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Illinois Iron Furnace Historic Site

The Illinois Iron Furnace is the only remaining iron furnace structure in the state of Illinois. Iron was manufactured at the Illinois Furnace by the charcoal blast method. The furnace was built on a dry laid limestone foundation. The exterior of the furnace was manufactured of large limestone blocks quarried near the town of Cave-In-Rock. The interior wall, or lining, was constructed of firebrick from Pennsylvania. The space between the interior and exterior walls was filled with sandstone. Wrought iron binders were placed through the stonework and tightened to secure the walls. All of the stonework was dry laid. A 1/2 mile trail leading from the back of the picnic area features bottomland habitat and bottomland tree species. The trail winds along Big Creek and offers 2 or 3 deep old-fashioned fishing holes. Once a site of an iron making blast furnace, the picnic area contains a reconstructed blast furnace as a monument to our nation's past industry.

General Information

Open all year - Daily from 6:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m. No overnight parking.

No trash receptacles - No garbage pick-up provided.  Pack it in - Pack it out.

Getting There

Latitude / Longitude

Latitude: 37.49916667

Longitude: -88.32694444

Directions

From Harrisburg take Highway 34/145 south 6 miles, then continue on Highway 34 south for 16 miles to Highway 146.  Go east on Highway 146 for 3.5 miles to Iron Furnace road, turn north (left) and follow the directional signs to the Iron Furnace historic site.

Facility and Amenity Information

Accessibility

Restrooms

Restrooms are available at this site.

Water

Potable water is not available at this site.

Last updated February 18th, 2025