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==History== Sulphur is named for the [[sulfur]] mines that were operated in the area in the 1900s. In 1867, Professor Eugene W. Hilgard, an experienced geologist who was prospecting for oil and other minerals, conducted exploratory borings in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana and discovered sulfur in the caprock of a [[salt dome]]. However, the sulfur was beneath several hundred feet of muck and quicksand containing deadly [[hydrogen sulfide]] gas, which made mining extremely hazardous. Repeated unsuccessful attempts to sink conventional mining shafts in the 1870s and 1880s resulted in the loss of many lives. In 1890, the German immigrant [[Herman Frasch]] invented and patented the [[Frasch Process]] of mining sulfur, using concentric pipes to pump superheated water into the ground, liquefy the mineral, and force the liquid to the surface with compressed air. The first molten sulfur was brought to the surface on Christmas Eve of 1894. Sulfur soon began to be mined on an industrial scale, with the molten mineral allowed to solidify and dry in enormous vats 100 by 400 feet, then blasted and hauled by rail to the Sabine River for shipment.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Cormier|first1=Adley|title=A Timeline History of Lake Charles and Southwest Louisiana|url=http://www.calcasieupreservation.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2:historyofsouthwestlouisiana&catid=19&Itemid=3|website=Calcasieu Historical Preservation Society|access-date=25 May 2015}}</ref> Frasch's invention greatly facilitated sulfur mining, and the [[Union Sulphur Company]], a joint venture of Dr. Frasch and the American Sulphur Company that owned the land, sparked a period of booming growth in the decades that followed.<ref>{{cite web|title=History of Sulphur|url=http://www.sulphur.org/eGov/apps/document/center.egov?view=item;id=252|website=City of Sulphur|access-date=24 May 2015}}</ref> The elementary school on South Huntington Street in downtown Sulphur is named after Frasch. With the addition of the Cities Service ([[Citgo]]) oil refinery in 1943, the areas of Maplewood and Hollywood were developed to house refinery workers. The Sulphur area is still mostly dependent on the oil refineries and petrochemical plants for employment.
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