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Forges d'Échalonge in Essertenne-et-Cecey en Haute-Saône

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine industriel
Forge

Forges d'Échalonge in Essertenne-et-Cecey

    Echalonge
    70100 Essertenne-et-Cecey
Private property

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1544
Site Foundation
5 juin 1544
Royal Authorization
1595
Destruction by soldiers
1603
First use of the term 'blast furnace'
1831
Buy by Jobard
1834
Innovative steam machine
1877
Extinction of blast furnace
5 avril 1993
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs of the forge master's house, the workers' housing and the coal hall; hydraulic system in full from the carriageway of the pond to the assembly of the downstream canals, including the buried part of the canals, the bridges and the old hand-washing (known as the small pond) (Box B3 381, 382; ZA 49, 50; ZB 33, 35): inscription by order of 5 April 1993

Key figures

Claude Agnus de Gray - Founder Created the furnace and mill in 1544.
Jean Chirard - Rebuilder Restored the blast furnace in 1651.
Louis Fabry de Montcault - Owner (1687) Acquiated the site and other local plants.
Jean-Baptiste Jobard - Innovative industrial Modernized the forge in 1834.
Adéodat Dufournel - Central Engineer Designed the steam machine in 1834.
Laurent et Thomas - Collaborating engineers Participated in technical innovations.

Origin and history

The Échalonge forges, located at Essertenne-et-Cecey in Haute-Saône, were founded in 1544 by Claude Agnus de Gray, farmer of the local ponds. Authorized by letters patent in June 1544, they initially included a furnace and a mill. The site, ruined in 1595 during the conflicts for Franche-Comté, was restored and became a major blast furnace in the 17th century, with an annual production of 500 to 800 tons of cast iron in the 18th and 19th centuries.

In 1831, Jean-Baptiste Jobard bought the site and modernized production by installing an innovative steam machine in 1834, using the lost heat from the blast furnace. This process, developed with the engineers Adéodat Dufournel, Laurent and Thomas, is spreading in the Saône valley. Despite these advances, the blast furnace shut down in 1877 and was demolished, leaving only remains such as the coal hall, the employer's house and a worker's house.

The site, marked by repeated destructions (1595, 1636, 1668), was also a place of technical innovation. In 1834 successful tests replaced charcoal with dried wood. The remaining buildings, including the water system powered by the pond, were listed in the Historical Monuments in 1993, thus preserving the memory of this major industrial activity.

The forges illustrate the evolution of steelmaking techniques in Burgundy-Franche-Comté, moving from artisanal production to early industrialization. Their decline in the 19th century reflected the economic changes in the region, where agriculture eventually replaced metallurgical activity on the site.

Today, the remains of the Échalonge forges, with their protected facades and roofs, offer a rare testimony of the 18th and 19th century industrial architecture. Their inclusion in the Supplementary Inventory of Historic Monuments underlines their heritage importance in French technical history.

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