Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site


Hopewell Furnace showcases an early American landscape of industrial operations from 1771-1883, Hopewell and other "iron plantations" laid the foundation for the transformation of the United States into an industrial giant for the time. The park's 848 acres and historic structures illustrate the business, technology and lifestyle of our growing nation.

On PA Route 345, 5 miles South of Birdsboro, Pennsylvania.

  • Arts and Culture
  • Craft Demonstrations
  • Cultural Demonstrations
  • Astronomy
  • Stargazing
  • Biking
  • Compass and GPS
  • Geocaching
  • Food
  • Picnicking
  • Guided Tours
  • Self-Guided Tours - Walking
  • Hands-On
  • Volunteer Vacation
  • Hiking
  • Horse Trekking
  • Horseback Riding
  • Hunting and Gathering
  • Gathering and Foraging
  • Living History
  • Junior Ranger Program
  • Skiing
  • Cross-Country Skiing
  • Wildlife Watching
  • Birdwatching
  • Park Film
  • Museum Exhibits
  • Shopping
  • Bookstore and Park Store
  • Gift Shop and Souvenirs

  • Architecture and Building
  • African American Heritage
  • American Revolution
  • Archeology
  • Arts
  • Burial, Cemetery and Gravesite
  • Commerce
  • Enslavement
  • Farming and Agriculture
  • Incarceration
  • Jails and Prisons
  • Industry
  • Factories
  • Mills
  • Mining
  • Logging and Timber Cutting
  • Immigration
  • Laborer and Worker
  • Medicine
  • Military
  • Artillery
  • Monuments and Memorials
  • Native American Heritage
  • Reconstruction
  • Religion and Spirituality
  • Churches
  • Schools and Education
  • Social Movements
  • Conservation Movement
  • Voting Rights and Suffrage
  • Transportation
  • Canals
  • Roads, Routes and Highways
  • Trains and Railroads
  • Wars and Conflicts
  • American Revolutionary War
  • Women's History
  • Animals
  • Birds
  • Climate Change
  • Fire
  • Forests and Woodlands
  • Geology
  • Mineral Deposits
  • Grasslands
  • Meadows
  • Night Sky
  • Rock Landscapes and Features
  • Volcanoes
  • Watersheds
  • Headwaters
  • Wilderness

Historical Rendering of Hopewell Furnace in Operation, 1840

Artists' Illustaration of Hopewell Furnace in operation circa 1840.

Overview of the Hopewell Furnace "iron plantation" community in operation during its prime.

Hopewell Furnace's Boarding House

Front of Hopewell Furnace's Boarding House

Hopewell Furnace's Boarding House housed single men or those living away from their families, who came to work at the furnace.

Blacksmith Shop & Cast House

Side view of blacksmith shop with cast house behind it.

The Cast House was the industrial center of the ironworks. It is were iron ore was smelted into iron metal and products. The smaller blacksmith shop formed iron metal into all kinds of necessary tools and goods used in everyday life.

Hopewell Stove

Side view of Hopewell Stove in front of wagon running gear.

The most notable manufactured product Hopewell Furnace made was its stoves. They were produced by the thousands at Hopewell and other like furnaces in the early 19th century and were transported for sale by horse and wagon.

Charcoal Pile

Demonstration charcoal pile smoldering.

Charcoal was the fuel used to fire Hopewell Furnace and other furnaces of its age. Thousands of bushles of charcoal were made from hardwood trees on the furnace lands and entered into the furnace to keep it "in blast."