Eagle Iron Works Scale House foundation (now an herb garden)
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Stone remnants of a circa-1865 two-story frame building equipped with scales for weighing iron products; office on first floor; clerk’s living quarters on second floor; herb garden established by volunteers in 1983, and re-established in 2018.
Images
11-22-2019 photo of herb garden

Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
Eagle Iron Works and Curtin Village formed the hub of a 900-acre iron plantation employing as many as 200 full- and part-time workers annually throughout much of its 112-year lifespan. Founded in 1810 when Irish immigrant Roland Curtin Sr. and Cumberland County native Moses Boggs established Eagle Forge along Bald Eagle Creek downstream from Milesburg, the charcoal-fueled and water-powered Iron Works was expanded through the addition of Eagle Furnace in 1818 (one mile southwest of Eagle Forge), a rolling mill near Eagle Furnace in 1830, and Pleasant Furnace beside Eagle Forge in 1848 (as the only operating furnace at Eagle Iron Works after 1848, Pleasant Furnace would become known as "Eagle Furnace"). Following his purchase of a gristmill tract beside Eagle Forge in 1825, Roland Curtin (by then the Works’ sole proprietor) began laying out a workers’ village on the European model, with single-family cabins arranged around an oblong village green. Just east of this “Curtin Village” Roland erected an elegant ironmaster’s mansion for himself and his large family in 1830-31. Upon his retirement in 1844 and return to Bellefonte (where he died in 1850), several of his sons took over the business, which they and their descendants managed with uneven success until fire destroyed the Eagle Furnace complex in 1921, leading to the closure of Eagle Forge the following year. In its final days, Eagle Iron Works featured the last operating cold-blast charcoal furnace in Pennsylvania. Restoration and reproduction efforts beginning in 1971 give visitors rare views into the lives and labors of central Pennsylvanians who helped propel the region into the forefront of American iron production in the early decades of the 19th century.
Cite This Entry
Ruth, Philip. "Eagle Iron Works Scale House foundation (now an herb garden)." Clio: Your Guide to History. January 22, 2025. Accessed April 28, 2025. https://theclio.com/tour/1853/4
Sources
Eagle Iron Works and Curtin Village Self-Guided Walking Tour. Produced in 2024 by the Roland Curtin Foundation for the Preservation of Eagle Furnace, Inc.
Roland Curtin Foundation Collection