Forging Ruin

Author:   Thomas Worrell
Publisher:   Bog Water Press
Volume:   3
ISBN:  

9798995438427


Pages:   384
Publication Date:   15 July 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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Forging Ruin


Overview

In 1818, six-year-old Richard Jones watches liquid iron pour from the tap hole at Hanover Furnace in the New Jersey Pine Barrens and does not flinch. His father Benjamin, a Quaker ironmaster managing forty-four thousand acres of timber and bog ore, sees in the boy the ambition that will either continue the family's enterprise or destroy it. Forging Ruin follows Richard from that first encounter with molten iron through seven decades of building, losing, and building again. He inherits an ironworks already once surrendered to creditors and reclaimed by his father's quiet persistence. He masters the Pine Barrens iron trade, marries Alice Woodmansie, and expands beyond the furnace - investing in zinc smelting at Newark, founding the Florence Iron Works on the Delaware River, and reaching toward railroads, land companies, and industrial patents that stretch his resources to the breaking point. When the Civil War takes his eldest son Ivins at twenty-five, the loss extinguishes something in Richard that no patent or partnership can reignite. The novel traces the full arc of a nineteenth-century American industrialist whose gifts - invention, vision, relentless forward motion - are inseparable from the forces that undo him. Richard's zinc oxide process is ruled abandoned by the courts and handed to a competitor. His foundry is sold at sheriff's sale. His bankruptcy is a matter of public record. Yet in the final movement of his life, he places a family ring - carried from Wales two centuries earlier - into the hands of his grandson William, a young pharmacist from a small house in Pemberton, and in that gesture transfers something the courts and creditors could never reach. Book Three of The Line of the Black Water, Forging Ruin is a work of historical fiction drawn from twenty years of archival research into one family's entanglement with the iron industry, land speculation, patent law, and the American impulse to build beyond what the ground can hold.

Full Product Details

Author:   Thomas Worrell
Publisher:   Bog Water Press
Imprint:   Bog Water Press
Volume:   3
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.445kg
ISBN:  

9798995438427


Pages:   384
Publication Date:   15 July 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Author Information

Thomas Worrell is a descendant of the Jones ironmaster family of the New Jersey Pine Barrens, whose holdings once encompassed over 44,000 acres spanning Burlington and Ocean Counties. In 2005, his grandmother - the last surviving heir of the Jones line - handed him a bundle of family documents that included deeds, letters, and a nineteenth-century survey map of the Jones Tract. That afternoon launched twenty years of archival research through the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Stockton University's Special Collections, and the online Pine Barrens research community, as well as connections with living cousins scattered across the country. What began as a family genealogy became The Line of the Black Water, a six-novel historical fiction series tracing the Jones family from 1680s Wales through twenty-first-century New Jersey. The series draws on over five hundred primary source documents - census records, Civil War letters, land deeds, pharmacy ledgers, and personal correspondence - to reconstruct the lives of the people behind the papers. Worrell is a member of the Florence Township Historical Society and the Pemberton Township Historical Society. He is the owner of Indoor Air Services, LLC, and lives in Florence, New Jersey - the same town where his ancestors operated the Florence Iron Works in the nineteenth century.

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