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Allied Products company history timeline

1915

About 1915 Honeywell received its first order for gas controls and asked to adapt the Butz system to the new fuel.

1916

In 1916, Honeywell Heating Specialty Company changed its name to Honeywell Heating Specialties.

1917

In 1917 the company introduced a substantial improvement with the model 55.

1919

1919 - As the money rolled in, he began to look for a place to manufacture his starter and to experiment with other ideas.

1921

At Syracuse, New York, in 1921, Allied Chemical had been the first in the United States to develop commercially the synthetic ammonia process for the fixation of atmospheric nitrogen.

1923

1923 - Vincent broke ground on the first small building of what would soon become a huge manufacturing complex in November.

In 1923 Ben Cyr and H.W. Sweatt, developed the Series 10, it was a low-voltage control circuit, which put everything “back in dead center” if anything failed.

1926

By 1926, there were branch offices in 9 cities, complemented by 15 authorized distributors.

In 1926, W.R. Sweatt oversaw the construction of an eight-story tower, 70,000 annexed to the north end of the structure.

1927

In 1927, Minneapolis Heat Regulator and Honeywell merged.

1928

In 1928 the company changed its name to Signal Oil & Gas.

Allied Products was formed in Michigan in 1928 by the merger of the Victor Peninsular Company, Richard Brothers Die Works and the Indiana Lamp Corporation.

1929

1929 – Vincent Bendix agreed to finance the purchase of two Eastern temples.

Diversification efforts were speeded by a number of acquisitions in a manner somewhat reminiscent of the whirlwind acquisitions of 1929.

1930

In the 1930’s as oil and gas became the new universal fuels, manufacturers of automatic controls sold their wares directly to the furnace manufacturers, dealers and installers.

The Norden Bomb Sight In the early 1930’s a man named Carl Norden invented a revolutionary new bombsight and founded a company in New York for the sole purpose of developing and manufacturing it.

Mark Watkins, a native Russian, managed the office and was able to provide an entry into the Soviet Union during the 1930’s.

Process control systems had been an outgrowth of the Brown’s Division’s business since the 1930’s.

The Soviet Union – One of the earliest international ventures was with the Soviet Union during the 1930’s.

1931

Honeywell has been a presence in New Zealand since 1931.

1932

1932 - A writer for American Magazine interviewed Vincent who showed him a collection, no other company, at the time, could match: a set of 14 volumes that contained the records of the 5,500 patents held by Vincent and his company.

In 1932 the corporation Vincent had founded was one of the foremost manufacturers of automotive and aviation equipment in the world, with 15 plants in this country and abroad.

1933

By the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair, more than 100,000 Chicago homes burning oil for heat and more than 300 retailers were selling oil burners for heating.

1934

The Steel Wheel Corp. car was finished in 1934 and was a show case of advanced automotive features, such as an aerodynamic body design, airscoop hubcaps for brake cooling and a built in ventilation system, some of which are standard equipment on today’s cars.

One of the most significant acquisition occurred in 1934,with the purchase of the Brown Instrument Company.

1936

One was created in London in 1936 and one in Stockholm in 1936.

Tom MacDonald was sent to establish a wholly-owned subsidiary; Honeywell-Brown, Ltd. was established in 1936.

1937

A 1937 -company profile in Fortune magazine pointed out this important fact about Sweatt and his firm.

1939

In May 1939, the company acquired a plant and warehouse in London and began factory operations there while augmenting the staff of its Swedish subsidiary.

In 1939, mathematics professor at Iowa State College, John Vincent Atanesoff graduate student, Clifford Berry, developed a working bench model of a digital computer.

1940

Wilputte Coke Oven Division, a part of Semet-Solvay, evolved from the Wilputte Coke Ovens Corporation, which was acquired by Allied in 1940.

In the late 1940’s, Minneapolis-Honeywell engineers developed a servo-amplifier system for controlling ambient temperature in aircraft cabins.

1941

By 1941 it was clear that Honeywell was going to be a mass-production facility for military instruments and equipment.

By mid-1941, work on defense contracts had grown to the point where the company the company thought it prudent to increase security and offices.

1942

In October 5, 1942, H.W. Sweatt announced the opening of Aero Division.

In 1942 Vincent was named chairman of the board, but only remained for a few months before cut all official ties with the corporation.

The first installation of what became called the C-1 automatic pilot took place at Boeing in a brand new B-17, on New Years Day, 1942.

1944

A. P. Fontaine first joined Bendix in 1944.

By mid-1944, the Minneapolis-Honeywell Aeronautical School had turned out2500 graduates.

1945

1945 - First automated system for airlines reservations.

In the summer of 1945, two employees were invited to participate in an Army tour of German scientific facilities, Willis Gille and Hub Sparrow, who had helped develop the C-1 autopilot, conducted a survey of Nazi flight development.

1946

No more sales could be accepted for 1946 deliveries except in very limited quantities of items in production.

1947

Deactivating many divisions and settling with the cancelled government contracts, withdrawing from the $100 million worth of production facilities, reducing and realigning personnel in 1947.

1948

By 1948 the new field stone laboratory built on the hilltop where “Cedar Court” had stood, was ready for its staff of 150 scientists.

1949

As the automobile industry prospered, Allied also grew, with sales reaching $8 million by 1949.

1950

1950's -- Bendix introduced several new and important products for commercial aviation application, including the Polar Path Compass, which made Arctic Circle flights possible and airborne weather radar, which permitted pilots to avoid storms in flight.

In 1950, the company purchased the Macro Switch Company of Freeport, Illinois.

In the 1950’s, the company management checked out many sources regarding the progress and development of the current computers.

1951

UNIVAC, built in 1951, by Sperry Rand, was sold to the United States Census Bureau.

1952

1952 - First computerized on-line real time data processing system ever used commercially.

Honeywell, repeating UNIVAC’S 1952 performance, used the H-800 to predict the outcome of the national elections on ABC television.

1953

In 1953, acquired the plant of the Louiseville Pulp and Wallboard Mfg.

By 1953, The Honeywell Round would be ready to transform the post-war home.

1954

Mutual Chemical Company of America was acquired in 1954.

1956

In 1956, the anti-submarine Rocket (ASROC) was a prime contract for the Navy, for the development and production of a rocket-assisted anti-submarine weapon with sonar foe detecting targets.

1957

1957 - First on-line teller terminal system for the banking industry.

The Datamatic D-1000 was a vacuum tube system costing $1.5 million, first sold and installed in 1957.

1958

Allied Chemical Canada, Ltd. - Originated in 1958 with the consolidation of five wholly owned Canadian subsidiaries: The Barrett Company Ltd.; Brunner Mond Canada Ltd; National Analine & Chemical Company Ltd; The Nichols Chemical Company Ltd; and Semet-Solvay Ltd.

1959

Prominent in the manufacture of dyes, dye intermediates, food colors, and detergents. Its organic pigments were made in Haledon, New Jersey, at the Harmon Colors plant acquired from the B.F. Goodrich Company in 1959.

1960

Union Sulphur subsequently became the Union Oil and Gas Corporation of Louisiana, which was merged, in 1960, with the Texas Natural Gasoline Corporation to form the Union Texas Natural Gas Corporation.

The name was changed in the 1960's due to mergers with other elements of the present Bunker Ramos Corporation.

By the end of the 1960's, Bendix had spanned the globe with a strong foothold in international business.

As early as 1960, Walter Finke, the president of the Datamatic Division, was predicting the development of a system like the internet.

1961

Thirteen H-800 were installed in the first quarter of 1961 and several companies in Australia purchased the system.

1962

The caprolactam plant operated by the Plastics Division, supplied the Fibers Division with raw materials for its heavy- and medium-denier yarn made at the Chesterfield plant near Columbia, South Carolina, which began production in 1962.

When the AB cafeteria opened in 1962, it was catered by Schraft.

1963

The Fibers Division -- Formed in 1963.

1964

1964 - First production model cathode ray tube data terminal.

1965

In 1965 after 20 years at the head of the company, Malcom Ferguson retired as chairman and president.

In 1965, Honeywell sent its entire board of directors on a tour of the European facilities.

Sherman won the cut, and in 1965 he and his partner, Lloyd Drexler, took over management of the firm.

1966

The Industrial Chemical division -- Was established in 1966, consolidating the former National Aniline, Solvay Process, and General Chemical Division -- Three of the Company's original components.

Honeywell computers were also featured in “Modesty Blaize”, a 1966 movie in which an H-200 selected clothes and accessories for a female spy.

1967

In 1967 Barrett sold its building materials business to Jim Walters of Tampa, Florida and the PVC pipe plant was included.

1968

The Special Chemicals Division - Created in 1968 to provide a better opportunity to develop the diverse marketing techniques required by certain product groups from the Industrial Chemicals Division.

Signal merged with the Garrett Corporation, a Los Angeles-based aerospace company and in 1968 adopted the Signal Companies as its corporate name.

In 1968, a group of protesters calling themselves the “Honeywell Project” regularly staged demonstrations at Honeywell World Headquarters in Minneapolis.

By 1968, the company announced that its international operations accounted for 25% of the company sales.

1969

The move to the Bendix Center was completed in May 1969.

In 1969, the development of the micro computer sparked yet another industry wide revolution.

1970

Blumenthal had been named vice-chairman of the corporation in June 1970 and 6 months later became President and Chief Operating Officer.

The Ring Laser Gyro continued to under go intensive development through the 1970’s.

Public arrangements of the planned merger were made in 1970.

Much of the growth came during Australia’s boom years of the late 1970’s.

1971

NASDAQ became fully operational in earl 1971.

In 1971, the Delta 2500, complete with computer was introduced.

Sales had doubled over the course of the decade to $332 million, but, at $3.1 million, net income was identical to 1971 levels.

1973

Maritime Systems Center experienced rapid growth in the late sixties and reached divisional status in 1973.

During 1973 alone, Allied acquired six agricultural machinery manufacturers: Standard Engineering Co., Kraus Manufacturing and Equipment Co., Industrial Scientific Co., Brewton Iron Works, Inc. and Gin Equipment, Inc.

1975

When the final ruling came in 1975, certain operations of Bendix and Fran, were ordered to be transferred to Facet Enterprises Inc., a wholly new subsidiary, which Bendix would divest within two years.

1976

Bendix divested the business in 1976.

In 1976, former CEO Jim Binger had headed a Honeywell trade mission to Peking, now Beijing.

1979

In January 1979, the United States established diplomatic relations with China after nearly three decades of estrangement.

1980

By the end of the fiscal year 1980, the Corporation had grown to nearly 100 units with 80,000 employees in three major lines of business.

In the 1980’s, Honeywell’s Ring Laser Gyro equipment became the standard on many business jets.

1981

China’s largest control valve factory started production in April 1981.

Dedicated in September 1981, The Advanced Technology Center in Columbus, Maryland was commissioned to develop innovative ideas and technological concepts for Bendix aerospace electronics, automotive and industrial businesses, as well for new ventures in fields such as the biosciences.

In 1981, the purchase of Telamerica Inc. heralded the formation of the Communications Services Division, a Dallas voice and data networking company was also purchased.

In 1981, the year W. R. Sweatt arrived in Minneapolis from Fargo, North Dakota, the directors of Consolidated Temperature Controlling Company organized contributions for the founding of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.

1983

In 1983, President Reagan pledged to increase military spending with a five year $1.8 trillion expansion.

Introduced in 1983, the TDC 3000 represented 3 years of development and 80 million dollars of investment.

1984

In 1984, the Dutch subsidiary marked its 50th Anniversary with this explanation of its origins.

1985

Honeywell marked its 100th Anniversary in 1985 with the celebrations in the United States and abroad.

In 1985, Allied Chemical & Dye Corporation merged with Signal Companies, an automotive and aerospace firm, to form AlliedSignal.

1986

In 1986 Allied sold Bunker Ramo to ADP.

In 1986 sales rose to $420 million, and net income reached a record $15 million.

1987

Honeywell’s new direction was announced in 1987, when Jim Renier wrote that, “a new Honeywell rededicate itself to a century-old heritage: helping people control their world.”

Jim Reiner became CEO in 1987 and summed up the new strategy.

In 1987, the Soviets opened their country to joint venture for the first time.

1989

In 1989, Honeywell sold half of its 50% stake in Yamatake-Honeywell for $407 million.

1990

In September 28, 1990, the spin off, Alliant Techsystems, began operating as an independent company.

A growing fear of crime in the 1990’s has lead to an increase use of security systems.

1991

In 1991, CEO, Larry Bossidy, began bold actions to position the company as a global competitive force.

1993

In 1993, The EXCEL 5000 was introduced in January.

In 1993, the company opened affiliates in Abu Dhabi, China, Oman, Romania, South Africa and the Ukraine.

1994

In 1994, Space and Aviation Control won more than $2 billion in new business, which represented 90% of the opportunities it pursued.

1995

The T8131 programmable thermostat, which cut energy bills by as much as 33%, were provide for all homes built in 1995 by Habitat North America and Europe.

1999

1999 was the year Allied Signal merged with Honeywell.

2003

The above section first appeared: June 2003

The above section first appeared: September 2003

The above section first appeared: November 2003

2004

The above section first appeared: January 2004

2005

The above section first appeared: January 2005

The above section first appeared: September 2005

2006

The above section first appeared: January 2006

The above section first appeared: April 2006

The above section first appeared: June 2006

The above section first appeared: November 2006

2007

The above section first appeared in the H/AREA print Newsletter: April 2007

2008

The above section first appeared in the H/AREA print Newsletter: January 2008

The above section first appeared in the H/AREA print Newsletter: June 2008

2021

"Allied Products Corporation ." International Directory of Company Histories. . Retrieved April 15, 2021 from Encyclopedia.com: https://www.encyclopedia.com/books/politics-and-business-magazines/allied-products-corporation

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1915
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