Oooooh . . . . thanks for those wrought iron sources. Don't do this stuff anymore, but glad to hear it is available somewhere. I learned to make my first forge weld in real wrought iron just before I, ah . . . burnt my first iron. Yeah.
Wrought iron was last produced din the USA about 1960 in Western Pennsylvania. The most "modern" production method started out by pouring molten low carbon steel into a bath of molten slag. Nothing like wrought iron for forging, absolutely nothing.
Now, whether you use low carbon steel or wrought iron, after you forge it some areas will be very coarse grain. Coarse grains ("crystallized" to the eye) are bad, fine grains are good. Just take your finish forged item and reheat it to a modest red color, 1650F if you measure such things, and let it cool in air. This will refine the grain & made a tougher item.
Probably doesn't matter much for soft steel or wrought iron, matters a lot for steel that is to be hardened. I got to be a hero of sorts at Black & Decker circa 1964 by getting them to anneal a forged 6159 steel sheet metal cutting tool bit before hardening it. Hephaestos/Vulcan was with me, the project engineer cut his hand when one of the old bits broke in testing. Heat treated My Way they lasted & lasted. Text Book (1950's -60's anyway) metallurgy that does work. Dunno if any colleges teach real metallurgy anymore.
Geezer Kelly