Essex County NJ Archives Biographies.....Edward BALBACH, (Jr.) 1838 - 1910 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/nj/njfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Joy Fisher http://www.genrecords.net/emailregistry/vols/00001.html#0000031 November 8, 2008, 11:45 pm Author: Mary Depue Ogden, Editor (1917) BALBACH, Edward, Jr., Metallurgist, Inventor, Edward Balbach, late of Newark, New Jersey, died at the Hotel Savoy, New York City, where he had resided for some time, on December 30, 1910, in the seventy-second year of his age. His death was felt as a loss, not merely by the community of which he was a distinguished member, but by the smelting and refining trades the country over, which his efforts had been instrumental in developing and bringing up to their present state of perfection. Edward Balbach, Sr., was the pioneer of the smelting business in the United States. Carlsruhe, Baden, Germany, was the city where Mr. Balbach was born June 4, 1839, and where his family had dwelt for many years previously. His father, Edward Balbach, Sr., was a man of very enterprising nature who came to this country during the Revolutionary troubles in 1848 in Germany, bringing with him his son, at that time a lad eight years of age. Mr. Balbach, Sr., was a chemist of large technical learning and considerable practical experience, and had been engaged in the smelting and refining of metals in his native city of Carlsruhe during his young manhood. It was his intention upon coming to the United States to establish himself in the same business, a project which he carried out with great success. The city of Newark, New Jersey, was the scene of his operations, and in the year 1851 he built a plant there (this was the first smelter built in the United States) and began the business which has since, under the able management of himself and son, grown to such enormous proportions. It was at first confined to refining work, such materials as jewelers' sweepings and other waste products forming the basis of the operations, but it was not a great while before other kinds of work were done and smelting became an important element in the business. During this time the son, the Edward Balbach of this sketch, was growing up to manhood and gaining an excellent education, especially in the subject of chemistry, for which he had an unusual natural talent. His practical knowledge was gained in working in his father's plant, where he came in contact with all the details of the manufacturing process, and was soon an experienced worker in the craft. In the year 1864, when he was twenty-five years of age, Mr. Balbach, who had already given a great deal of theoretical study to the subject, devised a new means of separating the precious metals, silver and gold, from what are known as silver-lead ores, such large quantities of which are found in Nevada. The treatment of these ores up to that time had been an extremely costly one, and not at all adequate in the removal of the metals, so that Mr. Balbach's new process was a great boom to the smelter and refiner, and has practically revolutionized the trade both in the United States and in Europe, where it has universally been adopted. It is thus described in "The Engineering Mining Journal," a scientific journal devoted to mining interests which, although somewhat technical, is not too much so to prevent the average reader from gaining a clear idea of it. Says "The Journal:" The practice was to soften the lead first in a reverberatory furnace, followed by a liquating furnace, then desilverized by the addition of zinc in a kettle; separate the gold-silver-zinc-lead alloy by liquation in a special furnace; refine the desilverized lead by heating in a reverberatory furnace, drawing it off into a market kettle and moulding in one hundred pound pigs; distilling the gold-silver-zinc-lead alloy in a tilting retort, invented by A. Faber du Faur, condensing about fifty per cent, of the zinc for further use, and obtaining from the retort a rich gold-silver-lead bullion, which was cupelled. The important modification was the distilling of the zinc crust. This has become generally known as the Balbach resilvering delivering process and, as has been said, has modified the trade throughout the world. In the same year, 1864, the elder Mr. Balbach took his son into partnership with him, the firm becoming known from that time forward as Edward Balbach & Son. The great shipments of silver-lead products from Nevada were at that time almost exclusively divided between the Balbach works in Newark and the Selby plant in San Francisco, and for many years these two concerns did practically the whole work of this kind in the country, so that large amounts of the refined metals were imported from Europe. This condition, of course, was favorable to the growth of the domestic business, and under the capable direction of the two Messrs. Balbach, the concern grew rapidly in size until at the present time it employs between seven and eight hundred men in its plants. The main plant at Doremus avenue and Newark Bay, Newark, known as the Newark Bay plant, covers about four acres of ground, and it is here that the great gold and silver refining operations are carried on. The Balbach re-silvering process is not by any means the extent of Mr. Balbach's contribution to the art of refining metals. He was the inventor of many devices now generally used in smelting, such as retorting and tilting furnaces, and the employment of water jackets, and many others equally important. In 1881 Mr. Balbach erected the first commercial plant in the United States for the refining of copper by electrolysis, and thus laid the foundation of one of the gigantic industries of the country, one in which it outranks any other in the world. This plant is situated at Passaic and Ferguson streets. The old home of the Balbach family was at No. 111 Passaic avenue, then a delightful neighborhood, which has, however, been spoiled since that time for residential purposes by the gradual contamination of the Passaic river from the multitude of mills upon its banks, extending all the way from Newark itself up to Paterson, and even beyond. In the year 1884 this old home was the scene of a noteworthy reception given to Grover Cleveland, who had just at that time received the Democratic nomination for President. Mr. Balbach, who was always a strong supporter of Mr. Cleveland, was also his personal friend, and this friendship grew and ripened after this event, and was only brought to an end by Mr. Cleveland's death in 1908. Mr. Balbach, Sr., died in 1889, and sometime afterwards the younger man turned the old home into offices for the company, and purchased a beautiful property near Bernardsville, New Jersey, which has since heen developed into a splendid estate. It was here that he lived during the summer months for many years, spending the winters partly in New York City and partly in Florida. Apropos of Mr. Balbach's relations to the general smelting and refining industries in the United States, the paper already quoted from remarks that: "He may be considered as a born chemist and metallurgist, and was never slow to profit by new inventions, adapting and applying them with success to the needs of the works in connection with the improvements already noted as the results of his own studies and genius. At the same time he always remained the practical smelting man, who had studied and learned the business from the bottom up, with a tireless energy and zeal, setting a constant and good example to the younger generation by presence at his post both early and late." Mr. Balbach was active in the community outside of his purely private business interests, and always took a keen interest in its public affairs. His political affiliations have already been commented upon, but there is much more to be said concerning his relations with the Democratic party—that his allegiance was in no other way a prejudiced one, and that he was perfectly capable of exercising an absolutely independent judgment in every question that arose. The truth of this is admirably illustrated by his action in 1896, when the Democratic party was split over the question of free silver. Mr. Balbach refused to support Mr. Bryan, and it is claimed that he voted for McKinley upon that occasion. He afterwards returned to the Democratic ranks, however, when the money issue had been dropped. He rather shrank from public office than courted it, and was only once persuaded to accept any important nomination, and that was in 1894, when George C. Ludlow ran for the Governorship of New Jersey. Mr. Balbach was the candidate for Congressman from his Congressional district, but was defeated with the rest of the ticket in a strongly Republican year. He was appointed to a constitutional commission in New Jersey, and aided in making some much needed changes and reforms in the existing state of the law. He served twice as a Presidential elector. He was a member of the Newark Board of Trade and of the Newark Automobile Club. In his religious belief he was an Episcopalian,.and for many years attended Trinity Church in Newark. The position occupied in the life of Newark by Mr. Balbach is not to be conveyed by a mere categorical description of his achievements. His personality, his charities, his general attitude in life, all contributed to it, and the great number of devoted friends that he possessed bears witness to its character. His philanthropies were large but very quietly carried on, and few indeed were they who knew of them other than the two parties to them—he who gave, and he who received. In no other way was this more creditably known than in his dealings with the great number of employees who worked in his mills, a relation which resulted in a very rare feeling of friendship and confidence between them. He kept a personal supervision over the men, and if one was injured or became ill, he saw that he was well cared for until able to be about once more. On this point the "Journal," which we have already quoted remarks: "What endeared him to his business associates and friends was his kind and cheerful disposition, combined with a straightforward character marked by a modest and unassuming manner, notwithstanding that he possessed force and the faculty to carry through his ideas to a successful end. He recognized in those around him every worthy effort in the direction of self-improvement, and strove to assist every honest endeavor." Mr. Balbach was united in marriage with Miss Julia Anna Nenninger, of Newark, a daughter of Peter Franz Nenninger, a native of Germany, who came to Newark about 1848. For many years Mrs. Balbach was a conspicuous figure in the Newark social world, and was well known as one of the most charming of hostesses. She was, however, a victim of ill health, and for some time lived in seclusion. It was in some measure due to this fact that the family eventually made their home at Iiernardsville, where Mrs. Balbach anticipated living much in the open air. Indeed it was she who laid out and superintended the arrangement of the grounds of the estate, without the assistance of a landscape gardener, with what succes is well known in the community. A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Balbach, who is now the wife of Edward Randolph, of New York, the president and treasurer of the great smelting company. Mrs. Balbach and her daughter both survive Mr. Balbach. Additional Comments: Extracted from: MEMORIAL CYCLOPEDIA OF NEW JERSEY UNDER THE EDITORIAL SUPERVISION OF MARY DEPUE OGDEN VOLUME III MEMORIAL HISTORY COMPANY NEWARK, NEW JERSEY 1917 Photo: http://www.usgwarchives.net/nj/essex/bios/balbach-ej.jpg This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.net/njfiles/ File size: 11.9 Kb This file is located at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/nj/essex/bios/balbach-ej.txt