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The Chemistry of Powder and Explosives - Sciencemadness Dot Org

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212 NITRIC ESTERS<br />

explosives. Blasting caps were used first for the safe <strong>and</strong> certain<br />

explosion <strong>of</strong> the dangerous liquid nitroglycerin, but presently<br />

they were found to be exactly what was needed for the explosion<br />

<strong>of</strong> the safer <strong>and</strong> less sensitive dynamites which Nobel also<br />

invented.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first establishment for the manufacture <strong>of</strong> nitroglycerin in<br />

industrial quantities was a laboratory set up by Alfred Nobel<br />

<strong>and</strong> his father, Immanuel Nobel, probably in the autumn <strong>of</strong><br />

1863, near the latter's home at Heleneborg near Stockholm. An<br />

explosion which occurred there in September, 1864, cost the life<br />

<strong>of</strong> Alfred's younger brother, Emil, <strong>and</strong> <strong>of</strong> four other persons.<br />

<strong>The</strong> manufacture <strong>of</strong> nitroglycerin was prohibited within the city<br />

area, but the explosive was already in practical use for the tunnelling<br />

operations <strong>of</strong> the State Railway, <strong>and</strong> it was desirable to<br />

continue its manufacture. <strong>The</strong> manufacture was removed to a<br />

pontoon moored in Malar Lake <strong>and</strong> was continued there during<br />

the late autumn <strong>of</strong> 1864 <strong>and</strong> during the following winter until<br />

March, 1865, when it was transferred to a new factory, the first<br />

real nitroglycerin factory in the world, at Winterwik near Stockholm.<br />

Later in the same year the Nobel company commenced<br />

manufacturing nitroglycerin in Germany, at a plant near Hamburg,<br />

<strong>and</strong> within a few years was operating explosives factories<br />

in the United States <strong>and</strong> in all the principal countries <strong>of</strong> Europe. 27<br />

<strong>The</strong> first considerable engineering operation in the United<br />

States to be accomplished by means <strong>of</strong> nitroglycerin was the<br />

blasting out <strong>of</strong> the Hoosac tunnel in Massachusetts. <strong>The</strong> work<br />

had been progressing slowly until George M. Mowbray, 28 an<br />

"operative chemist" <strong>of</strong> North Adams, was engaged to manufacture<br />

nitroglycerin at the site <strong>of</strong> the work <strong>and</strong> to supervise its use.<br />

Twenty-six feet <strong>of</strong> tunnel was driven during May, 1868, 21 during<br />

June, 47 during July when the use <strong>of</strong> nitroglycerin commenced,<br />

44 during August, <strong>and</strong> 51 feet during September. Mowbray<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>ited by the observation <strong>of</strong> W. P. Granger that frozen nitroglycerin<br />

could not be detonated, <strong>and</strong> accordingly transported his<br />

27 Cf. Schiick <strong>and</strong> Sohlman, "<strong>The</strong> Life <strong>of</strong> Alfred Nobel," London, William<br />

Heinemann, Ltd., 1929.<br />

28 His experiences <strong>and</strong> methods are told in a very interesting manner in<br />

his book, "Tri-Nitro-Glycerine, as Applied in the Hoosac Tunnel," third<br />

edition, rewritten, New York <strong>and</strong> North Adams, 1874.

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