John B. Lovis was born on January 9, 1935, at Rahway, N.J., and grew up in Winchester and Lexington, Mass. He graduated from Norwich University in Northfield, Vt., with a B.S. in Engineering Management in 1956. Immediately after graduation he joined the Bethlehem Steel Corporation and was assigned to the Blast Furnace Department at Sparrows Point, Md. In 1963 he was transferred to Bethlehem, Pa., to assist in the design and engineering of the company's new Burns Harbor Plant in Indiana. Over the next thirty-two years, he held various positions in Bethlehem's Corporate Engineering and Planning Departments. He retired as Director, Strategic Planning, in 1995. His book, The Blast Furnaces of Sparrows Point - One Hundred Years of Ironmaking on Chesapeake Bay, was published in 2005.
The Sparrows Point Steel Plant, located at the mouth of the Patapsco River below Baltimore, was originally constructed by the Pennsylvania Steel Company in 1887-90. The site was chosed so that the new plant could be supplied directly with rich Cuban ore, which otherwise would have had to be hauled inland by rail. The plant was spun off to a Maryland subsidiary, the Maryland Steel Company of Baltimore County, in 1891, and a Marine Department capable of constructing large steel ships was created the same year. In 1916, Charles M. Schwab's Bethlehem Steel Corporation purchased the entire Pennsylvania Steel group of companies. By the late 1950s, Sparrows Point was one of the largest steel plants in the world with over 25,000 employees. As a relatively modern facility, Sparrows Point survived the collapse of Bethlehem Steel that began in the 1980s and ended in bankruptcy in 2001. Ownership of the viable Bethlehem Steel properties passed to the International Steel Group Inc. in 2003 and to Mittal Steel USA Inc. in 2005.
From the description of Research notes on Bethlehem Steel Corporation, 1894-2006 [bulk, 1963-2003]. (Hagley Museum & Library). WorldCat record id: 233982284