Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. The Bethlehem Steel Corporation was an American steelmaking company headquartered in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Until its closure in 2003, it was one of the world's largest steel-producing and shipbuilding companies.

  2. A Brief Chronology of Bethlehem Steel. 1857 - Earliest predecessor company, Saucona Iron Company, is formed in South Bethlehem, Pa. 1861 - Name of company is changed to Bethlehem Iron Company. 1863 - Company produces first iron railroad rails.

  3. Bethlehem Steel Corporation is the second largest steel producer in the United States, with control of supply sources, production, and distribution, from raw materials to a wide variety of steel mill products.

  4. Bethlehem Steel Corporation. Corporate Profile. Bethlehem Steel Corporation, headquartered in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, is the nation's second largest integrated steel producer with revenues of about $3.5 billion and shipments of 7.5 million tons of steel products in 2002.

  5. Apr 5, 2004 · That hit Bethlehem where it literally lived--in Bethlehem, Pa., site of the company's big but antiquated structural steel mill. This plant, which was for years sentimentally kept on life...

  6. Jul 21, 2024 · Bethlehem Steel Corporation, former American corporation (1904–2003) formed to consolidate Bethlehem Steel Company (of Pennsylvania), the Union Iron Works (with shipbuilding facilities in San Francisco ), and a few other smaller companies.

  7. Bethlehem Steel has become a symbol of the city of Bethlehem, and the impact it has made on the rest of the country is legendary. Without Bethlehem Steel, eighty percent of New York’s skyscrapers, as well as the Ben Franklin, George Washington, and Golden Gate bridges would not exist.

  8. Feb 5, 2008 · Bethlehem Steel, The People Who Built America. PBS39. 8.65K subscribers. Subscribed. 9.2K. 1.7M views 16 years ago. Documentary about Bethlehem Steel's contribution to America ...more....

  9. Nov 18, 2020 · It was Nov. 18, 1995, the last day of steel making, or “last cast” at Bethlehem Steels furnaces, which still stand as a now-silent icon, the backdrop for some of the city’s biggest events ...

  10. Jacob Roth, Bethlehem Steel: The Rise and Fall of an Industrial Titan, Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies, Vol. 87, No. 2 (Spring 2020), pp. 390-402