Details for Alamo Portland and Roman Cement Company

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5029000098

Data

Marker Number 98
Atlas Number 5029000098
Marker Title Alamo Portland and Roman Cement Company
Index Entry Alamo Portland and Roman Cement Company
Address
City San Antonio
County Bexar
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 550721
UTM Northing 3259098
Subject Codes geology; manufacturing; design and construction; Business topics, general
Marker Year 1991
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location St. Mary's Ave. at Brackenridge Park, San Antonio
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Near this site in 1879, Englishman William Loyd discovered a blue argillaceous limestone believed to be a natural cement rock. Analysis by San Antonio druggist and chemist George H. Kalteyer confirmed the rock contained proper proportions of lime and clay to produce portland cement. Loyd and Kalteyer, along with other investors, organized the Alamo Portland and Roman Cement Company, which was chartered in January 1880. This, the first portland cement plant west of the Mississippi, began with on intermittent pot kiln. A second pot kiln was added in 1881, when the company name was changed to Alamo Cement Company. The tall stack Schoefer-type kiln was added in 1889. Cement from this plant was used in the construction of the State Capitol and the Driskill Hotel in Austin. Through the vision and leadership of Portland Cement pioneers Loyd, Kalteyer,and Charles Baumberger, who succeeded to the presidency following Kalteyer's death in 1897, the company flourished. In 1908 the plant relocated to a site later known as Cementville near Alamo Heights. The original quarry became the Japanese Sunken Gardens in Brackenridge Park. The kiln area was designated as Baumberger Plaza in 1944. (1991)