Aluminum can be extracted only from a single widely-
scattered and generally little known mineral called bauxite,
and the expense of extracting it from that mineral is very
heavy. The presence of aluminum in the earth’s crust was
known to scientists for many years before it was actually
isolated and obtained in metallic form. It was a young
American, Charles Martin Hall, who made the momentous
discovery, in 1886, that has given aluminum to the world.
He was only 22 years of age at the time, and a student of
Oberlin College. Mr. Hall applied for a patent covering
his discovery, in the year named, but it was not issued until
1889. The patent expired in 1904.
In 1888 Mr. Hall associated himself with some other
yeung men in Pittsburgh, and formed the Aluminum Com-
pany of America. These men are the pioneers of the alumi-
num industry, and, except as death has thinned their ranks,
they and their company have developed aluminum, in the
short space of 38 years, from a laboratory curiosity into cne
of the most important metals of everyday use. It was
under the guidance of these men that aluminum in the
United States was reduced in price from $8 a pcund to 25
cents pound, and its uses extended to such a degree that
it is now a necessity of civilized life.
In the year 1888 there was no consumption of aluminum
at all; today the world is consuming the metal at the rate of
250,000,000 pounds a year. This indispensable metal is
chiefly the product of labor. A ton of the material has a
value in excess of $500. The raw materials, unimproved
by labor, required to produce this ton of aluminum, are not
worth over $25. Least valuable of all is the bauxite, which
must be mined, treated, transported and put through an
elaborate chemical process. Coal must be mined, trans-
ported, and its energy turned into steam; limestone must
be quarried, transported and treated; common salt must be
produced and put through an extensive chemical process to
produce soda ash; cryolite is produced in the Arctic Circle
and brought from that distant field; fluorspar is mined at
considerable hazard and expense, and is highly treated; the
carbons used are the product of elaborate manufacture, using