, Raht attended the 42:and reputedly became the richest man in the state. 123:, where there was a significant German community. 80:, and Wisconsin before taking charge of mining at 8: 76:Raht worked for short periods in Missouri, 16:German-American mining engineer (1826-1879) 30:(June 26, 1826 – August 15, 1879) was a 139: 7: 322:Humboldt University of Berlin alumni 297:Emigrants from the Duchy of Nassau 14: 302:Immigrants to the United States 1: 312:German mining businesspeople 148:Ducktown Back in Raht's Time 343: 317:University of Bonn alumni 71:German revolution of 1848 327:Copper Basin (Tennessee) 65:, 1844–45, and then the 307:People from Dillenburg 24: 53:(today a town in the 22: 199:Barclay, 87-96, 193. 67:University of Berlin 28:Julius Eckhardt Raht 218:Mining Hall of Fame 106:Ducktown, Tennessee 23:J. E. Raht, c. 1870 247:Barclay, 229, 244. 159:Duncan Maysilles, 63:University of Bonn 25: 45:Raht was born in 40:Eastern Tennessee 334: 292:Mining engineers 267: 263: 257: 254: 248: 245: 239: 236: 230: 229:Barclay, 170-84. 227: 221: 215: 209: 206: 200: 197: 191: 190:Barclay, 190-91. 188: 182: 179: 173: 170: 164: 157: 151: 144: 57:in the state of 342: 341: 337: 336: 335: 333: 332: 331: 272: 271: 270: 264: 260: 255: 251: 246: 242: 237: 233: 228: 224: 216: 212: 207: 203: 198: 194: 189: 185: 180: 176: 171: 167: 158: 154: 146:R. E. Barclay, 145: 141: 137: 98:Guilford County 55:Lahn-Dill-Kreis 51:Duchy of Nassau 32:mining engineer 17: 12: 11: 5: 340: 338: 330: 329: 324: 319: 314: 309: 304: 299: 294: 289: 284: 274: 273: 269: 268: 258: 249: 240: 238:Maysilles, 35. 231: 222: 210: 201: 192: 183: 174: 165: 152: 138: 136: 133: 102:North Carolina 59:Hesse, Germany 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 339: 328: 325: 323: 320: 318: 315: 313: 310: 308: 305: 303: 300: 298: 295: 293: 290: 288: 285: 283: 280: 279: 277: 262: 259: 256:Barclay, 243. 253: 250: 244: 241: 235: 232: 226: 223: 219: 214: 211: 208:Maysilles, 33 205: 202: 196: 193: 187: 184: 178: 175: 172:Barclay, 187. 169: 166: 162: 156: 153: 149: 143: 140: 134: 132: 128: 124: 122: 118: 114: 111:Early in the 109: 107: 103: 99: 95: 91: 87: 83: 82:Harpers Ferry 79: 78:Dubuque, Iowa 74: 72: 68: 64: 60: 56: 52: 48: 43: 41: 37: 33: 29: 21: 261: 252: 243: 234: 225: 213: 204: 195: 186: 177: 168: 160: 155: 147: 142: 129: 125: 110: 75: 44: 36:Copper Basin 27: 26: 287:1879 deaths 282:1826 births 276:Categories 266:Cleveland. 135:References 121:Cincinnati 47:Dillenburg 117:Cleveland 113:Civil War 90:Jamestown 94:Virginia 86:Leesburg 96:, and 88:, and 38:in 278:: 100:, 92:, 84:, 49:,

Index


mining engineer
Copper Basin
Eastern Tennessee
Dillenburg
Duchy of Nassau
Lahn-Dill-Kreis
Hesse, Germany
University of Bonn
University of Berlin
German revolution of 1848
Dubuque, Iowa
Harpers Ferry
Leesburg
Jamestown
Virginia
Guilford County
North Carolina
Ducktown, Tennessee
Civil War
Cleveland
Cincinnati
Mining Hall of Fame
Categories
1826 births
1879 deaths
Mining engineers
Emigrants from the Duchy of Nassau
Immigrants to the United States
People from Dillenburg

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