September 30, 1841
- Samuel Slocum of Poughkeepsie, NY, received a patent for "Papering
Pins" ("machine for sticking
pins into paper"; 1839 - formed a company to make what
became known as "Poughkeepsie pins"- one man with two machines could
produce 100,000 pins in 11 hours. John Ireland Howe made the first
practical pin-making machine.
1843 -
Factory safety regulations enacted in Britain.
1847 -
Ten Hours Act shortens factory English work day to ten hours for women
and children.
November 28, 1851
- Hiram W. Hayden, of Waterbury, CT, received a patent for "Making
Brass Kettles")"Machinery for Making Kettles and Articles of Like
Character from Disks of Metal"); brass spinning; disc mounted in a chuck
that rotated at uniform speed; tool pressed against metal, shaped it to
a die.
1855 - Richard Teller Crane founded "R.T. Crane Brass & Bell
Foundry" in Chicago, a 14x24-foot foundry specializing in brass castings;
1936 - Company lists its shares on the New York Stock
Exchange.
1857 -
Wallace Barnes established manufacturing business (small springs, screw
machine products, drop forgings) in Bristol, CT; soon merged with E. L.
Dunbar, re named Dunbar and Barnes; 1866 - Barnes acquired
Dunbar's interests, renamed the Wallace Barnes Company; 1893
- Carlyle Barnes (son) succeeded; 1913 - Fuller Barnes
(grandson) assumed control; 1921 - Barnes-Gibson-Raymond,
Inc. founded in Detroit; 1922 - renamed Associated Spring
Corporation; 1946 - went public; 1951 -
Carlyle F. (Hap) Barnes (great grandson) named general manager;
1953 - sales exceed $50 million; 1962 - springs
used in space suit of astronaut John Glenn in his first orbital flight
of earth; 1969 - springs aboard Apollo 11 flight to moon;
1976 - name changed to Barnes Group Inc.; 1988
- sales exceed $500 million; formed Barnes Aerospace; 2007
- international aerospace and industrial components manufacturing and
distribution company, more than 6,100 employees at more than 60
locations worldwide.
November 30, 1858 - John Landis
Mason, of New York, NY, received a U.S. patent for a "Glass Jar"
("Improvement in Screw-Neck Bottles"); known as the Mason jar (shoulder-seal jar with zinc screw cap, threaded neck which fit with
threads in a metal cap to screw down to the shoulder of the jar and
in this way form a seal); became a common term for the preserved food
jar; 1869 - Top seal above the threads and under a glass
lid was introduced to the jar.
October 6, 1868
- William H. Remington, of Boston, MA, received a patent for
"Electro-Plating with Nickel".
July 13, 1869
- Henry Fairbanks, of St. Johnsbury, VT, received a patent for an
"Improvement in Automatic Grain-Weighing Scales" ("applicable also to
the weighing of analagous material").
May 10, 1870
- Thaddeus Fairbanks, of St. Johnsbury, VT, received a patent for an
"Improvement in Weighing-Scales" ("to facilitate the weighing of
widely-varying quantities with the same machine, without necessitating
any delay for adjustment or change in counterpoise").
September 13, 1870
- Henry Fairbanks, of St. Johnsbury, VT, received a patent for an
"Improvement in Self-Registering Weighing-Scales" ("means whereby the
operation of registering and weighing is mainly automatic, and the
machine may be worked successfully and reliably by very ignorant and
unskilled workmen"); Harvlin Paddock, of
St. Johnsbury, VT, received a patent for an "Improvement in Registering
Weighing-Scales" ("registering the amount of the weight and adding
together the several amounts or the amounts of the surplus over and
above that indicated by a poise in a beam...entirely automatic in its
action"); assigned to himself and Franklin Fairbanks.
February 14, 1871 -
Franklin Fairbanks and Harvlin Paddock, of St. Johnsbury, VT, received a
patent for an "Improvement in Weighing-Scales" ("especially adapted for
use in connection with railroad-track scales, and with scales for the
weighing of loads of coal, ore, ice or other material in which it is
more important to weigh very rapidly, with a close approximation to
accuracy, than to weigh with absolute accuracy at an expenditure of more
time").
1874 -
Factory Act introduced 56-hour week in England.
1874 -
Charles Jeremiah Smith established company in Milwaukee, WI; made parts
for baby carriages, other hardware specialties; 1889 -
entered bicycle industry, introduced concept of forming steel tubing
from sheet metal; 1899 - Arthur Oliver (A. O.) Smith (son)
developed world's first press steel automobile frame; 1903
- began supplying frames to Cadillac (supplier relationship lasted
nearly 90 years); 1904 - incorporated A. O. Smith Company;
1906 - Henry Ford ordered 10,000 steel automobile frames,
prompted company to develop world's first mass production process for
assembling frames; 1910 - North America's largest frame
manufacturer; 1913 - Lloyd Raymond Smith (grandson) became
third generation of family to lead company; 1917 - began
manufacturing bomb casings for war effort (largest bomb maker in United
States by end of WW I); 1921 - unveiled world's first
fully automated automobile frame assembly plant (frame every 8 seconds);
1925 - introduced first arc-welded, high-pressure vessel
used to refine oil; 1933 - introduced single-piece
glass-lined brewery tank; May 25, 1936 - Louis J. Larson,
of Milwaukee, WI, received a patent for a "Method of Fabricating Alloy
Line Pressure Vessels"; glass-lined water heater; assigned to A. O.
Smith Corporation; made hot water affordable convenience for homeowners;
1939 - began mass-producing residential water heaters
(halted during WW II); 1949 - introduced
glass-fused-to-steel silo targeted at dairy, livestock operations;
1959 - established glass fiber division to commercialize
research in use of fiberglass to replace steel; 1968 -
produced 10 millionth residential water heater; 1986 -
acquired Westinghouse small motor division; 1997 -
Automotive Products Company acquired by Tower Automotive = exit from
automotive industry after more than 90 years; world's leading
manufacturer of C-frame subfractional horsepower motors; 1998
- acquired General Electric's domestic compressor motor business, became
North America' leading manufacturer of hermetic motors; 1999
- acquired world-wide electric motor operations of MagneTek (largest
acquisition in its history); 2001 - doubled size of water
heater business through acquisitions.
May 11, 1875 -
Thaddeus Fairbanks, of St. Johnsbury, VT, received a patent for an
"Improvement in Weighing-Scales" ("applies to all forms of scales for
weighing hay, coal, and the like").
September 24, 1878
- Franklin Fairbanks, of St. Johnsbury, VT, received a patent for an
"Improvement in Drop-Lever Weighing-Scales" ("to provide a raising or
dropping mechanism which raise or drop the scale-beam bodily or
uniformly from each end, so as to prevent any injurious movement or wear
of the beam at either of its points of support").
1880 - Ball brothers founded Wooden
Jacket Can Company in Buffalo, NY (became Ball Corporation).
October 1, 1880
- Thomas Edison opened Edison Lamp Works, first electric incandescent
lamp factory in the U.S., in Menlo Park, NJ.
1881 - Glass factory established in small village of Iittala in southern Finland, north of
Helsinki; modern industrial plant; first glassblowers came from Sweden,
later professionals hired from Belgium, Germany; 1920s-1930s
- breakthrough occurred in early years of modernism, functionalism;
among first companies to make transition from creating decorative
settings and dinner sets to progressive Scandinavian design; 2004
- acquired by Iittala’s management and ABN AMRO Capital.
October 1, 1882
- Eugene and Victor Villaume opened Villaume Brothers, box- making
business in 30x30 foot floor space on West Side of St. Paul, MN; made
beer boxes, got first order from Theodore Hamm's brewery; July 3,
1897 - company incorporated; name changed to Villaume Box and
Lumber Company; manufactured paneling, cabinets, custom wood fixtures
for churches, hospitals, schools; 1950s - box division
became largest consumer of native- grown lumber in Minnesota outside of
home construction; 1957 - added new line of pallets,
skids, custom-designed wood packaging; modem roof trusses held together
by metal connector plates (acquired Frame-O-Wood) - sped up
construction, eliminated on-site cutting, reduced errors, minimized
waste; 1990 - J. Nicholas "Nick" Linsmayer
(great-grandson) took charge (130,000 roof trusses per year).
1883 -
John Pitcairn, John B. Ford, Edward and Emory L. Ford (sons) founded
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company in Creighton, PA; first commercially
successful maker of plate glass; 1896 - Fords sold
interest to Pitcairn, left company; 1916 - nation's
largest plate glass manufacturer; 1925 - began
mass-producing sheet glass; 1952 - opened fiber glass
business; 1963 - first U.S. glass manufacturer to use float process;
1968- name changed to PPG Industries; sales exceeded $1
billion; 1985 - Pitcairn heirs sold their remaining stake
to company for $530 million.
1883 -
Edward Drummond Libbey, made partner in New England Glass Company in
1880, took over Wm. Libbey & Son;
1888 - moved company to Toledo, OH; hired Michael Owens as glass
blower; 1892 - name changed to Libbey Glass Company; 1899
- helped finance Owens Bottle Machine Company; 1903 -Owens
Bottle Machine Company formed (Libbey as president, Owens as general
manager); 1916 - Libbey-Owens Glass Company formed; 1930 - merged with Edward Ford Plate Glass Company, formed Libbey-Owens-Ford
Glass Company.
1888 -
Harvey Hubbell opened manufacturing facility in Bridgeport, CT;
April 1, 1890 - received a patent for a "Roll-Paper Holder and
Cutter" ("used in stores to hold rolls of wrapping paper"); universal in
retail stores in early 1900s for use in wrapping goods; August 11,
1896 - received a patent for a "Socket for Incandescent Lamps"
("to provide a practical and inexpensive pull-socket for incandescent
lamps"); electric light bulb socket with on-and-off pull chain;
February 2, 1897 - received a patent for an "Automatic
Tapping-Machine" ("adapted for light rapid tapping and which shall be
constructed as to be capable of tapping a hole to any required depth and
will stop automatically the instant the tap has entered to the
predetermined depth"); August 12, 1898 - received a patent
for a "Machine for Slotting Screws" ("durable, quick-acting, and
thoroughly-practicable machine for slotting the heads of screws");
April 4, 1899 - received a patent for a "Machine for
Threading Screws" ("thread is pressed into the screw-blanks by means of
two externally-threaded rotating dies"; process and machinery for cold
rolled screw threads, reduced rate of material lost in production by
more than 50%; received a patent for a "Machine for Assembling Screws
and Parts" ("putting screws in articles with or without other parts as
washers"); ventured into electrical equipment manufacturing; expanded as
use of electricity expanded; 1905 - incorporated in State
of Connecticut as "Harvey Hubbell, Incorporated; June 17, 1913
- received a patent (#1,064,833) for a "Separable Attachment Plug";
May 4, 1920 - registered "Hubbell" trademark first used
October 1, 1904 (toggle snap-switches); December 17, 1927
- Harvey Hubbell III (26, son) succeeded; 1936 - went public;
February 14, 1956 - registered "Hubbellock" trademark first used
April 24, 1933 (cord connectors and flush receptacles); 1958
- began aggressive acquisition program.
1890 -
Charles and
Alexander Meston founded manufacturer of electric motors and fans in St.
Louis, MO; persuaded Wesley Emerson, a former Union army officer,
judge and lawyer, to be their principal investor; company then named Emerson Electric Manufacturing Co.
September 20, 1892
- Frank Shuman, of Philadelphia, PA, received a patent for a
"Machine for Embedding Wire-Netting in Glass" ("machine for
rolling what I term 'wire-glass' - that is, sheet-glass having embedded
in it wire or wire-gauze"); wire mesh inserted during plate glass
manufacturing process to create a single monolithic glass (useful for
fire safety); December 12, 1893 - received two patents for
a "Process of Manufacturing Wire-Glass".
January 22-25, 1895
- Group of Cincinnati businessmen, largely composed of members of
Cincinnati and Hamilton County Manufacturers Association, convened in
Oddfellows Hall in Cincinnati, OH (583 association and manufacturing
executives from all corners of the U.S. attended); founded National
Association of Manufacturers; Thomas Dolan of Philadelphia chosen as
non-partisan association's first president; January 1896 -
first annual convention held in Chicago; name "National Association of
Manufacturers of the United States of America" and constitution adopted;
objectives: 1) retention and supply of home markets with U.S. products
and extension of foreign trade; 2) development of reciprocal trade
relations between the U.S. and foreign governments; 3) rehabilitation of
the U.S. Merchant Marine; 4) construction of a canal in Central America;
5) improvement and extension of U.S. waterways.
February 26, 1895
- Michael Joseph Owens, of Toledo, OH, received a patent for an
"Apparatus for Blowing Glass"; glass-blowing machine
capable of producing five pieces at a time by placing five molds
surrounding molten glass in front of a blowing pipe; each piece was made
"without seams or roughness" (used in manufacture of
lamp-chimneys and
tumblers); Owens was a co-founder of the glass industry in
Toledo; 1903 - organized Owens Bottle Machine Co. to
capitalize on mechanized glass blowing process; August 2, 1904
- received patent for a "Glass Shaping Machine"; assigned to Toledo
Glass Company; May 10, 1904
- received second patent for a "Method of Blowing Glass"; perfected automatic glass bottle
manufacturing machine; revolution in glass bottle making; November
8, 1904 -received a patent for a "Leer"; automatic glass bottle
manufacturing machine capable of producing four bottles per second;
assigned to Toledo Glass Company;
1929
- Owens Bottle Company acquired assets of licensee Illinois Glass Company,
formed Owens-Illinois Glass Company;
1965 - name
changed to Owens-Illinois, Inc.
February 4, 1896
- Black American inventor, Willie H. Johnson, of Navasota, TX,
received a patent for "A Mechanism for Overcoming Dead Centers";
occur in machines when shaft is driven by a crank; October 1898 -
secured a second patent for an improvement to his design.
November 23, 1897 - Black
American inventor Elbert R. Robinson, of Chicago, IL, received a patent
for an improvement in "Casting Composite or Other Car Wheels"; method in which outer sides
are of one metal and the interior portions are of another metal; enabled
casting a metal of high electrical conductivity (brass) in a groove of
an iron trolley wheel, permitted new construction; 1894 -
previous patent awarded for an "electric railway trolley."
November 11, 1899 - Edward Ford,
former co-founder of Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company in Creighton, PA,
incorporated Edward Ford Plate Glass Company in Rossford, OH;
built largest plate glass manufacturing plant under one roof in country;
1930 - merged with Libbey-Owens Glass Company, formed
Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company.
March 7, 1899
- Irving W. Colburn, of Toledo, OH, received two patents for a
"Glass-Working Machine" ("novel means or apparatus for carrying
into operation a new mechanical method of forming or manufacturing
articles of glass such as have been heretofore been made by blowing");
March 25, 1902
- received a patent for a
"Glass-Working Machine" ("novel means or apparatus for rolling,
pressing, and stretching plastic glass into sheets for the purpose of
manufacturing plate and window glass"); process for fabricating
continuous sheets of flat glass made mass production of glass for
windows possible; 1906 - formed Colburn Machine Glass Co.
(bankrupt in 1911); 1923 - patents acquired by Toledo
Glass Company; November 25, 1913 - first draw of sheet
glass; 1916 - company organized as Libbey-Owens Sheet
Glass Company.
1901 -
Frank A. Poor became partner in
Merritt
Manufacturing
Company
in Middleton, MA that relighted burnt-out light bulbs (cut off glass
tip, replace filament, reseal bulb); 1906 - Novelty
Incandescent Lamp Company (NILCO) founded in Pennsylvania; concentrated
on specialty lamps for medical, budding automotive industries;
1909 - Poor created Hygrade Lamp Company; 1910
- General Motors acquired controlling interest in NILCO,
appointed Bernard G. Erskine to
run factory; 1922 - NILCO
acquired by Bernard Erskine and two associates, created Nilco Lamp
Works; 1924 - Nilco created Sylvania Products Company to
produce radio receiver tubes; 1931 - Hygrade, Nilco
Sylvania merged, formed Hygrade Sylvania Corporation; 1939
- made first
linear, or tubular, fluorescent
lamp
under Sylvania name; 1942
- name changed to Sylvania Electric Products, Inc., debuted "flashing S"
logo; 1959 - merged with General Telephone; 1971
- name changed to GTE
Sylvania, Incorporated; January
1993 - SYLVANIA lighting and precision materials businesses in
North America acquired by OSRAM GmbH.
1903 -
Alexander H. Kerr established home-canning supplies business, called
Hermetic Fruit Jar Company; earliest Kerr Jars made for Kerr, a jobbing
company, by Illinois Pacific Glass Company and Hazel Atlas Company;
January 1970 - company went public; 1975 -
owned, operated seven glass plants in various locations throughout
United States; 27 sales offices; May 1992 - name changed
to Kerr Group Inc. to reflect company's having grown to manufacture more
than just glass containers; 1997 - Fremont Acquisition
Company LLC and Kerr Acquisition Corporation (KAC) completed previously
announced merger, converted into private company.
June 9, 1903
- Ewald Goltstein, of Cologne, Germany, received a patent for a
"Jar-Closure" ("preservation of materials, articles or substances of
food...in packages suitable for transportation and storage, such as
packages or receptacles being preferably of the class which are closed
and hermetically sealed by the vacuum process, in which the air is
exhausted from the interior of the receptacle after it has been filled
and the closure applied and then held solely by the atmospheric pressure
and without any mechanical fastenings"); assigned to Julius A.
Landsberger; June 13, 1903 - Julius A. Landsberger, of
Alameda, CA, received a patent for a "Closure for Receptacles" ("clamp
for holding a cover upon [jars and cans], either temporarily, as during
the operation of the vacuum process of exhausting the receptacle,
permanently after the vacuum process has been completed, or originally
and permanently where the vacuum process is not employed"); both patents
incorporated by Kerr glass into economy jars.
April 17, 1906
- Deutsche Gasglühlicht-Anstalt (also known as Auer-Gesellschaft)
registered OSRAM name inTrademark Directory of Imperial Patent Office in
Berlin; name derived from two materials needed at the time to produce
filaments - initially Osmium and later Wolfram (or tungsten as it is now
more commonly known); July 1, 1919 - OSRAM Werke GmbH
Kommanditgesell- schaft formed (joint lamp production venture of Auer-Gesellschaft,
AEG and Siemens & Halske AG); 1925 - Bilux launched, first
fully developed car headlight lamp that offered both high beam and
dipped beam from single light source; 1978 - Siemens sole
shareholder; February 1993 - OSRAM GmbH acquired Sylvania
from GTE; September 30, 2005 - sales of 4.3 billion euros,
88 percent of which came from outside Germany; 2006 - one
of two leading lighting manufacturers in world.
1913 -
Ashland Manufacturing Company founded to develop innovative ways of
using slaughterhouse by-products of meat packing firm Schwarzchild and Sulzberger (original product line include surgical
sutures, inexpensive tennis racquets, tennis racquet string, two
models of baseball shoes); 1914 - Thomas E. Wilson (former
president of Chicago-based Morris & Co. packinghouse) named president,
company became separate operating subsidiary to focus on sports oriented
products; 1915 - Football jerseys, basketballs and indoor
baseballs are added to the line, and the Star tennis racquet is
advertised at $.75; 1916 - Ashland Manufacturing is
renamed as Thomas E. Wilson Co.; 1918 - $1 million in
sales; 1925 - name changed to Wilson-Western Sporting
Goods Company; 1931 - name changed to Wilson Sporting
Goods Co.; 1967 - Ling-Temco-Vought buys Wilson meat packing, Wilson
Sporting Goods is restructured as a subsidiary of the Dallas-based
aerospace conglomerate; 1970 - acquired by Pepsico;
1975 -tennis sales volume surpasses that of golf sales for first
time; 1989 - acquired by Amer Group Ltd. of Helsinki,
Finland.
1935 -
Corning Glass formed joint venture with Owens-Illinois to produce of
glass fiber; November 1, 1938 - spun off joint venture as
separate company, named Owens-Corning Fiberglas® Corporation; reported
sales of $2.5 million, more than 600 employees.
1938 -
Frederick August Krehbiel founded Molex Products Company in Brookfield,
IL (named for plastic material he developed); manufactured variety of
products (clock cases, flowerpots, valve wheels, salt tablet
dispensers); 1940s - added metal stamping to molding
processes, produced first connector assembly for Hotpoint/GE home
appliances; 1953 - introduced first plug-and-receptacle
connector line; 1960 - introduced first nylon
plug-and-receptacle line; 1967 - established an
international division (2007 - more than two-thirds of annual revenues
from products manufactured, sold outside United States); 2006
- acquired Woodhead Industries, increased presence in factory
automation, other industrial, harsh-environment applications.
October 11, 1938
- Games Slayter, of Newark, OH (vice-president, Research and Development
of newly formed Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation), received a patent
for a "Method and Apparatus for Making Glass Wool" (flexible glass wool
- Fiberglas) and a patent for "Textile Material"; Slayter and John
H. Thomas received patent for "Glass Wool and Method and Apparatus for
Making Same" and another patent for "Glass Fabric"; sought to make a
finer glass fiber material (instead of natural or other synthetic
fibers); assigned patents to Owens-Illinois Glass Co.
June 27, 1939 - Frederick M.
Stone, of Minneapolis, MN, received a patent for a "Ticket
Dispensing Machine" ("of primary utility when employed for the
dispensing of tickets".
December 16, 1982
- The Federal Reserve released a report indicating that the operating
capacity of U.S. factories had plummeted to 67.8 percent, the nation's
lowest mark since the indicator was introduced in 1948.
1988
- Utah State University recognized Dr. Shigeo Shingo, one of world’s
leading experts in improving manufacturing processes (helped create,
write about many aspects of revolutionary manufacturing practices
comprising Toyota Production System) for his lifetime accomplishments
with an Honorary Doctorate in Business; developed Shingo
Prize for Operational Excellence to promote awareness of Lean
manufacturing concepts, recognize companies in United States, Canada,
Mexico that achieve world-class manufacturing status; regarded as
premier manufacturing award recognition program for North America;
intended as "Nobel prize" in business, grounded in lean enterprise
management leading to world-class and globally competitive business;
criteria (practices, techniques that might achieve world-class level of
quality, cost, delivery, business results) organized into 5 sections: 1)
Leadership Culture and Infrastructure; 2) Manufacturing Strategies and
System Integration; 3) Non-Manufacturing Support Functions; 4) Quality,
Cost and Delivery; 5) Customer Satisfaction and Profitability.
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Railway's Works at Swindon, locomotive capital of the west, for 23
years. Great Western Railway Works; Railroad manufacturing; Locomotive
industry--Great Britain. Appalling working conditions
in foundries, blast furnaces, blacksmith's shops, engine sheds which
made up this vast industrial complex.
(J. & E. Hall), Harry Miller (1985).
Halls of Dartford,
1785-1985. (London, UK: Hutchinson Benham, 231 p.). J. & E.
Hall--History; APV Holdings--History; Refrigerator industry--Great
Britain--History; Machinery industry--Great Britain--History;
Manufacturing industries--Great Britain--History.
(Harman International), Sidney Harm an (2003).
Mind Your Own
Business: A Maverick's Guide to Business, Leadership and Life.
(New York, NY: Doubleday, 208 p.). Executive Chairman, Harman
International Industries; U.S. Deputy Secretary of Commerce
(1977-1978). Harman, Sidney, 1918- ; Harman International--History;
Audio equipment industry--United States; Businesspeople--United
States--Biography.
(Hemingray Glass), H.G. "Bea" Hyve (1998).
The Hemingray Glass
Co.: A Most Colorful History. (San Diego, CA: Clarice Gordon, 481
p.). Hemingray Glass Co.--History; Glass trade--United
States--History. Company operated from 1848-1972, then became division
of Owens-Illinois.
(Iittala Group), Eds. Marianne Aav & Eeva Viljanen; translation: John
Arnold (2007).
Iittala: 125 Years of Finnish Glass; Complete History with All Designers.
(Stuttgart, Germany: Arnoldsche, 270 p.). Design Historian, Director of
the Finnish Museum of Art and Design, Helsinki. Iittala Group; Glass;
Design-homeware; Design-Scandinavia. History of
Iittala Group's glass production, role of company in panorama of 20th
century.
(Inglis Limited), David Sobel and Susan Meurer (1994).
Working at Inglis: The Life and Death of a Canadian Factory.
(Toronto, ON: J. Lorimer, 192 p.). Inglis Limited -- Employees --
History; United Steel Workers of America. Local 290 (Toronto, Ont.) --
History; Electric household appliances industry -- Ontario -- Toronto --
Employees -- History.
(Kawneer Company), Thomas Stritch (1956).
The Kawneer Story. (Niles, MI: Kawneer Co, 123 p.). Plym,
Francis John; Kawneer Company.
(Knorr-Bremse-GmbH), Manfred Barthel (1980). Kraft und Sicherheit:
75 Jahre Knorr-Bremse 1905-1980. (Dusseldorf; Germany: Econ, 192
p.). Knorr-Bremse-GmbH; Machinery industry--Germany--History.
(Lannom Manufacturing Company), Neil A. Hamilton (1988).
Visions
of Worth: The Life of G.S. Lannom, Jr., Independent Entrepreneur.
(Solon, IA: Preservation Pub. Co., 242 p.). Lannom, G. S. (George
Sharp), 1885-1953; Lannom Manufacturing Company; Businesspeople--United
States--Biography; Sporting goods industry--United States--History.
(Lever Brothers Ltd.), David Roberts (1995).
Life at Levers: Memories of Making Soaps at Port Sunlight. (Wirral,
UK: Avid, 159 p.). Lever Brothers Ltd. -- History -- Anecdotes; Lever
Brothers -- Employees -- Anecdotes; Soap factories -- England -- Wirral
Peninsula -- History -- Anecdotes; Soaps Production Merseyside
(England).
(Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company), William Earl Aiken (1957).
The Roots Grow Deep; A Story of Captain Ford, His Son Edward and Their
Contribution to America’s Glass Industry, and a Picture of People and
Events That Helped To Build Our Land. (Cleveland, OH:
Lezius-Hiles, 92 p.). Ford, John Baptiste, 1811-1903; Ford, Edward,
1843-1920; Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company; Glass; Rossford
(Ohio)--History. Sponsored by Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company.
(Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company), E. William Fairfield (1960).
Fire & Sand; The History of the Libbey-Owens Sheet Glass Company.
(Cleveland, OH: Lezius-Hiles Co., 128 p.). Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass
Company.
(Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company), Frederick C. Fox (1982). The
Rossford Plant of Libbey-Owens-Ford, 1930-1975. (Toledo, OH: F.C.
Fox, 165 p.). Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company--History; Glass
trade--Ohio--Rossford--History.
(Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company), Quentin R. Skrabec Jr. (2007).
Glass in Northwest Ohio. (Charleston, SC: Arcadia, 127 p.).
Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company--History; Glass
manufacture--Ohio--History; Glass trade--Ohio--History; Glass
manufacture--Ohio--Pictorial works. 1930 - over 85
percent of world’s glass produced on machines of Michael Owens, bestowed
title of "Glass Capital of the World" on northwest Ohio.
(Lincoln Electric), James Finney Lincoln (1946).
Lincoln's Incentive System. (New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 192 p.).
Lincoln Electric Company--History.
(Lincoln Electric), Raymond Moley (1962).
The American Century of John C. Lincoln. (New York, NY: Duell,
Sloan and Pearce, 209 p.). Lincoln, John C.; Lincoln Electric
Company--History.
(Lincoln Electric), Virginia P. Dawson (1999).
Lincoln Electric: A
History. (Cleveland, OH: Lincoln Electric Co., 162 p.). Lincoln
Electric Company--History; Welding equipment industry--Ohio--History.
(Lincoln Electric), Joseph A. Maciariello (2000).
Lasting Value:
Lessons from a Century of Agility at Lincoln Electric. (New York,
NY: Wiley, 240 p.). Horton Professor of Management (Claremont Graduate
University). Lincoln Electric Company--Management; Electric
industries--United States--Management--Case studies.
(Lister R. A.), David E. Evans (1979).
Lister's: The First Hundred Years. (Gloucester, UK: Alan Sutton
Publishing Ltd., 256 p.). Lister -- History.; Gloucestershire Dursley
Mechanical engineering industries; Lister (R.A.) and Company to 1978.
(Longaberger Company), Dave Longaberger with Robert L. Shook (2001).
Longaberger: An American Success Story. (New York, NY:
HarperBusiness, 234 p.). Longaberger, Dave; Longaberger
Company--History; Basket making--Ohio--History; Basket
makers--Ohio--Biography.
(Marmon Group), Jeffrey L. Rodengen (2002).
The Marmon Group: The First Fifty Years. (Ft. Lauderdale, FL:
Write Stuff Enterprises, Inc., 160 p.). Marmon Group--History;
Manufacturing industries--United States--History.
(Carl Miele & Cie.), Marion Steinhart (2000). Carl Miele. (Munchen,
Germany: Ullstein, 158 p.). Miele, Carl, 1869-1938; Zinkann, Reinhard,
1869-1939; Carl Miele & Cie.--History; Manufacturing
industries--Germany--Gu¨tersloh--History; Industrialists--Germany--Gu¨tersloh--Biography.
(Milgard Manufacturing), Russ Banham (204).
The Milgard Story: Building Success Through a Commitment to People.
(Bainbridge Island, WA: Fenwick Publishing Group, Inc.). Milgard
Windows; Manufacturing industries--Washington--History. Milgard Windows
from small beginnings in Tacoma, WA to one of nation's premier
manufacturers.
(Miller Company), Marguerite T. Scheips (1995). The Miller
Company, The First 150 Years: The Story of a Successful American
Business, 1844-1994. (Connecticut: The Company, 175 p.). Miller
Company--History; Manufacturing industries--United states--History.
(Naval Aircraft Factory), William F. Trimble (1990).
Wings for the
Navy: A History of the Naval Aircraft Factory, 1917-1956.
(Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 413 p.). Naval Aircraft Factory
(Philadelphia, Pa.)--History; United States. Navy--Aviation--History.
(Owens-Illinois), Quentin R. Skrabec, Jr. (2006).
Michael Owens and the Glass Industry. (Gretna, LA: Pelican Pub.,
320 p.). Owens, Michael Joseph, 1859-1923; Industrialists--United
States--Biography; Inventors--United States--Biography; Glass
trade--United States--Biography. Nine companies,
49 patents bear his name; became
known as father of project management.
(Phoenix Glass Co.), Jack D. Wilson (1989).
Phoenix & Consolidated
Art Glass, 1926-1980. (Marietta, OH: Antique Publications, 202 p.).
Phoenix Glass Co.--History; Consolidated Lamp and Glass
Company--History; Art glass--Pennsylvania--Monaca--History--20th
century; Art glass--Pennsylvania--Corapolis--History--20th century.
(Pilkington Brothers), T.C. Barker (1977).
The Glassmakers:
Pilkington: The Rise of an International Company, 1826-1976.
(London, UK: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 557 p.). Pilkington Brothers, ltd.
(Pilot Pen Corporation of America), Ron Shaw with Richard Krevolin
and Phil Ehrenkranz (2005).
Pilot Your Life: How To Create the Career You Want.
(Cincinnati, OH: Emmis Books, 240 p.). President and CEO of Pilot Pen
Corporation of America; Professor of Screenwriting (University of
Southern California Cinema/TV School); Former Litigator. Career
development--Handbooks, manuals, etc.; Vocational guidance--Handbooks,
manuals, etc.
(Platt Brothers), Matthew W. Roth (1994).
Platt Brothers and
Company: Small Business in American Manufacturing. (Hanover, CT:
University Press of New England, University of Connecticut, 256 p.).
Platt Brothers and Company--History; Manufactures--United
States--History; Manufacturing industries--United States--History.
(RAYOVAC), Kenneth D. Ruble (1981).
The RAYOVAC Story-- The
First 75 Years. (Madison, WI: RAY-O-VAC, 207 p.). RAYOVAC
(Firm)--History.
(Rolls-Royce), Martin Bennett (1999).
Rolls-Royce and Bentley: The Crewe Years. (Sparkford, UK:
Haynes, 368 p. [2nd ed.]). Rolls-Royce automobile; Rolls-Royce
automobile -- History; Bentley automobile; Bentley automobile --
History.
(Ruston and Hornsby, Ltd.), Bernard Newman (1957).
One Hundred Years of Good Company. (Lincoln, UK: The Company,
280 p.). Ruston and Hornsby, Ltd. Published on the occasion of the
Ruston centenary, 1857-1957.
(Saint-Gobain), Jean Choffel (1960).
Saint-Gobain; du Miroir a L’atome. (Paris, FR: Plon, 145 p.).
Saint-Gobain, s.a.
(Saint-Gobain), Bernard Hartemann, Richard Ducousset et l’equipe
d’Edition speciale (1969). B.S.N. Contre Saint Gobain. (Paris,
FR: Editions et publications premieres, 223 p.). Saint-Gobain, s.a.;
Boussois Souchon Neuvesel, s.a.; Tender offers (Securities)--Case
studies.
(Saint-Gobain), Michel Gabrysiak (1969). Saint-Gobain--B. S. N.,
Comment L’audace Vient au Capitalisme. (Paris, FR: Fayard, 205 p.).
Saint-Gobain, s.a.; Boussois Souchon Neuvesel, s.a.; Tender offers
(Securities)--Case studies.
(Saint-Gobain), Maurice Corbel ; preface de Roger Pascre (1982).
Les "Boulangers" de la Chimie: Chronique de L’usine et des Travailleurs
de Saint-Gobain a Saint-Fons, 1937-1944. (Lyon, FR: Federop: Libr.
Nouvelle, 219 p.). Chemical workers--France--Saint-Fons--History--20th
century; Saint-Gobain, s.a.--History--20th century.
(Saint-Gobain), Roger Martin (1984).
Patron de Droit Divin--.
(Paris, FR: Gallimard, 568 p.). Martin, Roger, 1915-; Saint-Gobain-Pont-a-Mousson
(Firm); Industrialists--France--Biography.
(Saint-Gobain), Maurice Hamon (1988).
Du Soleil a la Terre: Une
Histoire de Saint-Gobain. (Paris, FR: J.-C. Lattes, 211 p.).
Manufacture royale des glaces de France (Saint-Gobain)--History; Saint-Gobain-Pont-a-Mousson
(Firm)--History; Glass manufacture--France--History.
(Saint-Gobain), Bertrand Badre, Philippe Colombet (1990).
Entreprises en Revolution. (Paris, FR: J.-C. Lattes, 287 p.).
Compagnie de Saint-Gobain--History--18th century; Forges de
Dietrich--History--18th century; Manufacture des toiles de Jouy--History--18th
century; Business enterprises--France--History--18th century.
(Saint-Gobain), Maurice Hamon, Dominique Perrin
(1993). Au Coeur du XVIIIe Siecle Industriel: Condition Ouvriere et Tradition Villageoise a Saint-Gobain. (Paris,
FR: Editions P.A.U., 756 p.). Saint-Gobain-Pont-a-Mousson
(Firm)--History; Glass trade--France--Saint-Gobain--History; Glass
manufacture--France--Saint-Gobain--History; Saint-Gobain
(France)--History.
(Saint-Gobain), Horst Moller; unter Mitwirkung von Hildegard Moller
(2001). Saint-Gobain in Deutschland: von 1853 Bis Zur Gegenwart:
Geschichte Eines Europaischen Unternehmens. (Munchen, Germany: Beck,
248 p.). Manufactures des glaces & produits chimiques de Saint-Gobain,
Chauny & Cirey--History; Compagnie de Saint-Gobain--History; Saint-Gobain-Pont-a-Mousson
(Firm)--History.
(Saint-Gobain), Maurice Hamon (2003). Saint-Gobain, Histoire de
Logos: Signes, Symboles & Messages: [elabore a l’occasion de la
presentation de l’exposition sur l’histoire de l’image institutionnelle
a Saint-Gobain, en juin 2003]. (Paris, FR: Somogy; Blois:
Saint-Gobain archives, 111 p.). Saint-Gobain-Pont-a?-Mousson
(Firm)--Exhibitions; Saint-Gobain-Pont-a?-Mousson
(Firm)--History--Exhibitions; Glass manufacture--France--Saint-Gobain--History--Exhibitions;
Glass manufacture--France--Saint-Gobain--Trademarks--Exhibitions;
Advertising--France--Saint-Gobain--Exhibitions.
(Saint-Gobain), Sous la Direction de Maurice Hamon et Caroline
Mathieu (2006). Saint-Gobain, 1665-1937: Une Entreprise Devant
L’histoire. (Paris, FR: Fayard: Musee d’Orsay, 223 p.). Compagnie de
Saint-Gobain--History; Glassware industry--France--History--Exhibitions;
Glass manufacture--France--History--Exhibitions.
(Scaife Company), William T Schoyer (1952).
Scaife Company and the Scaife family, 1802-1952; A History of the
Oldest Manufacturing Company West of the Alleghenies under Five
Generations. (Pittsburgh: The Company, 181 p.). Scaife
Company, Pittsburgh.
(SRC Holdings), Jack Stack and Bo Burlingham (2002).
A Stake in
the Outcome: Building a Culture of Ownership for the Long-Term Success
of Your Business. (New York, NY: Currency, 272 p.). CEO
(Springfield Remanufacturing Corporation). Success in business.
(Taco, Inc.), Robert Mayoh (2003). Wind on the Sail: The Life
and Times of John Hazen White. (Cranston, RI: John and Happy White
Foundation, 96 p.). White, John Hazen, 1913-2001; Taco, Inc.--History;
Businessmen--Rhode Island--Biography.
(Timken), Bettye H. Pruitt (1998).
Timken: From Missouri to
Mars--A Century of Leadership in Manufacturing. (Boston, MA:
Harvard Business School Press, 514 p.). Timken Company--History;
International business enterprises--United States--History; Bearings
industry--United States--History; Machine parts industry--United
States--History; Steel alloy industry--United States--History; Roller
bearings--United States--History.
(Toyota), Satoshi Kamata; translated by Tatsuru Akimoto;
introduction by Ronald Dore (1983).
Japan in the Passing Lane: An Insider’s Account of Life in a Japanese
Auto Factory. (New York, NY: Pantheon Books, 211 p.). Kamata,
Satoshi, 1938- ; Toyota Jido¯sha Ko¯gyo¯ Kabushiki Kaisha; Automobile
industry workers--Japan; Seasonal labor--Japan.
(Toyota), Shigeo Shingo; newly translated by Andrew P. Dillon; with
a foreword by Norman Bodek (1989).
A Study of the Toyota Production System from an Industrial Engineering
Viewpoint. (Cambridge, MA: Productivity Press, 257 p.). Toyota
Jidosha Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha; Production control; Just-in-time
systems (JIT). First book in English on JIT; classic industrial engineering rationale for priority of
process-based over operational improvements in manufacturing; basic mechanisms of Toyota production system,
production as functional network of processes,
operations, mechanism necessary to make JIT possible in any
manufacturing plant.
(Toyota), Yasuhiro Monden (1998).
Toyota Production System: An
Integrated Approach to Just-in-Time. (Norcross, GA: Engineering &
Management Press, 480 p. [3rd ed.]). Toyota Jid¯osha Kabushiki Kaisha;
Automobile industry and trade--Production control--Japan; Just-in-time
systems; Production management--Japan.
(Trinity Industries), Jeffrey L. Rodengen (2000).
The Legend of Trinity Industries. (Fort Lauderdale, FL: Write
Stuff Enterprises, 160 p.). Trinity Industries--History; Manufacturing
industries--United States--History--20th century; Railroad equipment
industry--United States--History--20th century; Tank industry--United
States--History--20th century; Transportation equipment
industry--United States--History--20th century; Concrete products
industry--United States--History--20th century.
(Vauxhall Motors), Richard Hart (2002).
The Vauxhall Story: A Pictorial History of Vauxhall Plant, Cars and
Commercial Vehicles. (Leighton Buzzard, UK: Farnon, 176 p.).
Vauxhall Plant (Luton, England) -- History; Vauxhall Plant (Luton,
England) -- History -- Pictorial works; Vauxhall Motors -- History;
Vauxhall Motors -- History -- Pictorial works; Vauxhall automobile --
History; Vauxhall automobile -- History -- Pictorial works.
(Warwick Manufacturing Group), Andrew Lorenz (2002).
Kumar Bhattacharyya: The Unsung Guru. (London, UK: Random
House Business, 228 p.). Bhattacharyya, Kumar, 1940- ; Warwick
Manufacturing Group; Manufacturing industries--Great Britain; Business
consultants--Great Britain--Biography; College teachers--Great
Britain--Biography.
(Thomas Webb & Sons), H. W. Woodward (1978).
Art, Feat and Mystery: The Story of Thomas Webb & Sons, Glassmakers.
(Stourbridge, UK: Mark + Moody Ltd., 61 p.). Thomas Webb & Sons;
Glassware--England--History--19th century;
Glassware--England--History--20th century.
(Western Electric), Richard Balzer (1976).
Clockwork: Life In and Outside an American Factory. (Garden
City, NY: Doubleday, 333 p.). Western Electric Company; Electric industry
workers--Massachusetts--North Andover; Industrial
sociology--Massachusetts--North Andover.
(Western Electric), Stephen B. Adams, Orville R. Butler (1999).
Manufacturing
the Future: A History of Western Electric. (New York, NY:
Cambridge University Press, 270 p.). Western Electric
Company--History; Telephone supplies industry--United States--History;
Electronic industries--United States--History.
(Wetherill and Brother), Miriam Hussey (1956).
From Merchants to "Colour Men"; Five Generations of Samuel Wetherill’s
White Lead Business. (Philadelphia, PA: University of
Pennsylvania Press, 149 p.). Wetherill and Brother.
(White Furniture), Bill Bamberger, Cathy N. Davidson (1998).
Closing: The Life and Death of an American Factory. (New York, NY:
Norton, 223 p.). Photographer, Professor of English (Duke),
respectively. White Furniture Company; Furniture industry and
trade--United States; Downsizing of organizations--United States--Case
studies; Plant shutdowns--North Carolina--Mebane.
(Whitehall Laboratories), Julia C. Abedian (1995).
Exposing Federal Sponsorship of Job Loss: The Whitehall Plant Closing
Campaign and "Runaway Plant" Reform. (New York, NY: Garland
Pub., 173 p.). Whitehall Laboratories; Plant
shutdowns--Indiana--Elkhart; Pharmaceutical
industry--Indiana--Elkhart--Employees; Pharmaceutical
industry--Employees--Labor unions--Indiana--Elkhart; Industrial
policy--United States; Corporations--Taxation--United States;
Corporations--Taxation--Puerto Rico.
(Whittier, Fuller & Co.), Marjorie G. January, Elmer E. Simmons
(1939).
Ninety Years; The Story of William Parmer Fuller. (San
Francisco, CA: Privately Printed, 144 p.). Fuller, William Parmer,
1827-1890; Fuller, W.P. & Co. (San Francisco). Contributors to this
volume: Marjorie G. January, Elmer E. Simmons, W.P. Fuller, Jr., Mary
Louise O’Brien.
(Whittier, Fuller & Co.), Mary E. Whitney (2000).
Whittier, Fuller & Company. (Hemet, CA: Hemet Area Museum
Association, 82 p.). Fuller, William Parmer, 1827-1890; Whittier,
William F.; Whittier, Fuller & Co.;
Businessmen--California--Sacramento--Biography;
Businessmen--California--San Francisco--Biography; Glass
trade--California--History; Paint industry and
trade--California--History; California--History--1850-1950.
(Williamson Company), George J. Gore (1990).
Williamson: The
Name Endures. (Cincinnati, OH: Williamson Co., 256 p.). Williamson
Company (Cincinnati, Ohio).
(Wiremold Company), Jim H. Smith (2000).
The Wiremold Company: A Century of Solutions. (Lyme, CT:
Greenwich Pub. Group, 160 p.). Wiremold Company; Electric wire and
cable industry--United States--Connecticut.
Frederick H. Abernathy et al. (1999).
A Stitch in Time: Lean
Retailing and the Transformation of Manufacturing--Lessons from the
Apparel and Textile Industries (New York, NY: Oxford University
Press, 368 p.). Clothing trade--United States--Management;
Manufacturing industries--United States--Management--Data processing;
Retail trade--United States--Management.
Margaret Ackrill (1987).
Manufacturing Industry
Since 1870 (Deddington,
Oxford: P. Allan, 250 p.). Manufacturing industries--Great
Britain--History; Industries--Great Britain--History.
Rolf Achilles (1993).
Made in Illinois: A Story of Illinois
Manufacturing. (Chicago, IL: Illinois Manufacturers' Association,
256 p.). Manufacturing industries--Illinois--History;
Industries--Illinois--History. "Published in honor of the Illinois
Manufacturers' Association Centennial."
Solly Angel (2004).
The Tale of the Scale: An Odyssey of Invention. (New York, NY:
Oxford University Press, 304 p.). Angel, Solly; Scales (Weighing
instruments); Inventions; Design, Industrial.
Karen Axelrod, Bruce Brumberg (2006).
Watch It Made in the U.S.A.: A Visitor's Guide to the Best Factory
Tours and Company Museums. (Berkeley, CA: Avalon Travel
Publishing, 400 p. [4th ed.]). Industrial tours.
Experience, firsthand,
products, companies, technology, workers that fuel the economy;
more than 300 ordinary, extraordinary products often
taken for granted.
Gillian Bardsley (2006).
Making Cars at Longbridge: 100 Years in the Life of a Factory.
(Stroud, UK: Tempus, 191 p.). Automobile industry and trade -- England
-- Longbridge -- History -- Pictorial works.
Maxine Berg (1994).
The Age of Manufactures, 1700-1820:
Industry, Innovation and Work in Britain. (New York, NY: Routledge,
304 p. [2nd ed.]). Manufacturing industries--Great
Britain--History--18th century.
Lindy Biggs (1996).
The Rational Factory: Architecture,
Technology, and Work in America's Age of Mass Production.
(Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 202 p.). Plant layout;
Mass production--United States; Production engineering; Industrial
efficiency--United States.
Barry Bluestone and Bennett Harrison (1982).
The
Deindustrialization of America: Plant Closings, Community Abandonment
and the Dismantling of Basic Industry (New York, NY: Basic
Books, 323 p.). Plant shutdowns--United States; Capital
movements--United States; Industries--United States.
David Bowen (1990).
Shaking the Iron Universe: British Industry
in the 1980s. (London, UK: Hodder & Stoughton, 324 p.).
Manufacturing industries--Great Britain--History--20th century;
Industries--Great Britain--History--20th century.
S. N. Broadberry (1997).
The Productivity Race: British
Manufacturing in International Perspective 1850-1990. (New York,
NY: Cambridge University Press, 451 p.). Professor of Economics
(University of Warwick). Industrial productivity--Great
Britain--History--19th century; Industrial productivity--Great
Britain--History--20th century; Industrial productivity--United
States--History--19th century; Industrial productivity--United
States--History--20th century; Industrial
productivity--Germany--History--19th century; Industrial
productivity--Germany--History--20th century; Competition,
International--History.
Brian Carroll (1987).
Australian Made: Success Stories in Australian Manufacturing Since
1937. (Parkville, Vic.: Institution of Production Engineers,
Australian Council, 230 p.). Institution of Production Engineers
(Great Britain). Australian Council--History--20th century;
Manufacturing industries--Australia--History--20th century.
Victor S. Clark; with an introductory note by Henry W. Farnam
(1929).
History of Manufactures in the United States. (New
York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 3 vols.). Manufactures--United States--History;
Industries--United States--History; Manufacturing industries--United
States--History. Contents: [v. 1] 1607-1860.--[v. 2] 1860-1914.
Stephen S. Cohen, John Zysman (1987).
Manufacturing Matters: The
Myth of the Post-Industrial Economy. (New York, NY: Basic Books,
297 p.). Manufacturing industries--United States.
Carolyn C. Cooper (1991).
Shaping Invention: Thomas Blanchard’s Machinery and Patent Management
in Nineteenth-Century America. (New York, NY: Columbia
University Press, 326 p.). Blanchard, Thomas, 1788-1864; Woodworking
machinery--United States--Patents--History--19th century;
Inventors--United States--Biography.
Robin Cooper (1995).
When Lean Enterprises Collide: Competing Through Confrontation.
(Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 379 p.). Costs,
Industrial--Japan--Case studies; Manufacturing
industries--Japan--Costs; Production management--Japan; Cost
control--Japan; Competition--Japan.
Eds. Jefferson Cowie and Joseph Heathcott; foreword by Barry
Bluestone (2003).
Beyond the Ruins: The Meanings of Deindustrialization.
(Ithaca, NY: ILR Press, 372 p.). Deindustrialization--United States;
Plant shutdowns--United States; Industries--United States; Industrial
policy--United States; Working class--United States--Economic
conditions; Globalization--Economic aspects--United States; United
States--Economic conditions--2001- ; United States--Social
conditions--20th century.
Robert W. Crandall (1993).
Manufacturing on the Move. (Washington, DC: Brookings
Institution Press, 111 p.). Manufacturing industries--United States;
Manufacturing industries--Lake States; Industrial productivity--United
States--Regional disparities; United States--Economic
conditions--1981- --Regional disparities.
Rick Delbridge (1998).
Life on the Line in Contemporary
Manufacturing : The Workplace Experience O Lean Production and the
"Japanese" Model. (New York, NY: Oxford University
Press, 232 p.). Industrial Sociology.
Solange de Santis (1999).
Life on the Line: One Woman's Tale of
Work, Sweat and Survival. (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 272 p.). Journalist.
Manufacturing-Labor.
Kathryn Marie Dudley (1994).
The End of the Line: Lost Jobs, New
Lives in Postindustrial America. (Chicago, IL: University of
Chicago Press, 224 p.). Chrysler Corporation, Plant Shutdowns,
Automobile Workers. Plant shutdown in Kenosha, WI.
John H. Dunning (1976).
American Investment in British Manufacturing Industry. (New
York, NY: Arno Press, 365 p. [orig. pub. 1958]). Manufacturing
industries--Great Britain; Investments, American--Great Britain.
ed. Richard Feldman and Michael Betzold (1990). End of the Line:
Autoworkers and the American Dream. (Urbana, IL: University of
Illinois Press, 297 p., Orig. pub. in 1988). Ford Motor Company,
Automobile Industry Workers.
Wayne Flynt (1987).
Mine, Mill & Microchip: A Chronicle of
Alabama Enterprise. (Northridge, CA: Windsor Publications, 376
p.). Industries--Alabama--History; Manufacturing
industries--Alabama--History; Industrial policy--Alabama--History.
Henry Ford in collaboration with Samuel Crowther (1930).
Moving
Forward. (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 310 p.). Machinery in
industry; United States--Industries.
Bill Geist (1994).
Monster Trucks & Hair-in-a-Can: Who Says
America Doesn't Make Anything Anymore? (New York, NY: Putnam, 223
p.). CBS Correspondent. Industries -- United States; Occupations --
United States.
Ed. with an introduction by James H. Gilmore and B. Joseph Pine II
(2000).
Markets of One: Creating Customer-Unique Value through Mass
Customization. (Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 210
p.). Flexible manufacturing systems; Product management; Relationship
marketing.
Amy K. Glasmeier (2000).
Manufacturing Time: Global Competition
in the Watch Industry, 1795-2000. (New York, NY: Guilford Press,
311 p.). Clock and watch industry--History.
Ellsworth S. Grant (1996).
Yankee Dreamers and Doers: The Story of
Connecticut Manufacturing. (Hartford, CT: Connecticut Historical
Society & Fenwick Productions, 358 p. [2nd ed.]).
Industries--Connecticut--History; Manufacturing
industries--Connecticut--History; Connecticut--History--1775-1865.
Norman S.B. Gras (1969). Industrial Evolution. (New York, NY:
A. M. Kelley, 259 p. [orig. pub. 1930]). Professor of Business History
(Harvard Business School). Manufacturing industries--History.
Ben Hamper (1991).
Rivethead: Tales from the Assembly Line.
(New York, NY: Warner Books, 234 p.). Automobile Industry Workers,
Blue Collar Workers, General Motors Corporation.
Alexandra Harney (2008).
The China Price: The True Cost of Chinese Competitive Advantage.
(New York, NY: Penguin Press, 352 p.). Reporter and Editor (Financial
Times). Manufacturing industries--China--Social aspects; Costs,
Industrial--China--Social aspects; China--Commerce--Social aspects.
Intense pricing
pressure from Western companies combines with ubiquitous corruption, lack of transparency to exact unseen,
unconscionable toll
in human misery , environmental damage; outsiders have no idea of
conditions under which goods from China are made.
Robert H. Hayes, Steven C. Wheelwright (1984).
Restoring Our
Competitive Edge: Competing Through Manufacturing. (New York, NY:
Wiley, 427 p.). Manufacturing industries--United States--Management;
Industrial management--United States; Production planning;
Manufacturing processes--Technological innovations; Competition,
International.
Robert H. Hayes, Steven C. Wheelwright, Kim B. Clark (1988).
Dynamic Manufacturing: Creating the Learning Organization. (New
York, NY: Free Press, 429 p.). Manufacturing industries--United
States--Management.
Steven High (2003).
Industrial Sunset: The Making of North America’s Rust Belt, 1969-1984.
(Toronto,ON: University of Toronto Press, 306 p.). Assistant Professor
of History (Nipissing University). Deindustrialization--Lake
States--History; Deindustrialization--Ontario--History; Displaced
workers--Lakes States--Social conditions--20th century; Displaced
workers--Ontario--Social conditions--20th century;
Desindustrialisation--Etats des Grands Lacs (E´tats-Unis)--Histoire;
Desindustrialisation--Ontario--Histoire; Travailleurs
licencies--E´tats des Grands Lacs (Etats-Unis)--Conditions sociales--20e
siecle; Travailleurs licencies--Ontario--Conditions sociales--20e
siecle. Comparative regional analysis of
economic, cultural devastation caused by plant shutdowns in Canada, United States from 1969 to
1984; led to ongoing, ravaging industrial decline of Great
Lakes Region.
Steven High and David W. Lewis (2007).
Corporate Wasteland: The Landscape and Memory of Deindustrialization.
(Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 192 p.). Canada Research Chair
in Public History (Concordia University in Montreal); Photographer.
Deindustrialization--United States; Deindustrialization--Canada; Plant
shutdowns--United States; Plant shutdowns--Canada; Industrial
sites--United States; Industrial sites--Canada; Industrial
buildings--United States; Industrial buildings--Canada.
How ritualized demolition of landmark industrial structures served as
dramatic punctuations between changing eras; focus on Youngstown, OH, where residents,
former steelworkers still live amid reminders of more prosperous
times.
Theodore B. Hodges (1994).
Erastus Hodges, 1781-1847:
Connecticut Manufacturer, Merchant & Entrepreneur. (Kennebunk, ME:
Phoenix Pub., 360 p.). Hodges, Erastus, 1781-1847;
Businesspeople--Connecticut--Torrington--Biography;
Industrialists--Connecticut--Torrington--Biography;
Merchants--Connecticut--Torrington--Biography; Manufacturing
industries--Connecticut--Torrington--History--19th century; Torrington
(Conn.)--Commerce--History--19th century. Published for the National
Association of Watch and Clock Collectors and the Torrington
Historical Society.
Donald R. Hoke (1990).
Ingenious Yankees: The Rise of the
American System of Manufactures in the Private Sector. (New York,
NY: Columbia University Press, 345 p.). Clocks and watches--United
States--History; Axe industry--United States--History; Typewriter
industry--United States--History; Manufacturing processes--United
States--History; Manufactures--United States--History--Case studies;
Manufacturing industries--United States--History--Case studies.
Eric Hopkins (1989).
Birmingham: The First Manufacturing Town in the World, 1760-1840.
(London, UK: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 222 p.).
Industries--England--Birmingham--History.; Birmingham
(England)--Economic conditions; Birmingham (England)--Social
conditions.
David A. Hounshell (1984).
From the American System to Mass
Production, 1800-1932: The Development of Manufacturing Technology in
the United States. (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University
Press, 411 p.). Mass production--United States--History.
Jerry Jasinowski and Robert Hamrin (1995).
Making It in America:
Proven Paths to Success from Fifty Top Companies. (New York, NY:
Simon & Schuster, 350 p.). Success in business--United States--Case
studies; Manufacturing industries--United States--Case studies; Total
quality management--United States--Case studies.
Satoshi Kamata, translated by Tatsuru Akimoto witrh an introduction
by Ronald Dore (1982).
Japan in the Passing Lane: An Insider's
Account of Life in a Japanese Auto Factory. (New York, NY:
Pantheon, 211 p.). Kamata, Satoshi, 1938-; Toyota Jid¯osha K¯ogy¯o
Kabushiki Kaisha; Automobile industry workers--Japan; Seasonal
labor--Japan.
Theodore B. Kinni (1996).
America's Best: IndustryWeek's Guide
to World-Class Manufacturing Plants. (New York, NY: Wiley, 429
p.). Formerly Director of Books for IndustryWeek Magazine.
Manufactures--United States--Case studies.
Edward M. Knod, Richard J. Schonberger (2001).
Operations
Management: Meeting Customers' Demands. (Boston, MA:
McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 714 p. [7th ed.]). Production management.
Samuel Kydd (1966). The History of the Factory Movement.
(New York, NY: A. M. Kelley, 2 vols. [orig. pub. 1857]). Factory
system--Great Britain; Child labor--Great Britain.
Ed. Robert Lewis (2004).
Manufacturing Suburbs: Building Work and Home on the Metropolitan
Fringe. (Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 294 p.).
Associate Professor of Geography (University of Toronto). Suburbs
--United States --History; Suburbs --Canada --History; Manufacturing
industries --United States --History; Manufacturing industries
--Canada --History; Working class --United States --History; Working
class --Canada --History; Urbanization --United States --History;
Urbanization --Canada --History. Development of industrial suburbs in
United States, Canada between 1850 and 1950 - in large part because of
location of manufacturing beyond city limits, building of
housing for workers in those factories.
G. J. R. Linge (1979).
Industrial Awakening: A Geography of
Australian Manufacturing 1788 to 1890. (Norwalk, CT: Australian
National University Press, 845 p.). Manufacturing
industries--Australia--History; Industries--Australia--History.
David or Daniele Linhart (1981). The Assembly Line or L'appel De
La Sirene, Ou, L'accoutumance Au Travail. (Paris: Sycomore, 199
p.). Academic. Assembly Line Job Satisfaction Surveys, Employee
Motivation, Absenteeism. French academician and radical takes job in a
Citroen plant.
John William Lozier (1986). Taunton and Mason: Cotton Machinery
and Locomotive Manufacture in Taunton, Massachusetts, 1811-1861.
(New York, NY: Garland, 549 p.). Mason, William, b. ca. 1808; Cotton
machinery industry--Massachusetts--Taunton--History--19th century;
Locomotive industry--Massachusetts--Taunton--History--19th century;
Taunton (Mass.)--History.
Richard T. Lubben (1988).
Just-in-Time Manufacturing: An
Aggressive Manufacturing Strategy. (New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 246
p.). Manufacturing industries--Management; Manufacturing
industries--Quality control; Manufacturing processes; Competition,
International; Just-in-time systems.
Theodore F. Marburg (1956). Small Business in Brass Fabricating.
(New York, NY: New York University Press, 116 p.). Smith and Griggs
Manufacturing Company, Waterbury, Conn.
Eds. Preston Maynard and Marjorie B. Noyes (2004).
Carriages and
Clocks, Corsets and Locks: The Rise and Fall of an Industrial
City--New Haven, Connecticut. (Hanover, NH: University Press of
New England, 223 p.). Former Executive Director of the New Haven
Preservation Trust; Member of the Board of Directors of the New Haven
Preservation Trust. Industrial archaeology--Connecticut--New Haven;
Historic sites--Connecticut--New Haven; Historic
preservation--Connecticut--New Haven; Industries--Connecticut--New
Haven--History; Manufacturing industries--Connecticut--New
Haven--History; New Haven (Conn.)--Antiquities; New Haven
(Conn.)--History; New Haven (Conn.)--Economic conditions.
Eds. Otto Mayr and Robert C. Post (1981).
Yankee Enterprise, The Rise of the American System of Manufactures: A
Symposium. (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 236
p.). Industries--United States--History--Congresses; Industrial
arts--United States--History--Congresses; Industrial
management--United States--History--Congresses; Interchangeable
mechanisms--Congresses.
Claudio Morrison (2007).
A Russian Factory Enters the Market Economy. (New York, NY:
Routledge, 234 p.). Industrial management -- Russia (Federation) --
Case studies; Industrial relations -- Russia (Federation) -- Case
studies; Free enterprise -- Russia (Federation) -- Case studies.
Experiences of textile enterprise in Russia during the 1990s; post-Soviet management, managerial practices illuminate content,
nature, direction of industrial restructuring in Russian privatized
sector during years of economic transition.
Daniel Nelson (1995).
Managers and Workers: Origins of the
Twentieth-Century Factory System in the United States, 1880-1920.
(Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 250 p.). Factory
system--United States--History; Personnel management--United
States--History; Industrial sociology--United States--History.
Albert W. Niemi, Jr. (1974).
State and Regional Patterns in
American Manufacturing, 1860-1900. (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press,
209 p.). Manufacturing industries--United States--History; Industrial
location--United States--History.
Lawrence A. Peskin (2003).
Manufacturing Revolution: The
Intellectual Origins of Early American Industry. (Baltimore, MD:
Johns Hopkins University Press, p.). Manufacturing industries--United
States--History; Industrialization--United States--History; Industrial
relations--United States--History; Entrepreneurship--United
States--History.
B. Joseph Pine II with a foreword by Stan Davis (1992).
Mass
Customization: The New Frontier in Business Competition. (Boston,
MA: Harvard Business School Press, 333 p.). Technological
innovations--Management; Manufactures--Technological
innovations--Management; Service industries--Technological
innovations--Management; New products--Management; Competition; Mass
production.
Edited with an introduction by Gary P. Pisano and Robert H. Hayes
(1995).
Manufacturing Renaissance. (Boston, MA: Harvard
Business School Press, 346 p.). Manufacturing industries--United
States--Management; Industrial management--United States.
Edited with an introduction by Sidney Pollard (1994).
The Metal
Fabrication and Engineering Industries. (Cambridge, MA: Blackwell
Publishers, 490 p.). Metal trade--Great Britain--History; Metalworking
industries--Great Britain--History; Manufacturing industries--Great
Britain--History; Engineering--Great Britain--History.
Jonathan Prude (1999).
The Coming of Industrial Order: Town and
Factory Life in Rural Massachusetts, 1810-1860. (Amherst, MA:
University of Massachusetts Press, 364 p.).
Industries--Massachusetts--History--19th century.
Joel Rast (1999).
Remaking Chicago: The Political Origins of
Urban Industrial Change. (DeKalb, IL: Northern Illinois University
Press, 201 p.). Manufacturing industries--Illinois--Chigaco--History--20th
century; Urban economics--Case studies; Chicago (Ill.)--Economic
conditions; Chicago (Ill.)--Politics and government--1951-.
Paul E. Rivard (2007).
Made in Maine: From Home and Workshop, to Mill and Factory.
(Charleston, SC: History Press, 160 p.). Former Director of the Maine
State Museum, Former Director of the American Textile History Museum.
Manufacturing industries--Maine. Industrial epoch in forming Maine;
ingenious ways products developed as nature of industry changed (homespun textiles of wool and flax, custom-made pine and mahogany
cabinetry, furnace-fired iron works, redware pottery).
Chaim M. Rosenberg (2007).
Goods for Sale: Products and Advertising in the Massachusetts
Industrial Age. (Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts
Press, 248 p.). Associate Professor of Psychiatry (Boston
University). Manufacturing
industries--Massachusetts--History--19th century.
Massachusetts businesses in Gilded Age: 1865-1920; from fishing, farming economy into
highly urbanized industrial state.
Warren Candler Scoville (1948).
Revolution in Glassmaking;
Entrepreneurship and Technological Change in the American Industry,
1880-1920. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Univ. Press, 398 p.). Glass
manufacture--United States.
Philip Scranton (1997).
Endless Novelty: Specialty Production
and American Industrialization, 1865-1925. (Princeton, NJ: