petrea_mitchell: (Default)
[personal profile] petrea_mitchell
I've just finished reading The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World From the Periodic Table of the Elements, which is chock-full of fascinating trivia about the discovery and use of the various elements.

One of the tales concerns the time a fellow named Otis King bought a molybdenum mine in Colorado and pioneered a new extraction process to produce more molybdenum from it than the world could possibly use in a year. This warranted a note in a metallurgical bulletin in 1915, just when the German military was looking for more molybdenum to build more of its big guns. Fritz Haber (of the Haber-Bosch process and later chemical warfare research) noticed it, and the Germans determined that they needed to take control of that mine.

At which point the story turns into a Hollywood Western:
[Max] Schott-- a man described as having "eyes penetrating to the point of hypnosis"-- sent in claim jumpers to set up stakes and harass King in court, a major drain on the already floundering mine. The more belligerent claim jumpers threatened the wives and children of miners and destroyed their camps during a winter in which the temperature dropped to twenty below. King hired a limping outlaw named Two-Gun Adams for protection, but the German agents got to King anyway, mugging him with with knives and pickaxes and hurling him off a sheer cliff. Only a well-placed snowbank saved his neck. As the self-described "tomboy bride" of one miner put it in her memoirs, the Germans did "everything short of downright slaughter to hinder the work of his company." King's gritty workers took to calling the unpronounceable metal they risked their lives to dig up "Molly be damned".

King had a dim idea what Molly did in Germany, but he was about the only non-German in Europe or North America who did. Not until the British captured German arms in 1916 and reverse-engineered them by melting them down did the Allies discover the wundermetall, but the shenanigans in the Rockies continued.


Anyway, the US eventually entered the war and started taking an interest in the actions of German companies on its own soil, and when it found out that Schott's company was shipping its entire output to Germany, it put a stop to that. King made his fortune shortly afterward when he persuaded Henry Ford that moly steel would be good for car engines, putting an nice bow on things.
This account has disabled anonymous posting.
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

Profile

petrea_mitchell: (Default)
petrea_mitchell

June 2025

S M T W T F S
123 4567
8910 11121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930     

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 13th, 2025 06:40 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios