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James Roycroft Gordon
Long before environmental issues became a cause célèbre,
Gordon developed metallurgical breakthroughs that allowed the
company to capture significantly greater amounts of minerals from
its ores rather than discarding those minerals with the tailings
or burning them off.
He and his research team devised the matte flotation method of
copper-nickel separation which replaced the Orford method, the
first major improvement in nickel metallurgy since the Orford
process was introduced 50 years earlier.
Gordon was born May 26, 1898, in Glenvale, Ont., near Kingston.
He graduated from Queen's University in 1920 with a B.Sc. in chemistry
and returned 35 years later for an LL.D. (Hon.). After serving
with the Canadian Field Artillery in the First World War, he landed
his first job with M.J. O'Brien doing research on the complex
ores from Cobalt, Ont., area. In 1929, he joined the young Ontario
Research Foundation as assistant director.
His talents in industrial research flourished at the foundation
where he pursued investigations into such diverse subjects as
analysis of nickel-bronze, the applicability of low-temperature
reduction to certain Ontario iron ores, the use of ammonia gas
as a source of hydrogen for the production of reducing atmospheres,
and the wear resistance of white case iron.
In 1936, he was hired by Inco to direct process research at its
new laboratory at Copper Cliff, Ont., seeking higher efficiencies
and recoveries. His first project was to reduce metal losses in
stag, which he did. His next major achievement Was to cut the
cost of copper-nickel separation which led to the matte flotation
process.
As well as the matte flotation process, the laboratory developed
flash smelting of copper resulting in greater sulphur recovery,
improved high-grade iron ore processing and the anode process
of refining nickel.
He received the 1948 Medal of the Canadian Institute of Mining
and Metallurgy for his contributions to process metallurgy in
the smelting and refining of nickel. In 1957, he was awarded the
James Douglas Gold Medal by the American Institute o Mining, Metallurgical
and Petroleum Engineers, also for his work in process metallurgy.
In 1941, Gordon was appointed assistant to the vice-president and
entered the management stream that would ultimately take him to
the top of the company. In 1960, at the first meeting of the company's
directors to be held at Thompson, Man., he was elected president
of both International Nickel Company of Canada and its subsidiary,
International Nickel Company of New York.
Gordon died in 1980.
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