8 episodes

In 1887, it was an isolated stretch of marshland on the shore of the Chesapeake Bay. By 1958, it was the biggest steel mill in the world. It went bankrupt in 2001. And by 2015, it was a pile of demolished rubble. Sparrows Point is a story of capitalism, labor unions, race, gender, civil rights, pride, and hubris.  It’s the story of American steel.

Sparrows Point: An American Steel Story Podcast WYPR

    • History
    • 4.7 • 48 Ratings

In 1887, it was an isolated stretch of marshland on the shore of the Chesapeake Bay. By 1958, it was the biggest steel mill in the world. It went bankrupt in 2001. And by 2015, it was a pile of demolished rubble. Sparrows Point is a story of capitalism, labor unions, race, gender, civil rights, pride, and hubris.  It’s the story of American steel.

    If History Is Our Guide

    If History Is Our Guide

    What does the story of Sparrows Point have to teach us today? What lessons are worth remembering as we look ahead to an uncertain economic future? This episode, we look the shift from manufacturing to distribution jobs, the decline of unions, and the pitfalls of nostalgia.
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    • 36 min
    The Writing On The Wall

    The Writing On The Wall

    By the mid-20 century, Bethlehem Steel was the biggest steel company in the US. It was an industrial giant that seemed too powerful to fail. But in 2001, it declared bankruptcy, decimating retirees’ pensions and health benefits. In this episode, we examine how the empire collapsed, and we bear witness to the aftermath.
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    • 34 min
    Bonus Episode: What Didn't Get Said

    Bonus Episode: What Didn't Get Said

    Back in the third episode of this series (Hard Fought Negotiations), we introduced you to Eddie Bartee, Jr. and after he heard the episode, he got in back in touch to share some feedback. In this bonus episode, we hop on the phone with Mr. Bartee for a candid conversation about what’s been said – and what hasn’t been said – in our telling of the Sparrows Point story so far.
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    • 20 min
    Women of Steel

    Women of Steel

    In the 1970s, Bethlehem Steel was forced by a federal consent decree to start hiring women in all operational departments, and at Sparrows Point, a brave generation of female steelworkers first walked through the doors. They stepped into a work environment that was crass, sexist, and often openly hostile to their presence. This episode, we meet three ‘Women of Steel’ from that pioneering generation and hear their stories of setbacks and perseverance.
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    • 40 min
    Hard-Fought Negotiations

    Hard-Fought Negotiations

    A unionized workforce was never part of the original plan at Sparrows Point. Neither was racial equity. Workers were meant to be cogs in a machine, and black workers got channeled into the hottest, dirtiest, and lowest-paying jobs. It took until World War II before the plant was unionized, and it took until the 1970s before the company was forced to desegregate its job classifications. This episode, we learn about the uphill battle for worker rights and racial justice at Sparrows Point.
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    • 33 min
    The City In The Marshes

    The City In The Marshes

    How did a swampy peninsula on the Patapsco River get picked as the site for a revolutionary, state-of-the-art steel mill? What was it like to live and work in a self-contained company town? Did Bethlehem Steel help the Allies win World War II? And, by the way, just how complicated is it to make steel, anyway? This episode, we rewind to the origins of Sparrows Point and trace the growth of what would become the biggest steel mill in the world.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 38 min

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5
48 Ratings

48 Ratings

EllieBeatha ,

This needs to be heard

My father (God rest his soul), worked there his entire life. We’d hear some stories, but he didn’t like to talk about it too much (he didn’t want to worry us.) The one thing that was certain: those men were like family. They were the ones who saved his life when he had a heart attack on the job. Thank God for all of them.
My father died six years ago in large part from asbestosis. It was heartbreaking. He was a good man and many people from there came to support us.

Born in the 70's ,

Skip episode 2

Mark Reuter is a wanna be steelworker and you should be embarrassed to include him in your podcast.

barthel 1979 ,

Love it!

It is awesome to hear the stories and the picture that is painted when listening to an era gone by

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