1908 - Big Coal Contract Let

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Wed Apr 23 22:59:33 EDT 2008


Roanoke Times - April 24, 1908

BIG COAL CONTRACT LET

Norfolk & Western Will Haul 260,000 Tons for Panama This Year

Friends of the Norfolk & Western will be pleased to learn that the
concern of Castner, Curran & Bullitt, which handles a large
proportion of this product of the Pocahontas coal fields, has been
awarded the contract for furnishing 260,000 tons of coal to the
Panama Canal Commission. All of this great amount of coal will be
hauled over the Norfolk & Western. This coal is to be used to supply
the needs of the government at Panama during the coming year.
Castner, Curran & Bullitt will begin shipping fuel in a day or so.
The first steamer to load with this coal - the Norwegian, Fridtjof
Nansen - is coming in from New York to load at Lambert's Point, Norfolk.
The Erne Line was awarded the contract for freighting the coal to
the canal and will use the foreign steamers which they have under
charter. The total amount of coal sold under this contract was
360,000 tons. Of this C. C. & B. will furnish 260,000 tons of
Pocahontas, while the Berwind White Coal Company furnish 100,000 tons
of New River. This last goes from Newport News and therefore Hampton
Roads got the whole business.
This is a notable achievement, since all of the great coal
concerns in the United States were competitors and there were fifteen
bidders, some of whom bid slightly under Norfolk. The coal, however,
was offered under certain specifications which required that it
should be up to a fixed standard, and Pocahontas, at the price was
adjudged by the government experts to be the cheapest.
Each cargo will be sampled by an agent of the Geological Survey
and the coal will be analyzed and must come up to specifications. The
securing of this contract by Castner, Curran & Bullitt means that
nearly three-fourths of one million of dollars will come to the coal
during the coming year in payment for this coal.
The fuel will go at the rate of a ship load a week for the next
twelve months.
It is pointed out by coal men that Norfolk has come to be as the
letting of this contract again shows, the leading steam coal port of
the United States and they anticipate that it shall be in a short
time the greatest in the world. The completion of the Virginian
Railway alone will, they say, insure this, even though no more
railways from the coal fields to that port should be constructed.

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- Ron Davis, Roger Link






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