Take over by the Petitjean 1843 (≈ 1843)
Start of family farm.
milieu du XVIIIe siècle
Initial construction
Initial construction milieu du XVIIIe siècle (≈ 1850)
Foundation of the original forge.
années 1930
Attempted recovery
Attempted recovery années 1930 (≈ 1930)
Manufacture of axes by Camille Petitjean.
1952
End of main activity
End of main activity 1952 (≈ 1952)
Cessation by Camille Petitjean.
1977
Last occasional activity
Last occasional activity 1977 (≈ 1977)
César Petitjean's work is over.
1980
Sale to the town hall
Sale to the town hall 1980 (≈ 1980)
Acquisition by the municipality of Etueffont.
13 juin 1981
Opening of the museum
Opening of the museum 13 juin 1981 (≈ 1981)
Open to the public after restoration.
5 avril 1993
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 5 avril 1993 (≈ 1993)
Official registration of places.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Forge, including the trade to be ironed (excluding recent staircases and footbridges and the new building body in the South) (Box AB 101): inscription by order of 5 April 1993
Key figures
César Petitjean - Last blacksmith of the family
Sell the forge in 1980.
Camille Petitjean - Forgeron and innovator
Attempted to revive activity in the 1930s.
Origin and history
The Etueffont forge museum is a former blacksmith's workshop located in the village of Etueffont, in the Territory of Belfort. Built in the middle of the 18th century, this forge was operated by the Petitjean family from 1843, through four generations of blacksmiths. The workshop, modest in its architecture, was enriched with 19th century extensions to meet the growing needs of craft production. Its main activity, centred on the manufacture of tools and horse-drawn irons, gradually declined in the twentieth century, despite attempts to modernize such as the production of axes in the 1930s.
In 1977, César Petitjean, the last representative of the dynasty, permanently ceased his occasional activity. The forge was sold to the town hall of Etueffont in 1980 with its original tools. Thanks to the commitment of 15 volunteers, the site was transformed into a museum and inaugurated on 13 June 1981. His ethnological interest, including the intact preservation of machines and tools, motivated his registration in the Historical Monuments in 1993. Today, the forge-museum offers a rare testimony of pre-industrial craft techniques and rural life in Franche-Comté.
The museum, managed by an association created in 1978, preserves the workshop in the state where Caesar Petitjean left. Although the architecture of the building is simple, it is the richness of its content — ironwork, bellows, anvils and tools — that makes it a remarkable place. The forge-museum also holds the label Musée de France, stressing its heritage and educational importance for the transmission of traditional know-how.
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