Heavy cast iron stoves survive extreme cold through thermal mass physics: a 300-pound stove stores approximately 18,900 BTUs of heat (compared to only 2,500 BTUs for a 40-pound sheet iron stove), allowing it to radiate infrared heat continuously even after the fire drops to coals. This radiant heat warms walls, floors, and people directly, while the cabin's insulation (sod banking, chinking, and flower sacking) prevents heat loss. The combination of thermal mass and proper insulation enables survival in temperatures that would kill those using lighter, less efficient heating methods.
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She Found a Stove Twice as Heavy as She Could Lift - Dragged It Home and Survived Coldest WinterAdded:
The 14th of October, 1886, Miles City, Montana Territory. The temperature that morning was 34° above zero, warm enough that Norah Callaway's two boys, 7-year-old Declan and 5-year-old Finn, had left their coats on the peg by the door. She let them. There was still sun coming through the south window of the claim shanty, and the grass outside was dry and gold, and if you squinted at the hills from the right angle, it almost looked like any other October. She had $4.17 in a tobacco tin on the shelf above the door. That was everything. Thomas had been dead 11 weeks. He came off his horse wrong on August 5th, a rock hidden in tall grass. The horse spooked sideways and Thomas went over the right shoulder at speed. The nearest doctor was 31 mi away in Mile City and had charged $8 for the visit. Thomas had been unconscious by the time the neighbor's boy rode back with him, and he never came around. Norah had held his hand for 14 hours before it went still.
The claim was 160 acres of scrub grass and hardpan in Kusta County, Montana territory, 7 miles west of the Tongue River crossing. Thomas had filed on it in the spring of 1,884, paying the $14 filing fee, and had spent two full seasons breaking ground on the East 40. They had a pole barn, a root seller dug three feet into a clay hillside, a small garden patch that the summer drought had scorched to nothing in July. And the claim shanty itself, 12 ft wide by 14 ft deep, built out of cottonwood planks that had warped badly in the first dry summer, and left gaps along the north wall you could push two fingers through. The stove was a problem. Thomas had bought a laundry stove in spring of 1884.
sheet iron, not cast iron, two lids, a firebox the size of a bread loaf, a draft vent that never drew properly. It weighed maybe 40. In the spring and fall, it was enough to cook on. The first winter they had stacked burlap sacking against the north wall and slept fully clothed under every hide and blanket they owned, and they had made it to March, but only barely, and only because Thomas had cut a full cord of dry cottonwood in November, and only because Declan had not yet been born, and it was just the two of them. Two winters later, with two small boys, the sheet iron stove was not going to be enough. Norah knew this before the end of August. She knew it the way you know things. When survival is not an abstraction anymore. When the gap between having and not having is a specific number you can hold in your hand. The number was $4.17 and a new cast iron cook stove from the merchant in Miles City cost $11.
A used one, if anyone had one to sell, was still six or seven. She had neither, and she had no way of getting either before December, when the Tongue River crossings would become unreliable, and the road into town would drift shut in any serious wind. She spent the first two weeks of September trying to figure a way out of this that didn't exist. She thought about writing to her sister in Ohio. She thought about selling the horse, but without the horse she couldn't work the East 40 come spring, and without the East 40, she had no claim and no future. She thought about taking the boys into Miles City, and seeing if she could get work for the winter, but the town was full of cowboys, laid off from the cattlemen, who had overstocked the range all summer, and a widow with two small children was not what anyone was hiring.
What she had was the claim, the horse, a 40 sheet iron stove that let the cold in around its seams and $4.17.
September ran out. October began. The other thing she had, and this mattered more than she knew yet, was a neighbor.
His name was Gus Alderman. He ran 40 head of cattle on the section north of hers and had lived in the territory since 1879.
He was 53 years old, had survived two bad winters on the Yellowstone without a proper stove, and had opinions about everything. When he rode down to check on her in the second week of September, she told him about the stove situation, and he looked at the sheet iron box on her hearthstone, and he laughed. Not cruy, just the way old men laugh at things they've seen kill people. That thing, he said, won't he a chicken coupe in January? He paused. You know about the Hendricks place? She didn't. The Hendricks family had filed on a claim 6 milesi east up on the bench above the creek drainage. They'd come out from Minnesota in the spring of 1,885, which was bad timing. The drought had already started by then, and the husband was a wheat farmer trying to grow wheat in country that hadn't seen a real growing season in 2 years. By June of 1886 they were gone back east on the northern Pacific and the claim shanty was sitting empty on the bench. Alderman had ridden past it in August. He remembered the stove. It's a big one. He said home comfort. I saw it through the window. They left in a hurry. Left most everything. She rode out there on October 14th leaving the boys with Alderman's wife and she found it. It was a home comfort range. Six burner lids, cast iron from the firebox legs to the warming shelf on top. The model CB, though she wouldn't have known that designation. The firebox was on the left side, the oven in the center, a water reservoir on the right that would hold eight gallons when filled. The surface was still black with graphite polish, though spotted with a summer's worth of rust where rain had come through a hole in the roof. The legs sat on the plank floor, and the planks had not rotted.
She found a board in the corner of the shanty, and she scratched at the base of one leg with a nail until clean iron showed through. She pressed her palm flat against the casting. It was cold, and it was dense, and it was real. Then she tried to move it. She got her arms around the left side, braced her feet against the floorboard, and pulled.
Nothing happened. Not even a creek. The stove did not shift one inch. She tried tipping it, wedging her shoulder under the firebox side and pushing up. The stove moved slightly, the left front leg lifting perhaps half an inch off the plank before she ran out of strength and it settled back. What she was trying to move weighed, she later calculated based on the home comfort catalog she found packed in a crate under the Hrix's bed, approximately 300 lb. She weighed 127 lbs, soaking wet. She stood in the middle of the empty claim shanty and looked at the stove for a long time.
Then she started working. The first thing she did was go outside and find a long piece of hardwood, a fence rail that the Hrix had cut and never set, 7 ft long, maybe 3 in in diameter. She brought it inside. Then she went to the leanto beside the shanty and found two lengths of round pole, each about 4 feet long and 3 in across posts that had never been sunk. She laid one pole on the floor about 8 in in front of the stove's front legs. She shoved the fence rail under the right side of the firebox and pushed down on the far end. The right front leg lifted 4 in. She kicked the second round pole under the right side with her boot while the leg was in the air. The stove settled onto the pole. She moved to the left side and did the same thing. The stove now sat on two round poles like rails under a sled.
Here is what she was doing, though she had no name for it beyond common sense.
She was converting the problem from a lifting problem to a rolling problem.
Lift 300 lb straight up and you need 300 lb of force. Roll 300 lb on round logs and you need about a 20th of that around 15 to break the static friction and keep it moving on flat ground. That's why ancient peoples moved stones that weighed tons.
That's why it works. She didn't know the physics. She knew that round things roll and flat things don't. She walked the stove forward 6 in on the poles push.
The front pole rolls out the back. Pick it up. Place it in front. 6 in. Another 6 in. It took her the better part of an hour to move the stove 12 ft to the doorway. The step down from the door to the ground was 8 in. She built a ramp out of two planks pulled from the Hrix's leanto, angled them from the doorstep to the ground, and rolled the stove down.
It hit the dirt hard and sat there in the October sunlight, and she sat beside it breathing. She still had to get it six miles home. She had the horse. She went back to Alderman's place, borrowed a stoneboat, two wide planks held apart by cross pieces like a flat sled without runners designed for hauling rocks off fields, and drove it back to the Hrix's place behind the horse. She rolled the stove onto the stoneboat using the same pole method, lashing it with rope she'd brought from the barn, and she started home. Six miles on a stoneboat in October takes a while. The ground was hard and dry, which was bad for dragging. She wet the dirt ahead of the runners with water from the Hrix's well, an old trick, the same physics the Egyptians used dragging stone blocks, though she didn't know that either, and the horse leaned into the harness and the stoneboat moved. She walked beside it the whole way. She got home an hour after dark. Alderman came down the next morning to see it. He stood in the yard looking at the stove sitting outside the cabin door because she hadn't yet figured out how to get it over the step and threw the 12-in rise into the cabin.
And he tilted his head and looked at her for a moment. You dragged that home yourself. She told him how. He went back to his place and came back with two of his hands, and the three of them got the stove inside in 20 minutes. They set it on the hearthstone she'd already prepared, a flat layer of sandstone pieces she'd gathered from the creek bank and mortared with clay. About 18 in of solid stone base to keep the iron from sitting directly on the wood floor.
When they were done, Alderman's hands left, and Alderman stood in the doorway looking at the setup. You're going to want to pack that north wall before it gets cold, he said. The wind comes straight off the Yellowstone brakes and it'll go right through those planks. She spent the next two weeks on the north wall. She packed every gap with twisted grass and clay. She cut sod bricks and stacked them 2 ft deep along the outside base of the north and west walls. Not to insulate the whole cabin, but to stop the wind from getting under the floorboards and into the living space from beneath. She nailed flower sacking along the inside seams and pushed rope into the worst gaps between planks. The cabin went from something you could see daylight through to something that felt when you stood inside it with the door closed like an actual enclosed space.
Alderman came back in late October, looked at the wall work, said nothing specific, and rode home. He thought she might make it. On the 11th of November 1886, the first serious storm came down from Canada. The temperature dropped from 38 degrees Fahrenheit at noon to 9° F by sundown. Snow came in horizontally off the bench, and the wind didn't stop for 3 days. Norah fired up the home comfort for the first time that evening.
She'd had fires in it before, smaller ones to test the drawer and season the iron, and inside 20 minutes the cabin was warm. This is the part that people who have never used a heavy cast iron stove don't understand, and it's worth taking a minute to explain because it's the difference between surviving that winter and not. The sheet iron laundry stove she'd been using 40 of thin metal heated the air in the cabin. That's convection. Warm air rises, cold air falls, and the moment you stop feeding the fire, the air cools within minutes.
You're essentially trying to keep a leaky balloon inflated. The cold comes back through every crack and gap the instant the fire goes below a certain level, and by 3 in the morning, when the fire has dropped to coals, the air temperature in the cabin is already falling toward the outside temperature.
The home comfort worked differently. It weighed 300 lb. Most of that thick cast iron. Cast iron has a specific heat capacity of about 0.11 British thermal units per pound per degree Fahrenheit, which sounds small until you do the math. Heat that 300 pound stove from a cold 40° F to its working temperature of 500° F at the surface. And the iron itself has absorbed about 18,900 British thermal units of heat stored in the metal like water stored in a tank.
But more than the stored heat was the radiant heat. This is the part that actually saves you. A hot cast iron surface radiates infrared energy in every direction. That radiation doesn't warm the air. It travels straight through the air at the speed of light and warms the first solid thing it hits.
The walls of the cabin, the floor, the table, the children sleeping in their beds. Norah herself sitting close to the stove in the evening. Her face and hands warmed directly the same way your face warms if you stand outside on a cold day with the sun on it. The air around you might be 30° F. But the radiant energy from the sun hits your skin directly, and you feel warm. You could hold a thermometer in the air of that cabin at 2:00 a.m. with the fire burned down to coals, and it might read 45° F, cold enough that you'd see your breath. But the walls and floor and furniture had been absorbing radiant heat for hours, and they were still releasing it back into the space, and a person under blankets in that cabin was not cold. The thin metal stove would have let the air temperature drop to 20° F and kept dropping. The home comfort held the warmth in the mass of the building itself. Declan and Finn slept through the November storm without waking up cold. Alderman came by on the fourth day when the snow had stopped, and he stopped his horse in the yard and looked at the smoke coming steadily from the chimney. He'd spent the last three nights banking his own fire every few hours, which was the standard management for a thin metal stove. You wake up at 2:00 a.m., add wood, go back to sleep.
Norah had slept straight through, adding wood at bedtime, and at 6:00 a.m. when she woke. He knocked on the door, and she let him in, and he stood in the cabin for a moment. "Warm," he said. She offered him coffee. He told her over the coffee that the neighbors to the east, a family named Bernett, three adults, had a cast iron parlor stove that was running them through wood at about a cord a week in serious cold. At that rate, they'd burn through their four cord supply before March. The home comfort, in the same cold, was burning about a third of a cord per week. This was the other thing about mass and radiant heat. Not only did the heavy stove warm you more effectively, it used less wood to do it. The reason is that a thin stove has to run hot continuously to keep the air warm, while a heavy stove runs at a steadier, more efficient temperature and stops losing so much heat the moment the fire drops. The fire doesn't have to fight as hard. She had enough wood for the winter, barely, but enough. November passed, December came.
The first week of December, 1,886, brought temperatures that the old-timers on the Tongue River had not seen before.
The cattle on the open range were already in trouble. The summer drought had kept the grass short, which meant the animals had gone into winter without their usual layer of fat. The December cold hit them before they were ready. By December 15th, the temperature at night was dropping to 18° F on the flat ground outside the cabin. Norah had a thermometer, a thin glass tube of alcohol that Thomas had bought in Miles City, and she checked it every morning.
The 15th, 18° F. The 18th, 22° F. On December 23rd, she went outside in the gray pre-dawn and held the thermometer up, and it read 27° F. The wind was from the northwest and had been for 4 days.
It came off the Yellowstone brakes with nothing to stop it from the Canadian border down. And it had a sound at that temperature, a dry, sustained sound like paper tearing, but constant, never stopping. The snow was not falling. It was moving horizontally. Old snow picked up off the ground and driven into every surface at face height. You could not open your eyes in it. This was the beginning of what people in Kuster County would later call the Iron Winter.
Ranchers and historians have used several names for what happened between December 1,886 and February 1,887 across the northern plains. The big dieup, the Great Dieup, the winter that ended the open range. The temperature at Glendive, 38 mi northeast of where Norah's cabin stood, was recorded at -35° F before Christmas. Bismar, the nearest weather station with a functioning barometer, recorded -43° F on February 1st and again on February 12th. The cattle died by the tens of thousands. They drifted south before the wind, which is what cattle do in a blizzard. They turn their backs to it and walk until they hit something. On the open range without fences, that something was usually a river or a or a drift fence line. And the cattle piled into these natural barriers and froze standing up. Cowboys from the big outfits rode out to break trails to hay and couldn't make it. The horses couldn't work in the cold, and neither could the men. Riders came back in with frostbitten faces and hands, and some of them didn't come back at all. Gus Alderman lost 22 of his 40 head before January was over. He rode down to Norah's place on the 9th of January, 1887, a Sunday, at about 10 in the morning. The temperature was 19° F, and the wind made it feel worse. He knocked, and she opened the door, and he stepped inside and stood for a moment with his eyes closed. the cold dropping off him, the warmth of the cabin surrounding him, he said without opening his eyes. "Lord Almighty," she gave him coffee. He sat at the table with both hands around the cup, and after a few minutes, the color came back into his face. Declan and Finn were on the floor by the stove playing some game with two sticks and a piece of rope. The cabin was 61° F. Outside it was 19° F. That's an 8 0° difference across 1 ft of warped cottonwood plank, sodbanked base and flower sack chinking.
Alderman looked at the stove for a long time. He'd ridden by this cabin in September when she'd been struggling to keep it tight, and he'd told her the laundry stove wouldn't do it, and he'd thought honestly that she'd either get a real stove somehow, or she'd end up riding into Miles City by October. He'd been genuinely surprised when she came back with the home comfort. He'd been less surprised when she'd made it through November. Now he sat in her cabin in January with his cattle dying and his own place running cold in the nights when the fire dropped, and he was trying to figure out what she had done differently that he hadn't. "I have a problem," he said. His wood pile was lower than he'd planned. He'd expected a hard winter, but not this hard. And he'd taken in his wife's sister and her husband from Glendive in November, two extra people, and the wood was going faster than he'd cut. He had maybe six weeks of supply left. If the winter ran to March, which winters in this part of Montana generally did, he was short.
Norah thought about this. She thought about the math of her own wood pile.
She'd cut 11 face cords over the summer and fall, which was more than she'd thought she'd need because she'd been planning for the laundry stove and had recalculated when the home comfort changed the picture. She had, she estimated, 7 to eight face cords remaining. At her burn rate of roughly a third of a cord per week in serious cold, that was enough for 20 to 24 weeks, which was more than she needed.
She told Alderman he could take three face cords from her pile. He looked at her over the coffee cup. She said it again. He rode home and came back with his two hands, and they moved three cords of wood from her pile to his wagon over the course of the afternoon. When they were done, one of the hands, a young man named Krauss, who had come up from Texas the previous spring and had never seen a Montana winter, stood in the yard, looking at the remaining pile, and then at the cabin. And he said to Nora, "What kind of stove you running in there?" She told him. He squinted at the cabin. "You warm in there?" she said.
"Yes." He shook his head slowly, like something about the arithmetic didn't add up, which was fair, because by the standard experience of that winter, a woman alone in a 12x4 cottonwood shanty with two small boys should not have been warm. The first week of February brought the worst of it. On February 1st, the temperature at dawn was minus31° F on Norah's thermometer, which she had moved inside and was reading through the window rather than going out. The wind had died, this was actually more dangerous in a way than wind, because when the wind dies in a Montana winter that cold, it means a high pressure has locked in over the region, and the temperature is going to stay there or go lower for days. No fronts moving through meant no warming, just cold, the kind of cold that settles into the ground and the walls of buildings and doesn't let go. She kept the fire higher than usual that week, not because she needed to for warmth, but because she was worried about the water reservoir on the right side of the stove, 8 gall of water, and she did not want it to freeze if the fire dropped overnight. She added a log before bed and one at 3:00 a.m. and the reservoir stayed liquid. Outside things were going wrong in ways that were hard to fully account until spring. The Bernett family to the east, had run out of wood on January 28th.
They'd burned their kitchen chairs by February 3rd. Their cast iron parlor stove, a lighter model than the home comfort, about 180 lb, had chilled the cabin enough by the fifth that the water bucket inside near the wall had frozen solid. On February 7th, Bernardet's wife walked the quarter mile to the neighbors, a couple named Reed, who had a better supply, and she walked it in 28 degrees Fahrenheit weather, and came inside with her face white on the nose and cheeks. The frostbite was superficial, but it was a sign of what the open air was doing to anyone who spent more than 10 minutes in it. The reeds took the Bernets in. That put seven people in a cabin built for two.
Norah heard about this from Alderman on February 9th when the temperature had climbed back to minus12 degrees Fahrenheit and people were venturing out again. He came by and told her and she thought about the Bernit children, three of them, ages 4 through 9, and she said nothing for a moment. Then she asked how much wood the reeds had. Alderman said maybe four cords, which at seven people in serious cold would go fast. She thought again about her own pile. Six cords remaining. She could survive the winter on four. She offered two.
Alderman went quiet for a moment. Then he said, "You know, the Bernetts weren't exactly charitable when you dragged that stove in." He let that sit for a second.
Bernett told me in October that you were going to kill those boys trying to winter here on your own. Said you didn't know what you were doing. Norah looked out the window. He said that in October, she said that doesn't do him much good in February. Two of Alderman's hands moved the wood. What finally broke the winter was a shinook in early March. The shinooks are warm, dry winds that drop off the eastern face of the Rockies and can raise the temperature on the Montana plains by 40° F in a matter of hours.
The snow that had been sitting on the bench ground since November began to melt rapidly, and the creeks ran murky with snow melt, and the dead cattle emerged slowly from the drifts where they'd been buried since December. The count was catastrophic.
Montana Territory ranchers had run close to a million head of cattle on the open range before that winter. The losses were between 50 and 90% depending on the operation and the location.
Some outfits that had hay and shelter lost 30%. Outfits on the exposed open range lost nearly everything. Kuster County's tax roles listed 200 active ranchers in 1886.
By 1888, 80 of them were gone. Gus Alderman came down in late March when the mud had firmed enough to ride through and stood in Norah's yard in the March sun, looking at the surviving cattle in the east pasture. She had no cattle, but her horse had made it, and the garden ground was thoring early, and he said that the home comfort had saved her life. She disagreed with the word saved. She said the stove had just meant she didn't have to spend her energy fighting the cold every night. that had left her energy for everything else, the wood, the chinking, the boys, the food. She thought that was more important than the stove by itself. Alderman thought about this and said she might be right. He also told her that he'd talked to the land office in Miles City, and the Hrix homestead, where she'd found the stove, was still technically on its original filing, but the family hadn't been in contact for 8 months, and the claim would likely be abandoned on the rolls in the spring. He mentioned this without particular emphasis, but the implication was clear. The stove was legally hers by any practical measure, and if she ever wanted to file on the Hendricks parcel herself as an additional claim, the quarter section east of her current60 acres, he knew a man at the land office.
She filed in May of 1887.
The additional 160 acres cost her $14 in filing fees, which she had by then because she'd sold a small load of hides from animals she'd found dead on the bench over the winter, not cattle, but antelope and deer that had come down from the hills during the worst cold.
She hadn't gone looking. They'd come to her. Norah Callaway proved up on her original 160 acre claim in the spring of 1,889, 5 years after Thomas's filing. She proved up on the Hrix parcel in 1892.
By 1895 she was running 40 head of cattle of her own, a smaller operation, hayfed and fenced, not the open range gamble that had ruined the big outfits and had two full-time hands in summer.
Declan was 15 that year and could do the work of a grown man. The home comfort range was still in the cabin in 1895.
She had polished it with graphite every fall, replaced one cracked firebox great in 1891 and repaired the water reservoir fitting in 1893. It had run through nine Montana winters by then. Here's what that winter actually teaches, and it's worth being clear about it because the lesson is specific, not general. The reason Norah survived while the Bernets burned their chairs and the reeds were packed seven to a cabin comes down to one piece of physics that the cast iron stove industry understood intuitively, but couldn't have articulated technically in 1886.
Mass stores heat. A 300 pound stove loaded to 500° F surface temperature stores roughly 18,000 900 British thermal units in its own body.
That's almost 6 hours of heating at 3,000 BTU HR, which is a reasonable heat loss rate for a small insulated cabin in serious cold. A four zero pound sheet iron stove stores around 2,500 British thermal units at the same surface temperature less than an hour.
When the fire drops at 2 a.m., the heavy stove is still radiating heat at a meaningful rate. The light stove is already cooling toward room temperature.
The second piece is the difference between radiant and convective heating, which matters more than most people realize. Convection heats. Radiant heats objects and people directly, passing through the air without warming it. A hot cast iron surface radiates infrared in every direction, and that radiation is absorbed by walls, floors, furniture, and the people in the room. When Alderman walked in from 19° Fahrenheit and stood in Norah's cabin with his eyes closed, what he was feeling wasn't just warm air. The walls of that cabin had been absorbing radiant heat for weeks and were themselves a heat source. The floor was warm under his boots. The entire space had thermal mass, not just the stove, but the cabin itself, slowly saturated with warmth from months of radiant heating. This is the same principle that drives passive solar design, masonry heaters, and thermal mass architecture. Today, the object that stores more heat per unit of fire input stays warm longer and more evenly.
You can't fake mass. The third piece is what Norah did to the cabin itself. The sod banking and the chinking and the flower sack lining. And this was as important as the stove, maybe more. The stove generated heat. The insulation kept it in. A home comfort in a drafty shanty with gaps in every wall will still lose heat faster than you can make it. And by January, you're still burning two cords a week instead of a third. The combination was what worked. a stove with enough mass to radiate heat efficiently in a cabin tight enough to hold it. Norah had arrived at both of these things, not through theory, but through a version of engineering that frontier women practiced constantly working backwards from the problem. She needed to stay warm. She couldn't afford to keep a fire burning through the night. That meant she needed a stove that kept working after the fire dropped. She knew from watching Thomas struggle with the laundry stove that mass was the variable that the big stoves held heat and the small ones didn't. She didn't need a physics textbook. She needed the right stove and she needed to get it home. The dragging was the part people talked about.
Alderman told the story at least a dozen times over the following years, how she'd gone out to the Hendricks place alone, found the stove, figured out the rollers and the stoneboat, and come home in the dark with a 300B cast iron range lashed to a borrowed sled. There was something in that image that people in Kusta County kept coming back to because it was exactly the kind of thing that looked impossible until someone actually did it and then it seemed obvious. She was 31 years old that winter. The boys were 7 and five.
She had $4.17 in a tobacco tin and a dead husband and a claim on60 acres of Montana bench land that nobody thought she'd keep. She kept it both parcels.
The home comfort range is the kind of object that once you understand what it was actually doing makes you rethink what survival means. It wasn't a luxury item. It was a heat storage device that happened to look like a stove. Every pound of cast iron in that six burner range was working, absorbing heat when the fire was going, releasing it when the fire was not, radiating it steadily to the walls and floor. and the two small boys on the floor and the woman sitting close to it in the evening going over whatever numbers she had to go over to figure out how to make it to spring.
40 laundry stoves let the cold in at 2 a.m. 300 cast iron ranges kept it out until morning. That's the whole story told in physics. The principle is still correct. Cast iron's specific heat hasn't changed. A masonry heater in a wellinssulated modern home uses the same logic. A large thermal mass fired hot once or twice a day, releasing heat slowly over many hours. The wood stoves that hold heat the longest today are the ones with the thickest walls and the most mass. The physics Nora was working with rolling that stove out of an abandoned soda on fence rail log rollers is the same physics that modern heating engineers spend careers on. She just didn't have time to wait for them to figure it
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