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by jaclaz 1668 days ago
Only as a side note/curiosity, possibly one of the most valued sets of cutlery Napoleon III owned was an aluminium one:

https://history.stackexchange.com/questions/51115/did-napole...

Anyway until the late second half of the 1800's, it was considered as valuable as gold, if not more (article in French):

https://journals.openedition.org/archeosciences/560

2 comments

Until exceptionally abundant electricity and the Hall-Heroult process, a french guy whose name I forgot discovered you could burn bauxite under a vacuum with elemental sodium. Which meant it was like a twenty step process that burned off other really expensive difficult materials to make.

Wild stuff.

In the same vein, the Washington Monument is topped with an aluminum pyramid. This material was selected because at the time of construction aluminum was still considered nifty and new.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Monument#Aluminum_a...