Ironworks Oil House on Belle Isle stabilized

The walls of the old stone Ironworks Oil House on east end of Belle Isle have been stabilized. The granite walls of the roofless structure had begun to crack and the foundation needed to be shored up. From the brand new park signage: This stone storage shed was built to hold flammable lubricants and dangerous acids. […]

The walls of the old stone Ironworks Oil House on east end of Belle Isle have been stabilized. The granite walls of the roofless structure had begun to crack and the foundation needed to be shored up.

From the brand new park signage:

This stone storage shed was built to hold flammable lubricants and dangerous acids. The hand-cut stone likely was quarried here on Belle Isle. The shed served the Old Dominion Iron and Nail Company, which expanded from this area eastward, late in the 19th century. An 1886 fire insurance map identified the shed as an “oil house” and showed a “laboratory”  next to it. The oil house may have been constructed by 1876, when another map showed a similar building in about this location.

Ironworks Oil House on Belle Isle, viewed from Robert E. Lee BridgeNotice the earth piled around the shed’s side walls. The earth once reached within two feet of the roof. The thick stone walls, reinforced by the heaping earth, would have helped direct any explosion and fire upward rather than outward, to protect other buildings as well as the workers here.

When the 1934 Robert E. Lee Bridge was demolished after the new bridge was completed in 1988, the shed’s heavy slate roof  was removed. The walls were temporarily buried under thirty feet of sand to protect them from any falling debris.

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Phil Riggan

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