My paternal
grandfather was Frank Leahy, Chemist, Executive, Investor
and major stockholder of Olin Chemical. We called him “Daddy
Warbucks”.
The history of Olin
Chemical is a case study in the changes US strategic Industries have experienced
and how they evolved. See below.
In 1892, Franklin W.
Olin, a Vermont-born engineer who was educated at Cornell
University, founded the Equitable Powder Company in East Alton, Illinois. A
predecessor of Olin Industries, Equitable Powder supplied blasting powder to
Midwestern coal fields. The powder company soon expanded into small arms
ammunition, and the Western Cartridge Company was formed in 1898.
During the First World
War, Western built a brass mill to supply the great demand for brass for
military cartridges. When the war ended, Western turned to
"tailor-made" brass and other copper alloys to absorb excess
production capacity. Olin Brass continues to produce a wide range of
copper and copper-based alloy sheet, strip, tube and fabricated products.
In 1931, Western
completed its integration into small arms and ammunition with its purchase of
the legendary Winchester Repeating Arms Co., which had been founded in New
Haven, CT, in 1866. Winchester also greatly expanded production during World
War I, but to absorb the excess capacity and pay down debt it made a disastrous
foray into manufacturing and selling hardware goods, from roller skates and
refrigerators to batteries. This failed experiment eventually drove Winchester
into receivership and led to its sale to the Olins and Western Cartridge in
1931. The Olins quickly ended Winchester's foray into the hardware field,
paring it down to its core competencies in arms and ammunition.
Winchester-Western
made major contributions to Allied Forces in World War II by manufacturing 15
billion rounds of ammunition and also developing the U.S. carbine and M-1
rifle. By the end of the war, Winchester-Western employed 62,000 people,
including those at plants operated for the government.
Mathieson Chemical
Corporation had charted an equally impressive path to success since its
founding in 1892. At that time, seven U.S. businessmen formed the Mathieson
Alkali Works of Saltville, VA, where they built a plant to produce soda ash
from local deposits of salt, coal and limestone. Working with them on the
plant's design was a young British
engineer, Thomas Mathieson. His father, Neil Mathieson, an English chemical
manufacturer, sold the U.S. group the rights to a process to produce alkalis in
the U.S.
On July 4, 1895,
Mathieson shipped its first soda ash from Saltville to eastern U.S. glass,
textile and paper industries. A year later, the company began producing the
nation's first commercially available bleaching powder, a chlorine product
derived by the electrolysis of salt brine. On Thanksgiving Day in 1897,
Mathieson started up a plant at Niagara Falls, NY, to produce chlor-alkali
products. That initial plant, just like Olin's current operations in Niagara
Falls, benefited from the Falls' low-cost hydroelectric power. Mathieson's
growing expertise in
chlor-alkali products eventually led to such products as today's HTH swimming
pool and spa sanitizer, one of the leading brands of calcium hypochlorite pool
sanitizers in the world.
In 1909, Mathieson
began the first commercial production of liquefied chlorine,
and in 1923 it built one of the first synthetic ammonia plants. During World
War II, chlorine and other alkali chemicals were used for water purification
and sanitation of military medical equipment in the field. In 1949, Mathieson
began a strategy of expansion into industrial and agricultural chemicals when
it became a producer of sulfuric acid, fertilizers and pesticides. In 1950 it
built a plant in Brandenburg, KY, to process natural gas into organic
chemicals. Also, it added a plant in McIntosh, AL, for chlorine and caustic
soda.
Mathieson continued
its expansion with its acquisition in 1952 of the pharmaceutical firm E.R.
Squibb & Sons. This acquisition was not as far afield as one might think,
for the production of medicines requires much the same exacting skills as the
production of specialty chemicals. Moreover, chlorine is a vital precursor
chemical in 85% of all pharmaceutical products. Squibb also provided Mathieson
with a complete international sales organization and overseas production
plants, expertise that was vital to growing Mathieson's international presence.
Squibb remained a part of the Olin empire until it was spun off in 1968 as a
separate company.
For example, based on its
50 years of experience in cellulose-based products such as explosives, Olin in 1949 entered
the cellophane business. In a related move into cellulose
products, Olin in 1951 acquired the properties of Frost
Lumber Industries of Louisiana and
Arkansas, including
440,000 acres of timberlands. Olin around this time also
acquired Ecusta Paper Corporation in Pisgah Forest, NC,
a leading producer of fine papers for everything from
cigarettes to the Bible.
In 1952, Olin's
interest in powder technology led it to purchase Ramset Fasteners, a producer
of powder-actuated building tools (such as nail guns) and fastening systems. As
a result of these and other initiatives, Olin Industries in the early 1950s was
comprised of businesses in brass and other non-ferrous alloys,
arms and ammunition, explosives, cellophane, fine
papers, construction fastening systems and forest products.
The various Olin
businesses were brought together in 1944 under the new corporate
name of Olin Industries, Inc. With the retirement of
founder Franklin Olin from active management, his sons
John and Spencer went on to guide the company
through a remarkable period of
expansion. Olin's core
products and technologies remained metals and ammunition,
but it periodically expanded into related businesses.
On October 5, 2015,
Olin acquired The Dow Chemical Company’s US chlor
alkali and vinyls, global epoxy and chlorinated organics
businesses.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
No comments:
Post a Comment