Written on back: "President Charles Lukens Huston, Jr. of Lukens Steel Co. presenting President Dwight D. Eisenhower with the 'Coatesville Declaration' at White House ceremonies Tuesday, December 13, 1960. (left to right): Messrs. S. W. Antoville,...
Written on back: "President Charles Lukens Huston, Jr., of Lukens Steel Co. presenting President Dwight D. Eisenhower with the 'Coatesville Declaration' at White House ceremonies Tuesday, December 13, 1960. (left to right): Messrs. S. W. Antoville,...
Written on back: "President Charles Lukens Huston, Jr., of Lukens Steel Co. presenting President Dwight D. Eisenhower with the 'Coatesville Declaration' at White House ceremonies Tuesday, December 13, 1960. (left to right): Messrs. S. W. Antoville,...
Written on back: "President Charles Lukens Huston, Jr., of Lukens Steel Co. presenting President Dwight D. Eisenhower with the 'Coatesville Declaration' at White House ceremonies Tuesday, December 13, 1960. (left to right): Messrs. S. W. Antoville,...
Written on back: "Behind the pump house, work is progressing on the new armor plate building. In the left background is t he Green Anneal building, where the 5,000 ton flattening press is in the process of being installed." (See Lukens Life, Nov....
Written on back: "The primary purpose of the stacks is to modernize the Open Hearth furnaces and to make them more efficient." - Lukens Life, Nov., 1954, also used March, 1961
Written on back: "1956 annual report: Lukens T-1 steel - 60 tons of it - went into the dipper and related parts of a big power shovel built by the Marion Power Shovel Company. The shovel has a bucket with a 45-cubic yard capacity and can dump its...
Written on back: "from Lukens are a part of the Atomic Energy Commission & engineering test reactor at the AEC Laboratories in Scoville, Idaho. 1956 Lukens annual report."
Written on back: "flame cut in the By-Products Division. They can be seen in bridges in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, and the Alcan Highway. 1955 Lukens annual report."
Written on back: "Caustic storage vats of nichle-clad steel enable a chemical producer to ship high temperature soda in the tanker below. Lukens annual report 1955."
Written on back: "U.S.S. 'Nautilus,' Groton, Conn. World's first atomic-powered submarines, Nautilus and Seawolf, have Lukens high tensile steel in their keels. 1955 Lukens annual report."
Written on front: "Home of Rebecca Lukens, famed nineteenth century woman Ironmaster, it stands amid the twentieth century facilities of Lukens Steel Company, oldest steelmaker in America."