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  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. At the height of its success and productivity, the company was a symbol of American manufacturing leadership in the world, and its decline and ultimate liquidation in the late 20th century is similarly cited as an example of America's diminished manufacturing leadership. ...

  2. 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. Also a long-time repairer of ships and offshore drilling platform businesses and manufacturer of forgings and castings, Bethlehem had curtailed many of these activities during the late 1990s. The company is the nation's number one supplier of steel to the domestic construction industry ...

  3. 1899 - Bethlehem Steel Company is formed. Eugene G. Grace joins Bethlehem after graduating from Lehigh University. 1901 - Charles M. Schwab is instrumental in formation of U.S. Steel Corporation and is named its first president. 1903 - C.M. Schwab resigns from U.S. Steel. 1904 - C.M. Schwab forms Bethlehem Steel Corporation, becoming president and chairman of the board. Facilities include steel plant in South Bethlehem, iron mines in Cuba and shipyards on East and West Coasts. ...

  4. Bethlehem Steel employs about 11,000 and produces a wide variety of steel mill products including hot-rolled, cold-rolled and coated sheets, tin mill products, carbon and alloy plates, rail, specialty blooms, carbon and alloy bars. Its principal markets include automotive, construction, machinery and equipment, appliance, containers, service centers, and rail.

  5. Apr 5, 2004 · Bethlehem, Roderick says, even used the difference between its strategy and U.S. Steel's as a selling point, telling its customers that Bethlehem was investing to improve its products whereas Big ...

  6. Jun 28, 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.. The company’s history traces to 1857, when a group of railroaders and investors of the city of Bethlehem, Pa., founded the Saucona Iron Company, which four years later was renamed Bethlehem Iron Company; the works was designed principally to turn out ...

  7. Bethlehem Steel’s success was not destined to last forever. Due to a combination of poor business management, labor strikes, and a general transition away from traditional steel manufacturing in the United States, the Bethlehem Steel Corporation fell into a period of decline in the late 1970s from which it never recovered. It filed for bankruptcy in 2001, marking the end of an industrial titan

  8. Company profile page for Bethlehem Steel Corp including stock price, company news, executives, board members, and contact information

  9. Nov 14, 2020 · A quarter-century after Bethlehem Steel Corp.’s last cast in the city that shared its name, the dormant blast furnaces are an icon of the Lehigh Valley’s industrial past and the centerpiece of ...

  10. About the Project The Bethlehem Steel Legacy Project preserves the 125-year history of the steelmaking giant in Baltimore. From 1887 to 2012, the mill provided steady if dangerous work for tens of thousands of men and women. At its height, its Sparrows Point mill was the largest steel producer in the world. The project honors the experiences