
As the explanatory sign read, “Coplay made cement: Cement made Coplay.” These cement-making kilns were once enclosed by a huge building with only their tops showing. By 1900 the Lehigh Valley was producing 3/4 of all Portland Cement used in the country because of the local abundance of suitable limestone and coal. Standing at this spot in 1900 when these kilns were six years old, a viewer would have been in the midst of a smelly, dirty, noisy inferno. Round the clock, smoke and dust belched from these kilns where the inside temperature reached 2000 deg F. Trains roared in loaded with coal and limestone; workers covered with cement dust scurried everywhere.
Leonardo would be proud!

The twin of this American Horse is in Milan. To prevent either city from touting that “we were first”, some castings from the first pour went into the Milan statue and other parts went into Grand Rapids’. The same was done with the second casting. The molds were then purposely destroyed to preclude any more statues from ever being made.
The Heavens Open
