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Pages 111-156: Report of Water-Works Committee Page 123: List of bidders, August 9, 1886, including American Water-works Company.
When the firm formed American Water Supply Co. in 1888, the Payson partners added operational responsibilities as well.
New Jersey greatly liberalized their corporation laws in 1889, allowing incorporated companies to stock stock in other corporations.
1890 "Water Works Sold," The St Joseph News-Press, April 25, 1890, Page 1.
1891 American Water Works and Guarantee Company incorporated in Maine, January 7, 1891.
1891 Statement by Corporation Transacting Business in the State of New Jersey, May 6, 1891
1892 Statement by Corporation Transacting Business in the State of New Jersey, June 22, 1892
1894 Statement by Corporation Transacting Business in the State of New Jersey, September 17, 1894
1895 Statement by Corporation Transacting Business in the State of New Jersey, April 30, 1895
1896 Statement by Corporation Transacting Business in the State of New Jersey, May 25, 1896
1897 Statement by Corporation Transacting Business in the State of New Jersey, July 16, 1897
1899 "Joplin Water Works Sold," Salina Herald, April 28, 1899, Page 2.
1899 Statement by Corporation Transacting Business in the State of New Jersey, July 6, 1899
1901 Annual Report by a Domestic Corporation, July 15, 1901.
1901 Moody's Manual of Corporation Securities Page 1063: Miscellaneous Corporations.
1902 Annual Report by a Domestic Corporation, July 27, 1902.
1902 Moody's Manual of Corporation Securities Page 1211: Water Supply Companies.
1903 Annual Report by a Domestic Corporation, July 20, 1903.
1903 Moody's Manual of Corporation Securities Page 1221: Water Supply Companies.
1904 Moody's Manual of Corporation Securities Page 1137: American Water Works & Guarantee Co.
1905 Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities Page 1451: American Water Works & Guarantee Co.
1906 Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities Page 1513: American Water Works & Guarantee Co.
1907 Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities Page 1729: American Water Works & Guarantee Co.
1908 Annual Report by a Domestic Corporation, July 11, 1908.
1909 Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities Page 1267: American Water Works & Guarantee Co.
1910 Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities, June 15, 1910.
1911 Certificate of increase of the capital Stock to $5 million - June 22, 1911
1912 Certificate of Amendment of the certificate of incorporation - Authorizing an increase of Capital Stock - February 17, 1912 Increased to $20 million
1913 Annual Report by a Domestic Corporation, March 14, 1913.
1913 "Kuhn Brothers Well Known Here," The Star Press (Muncie, Indiana), July 8, 1913, Page 12.
1914 Sale of the assets of the American Water Works and Guarantee Company, April 15, 1914
1914 Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities, Volume 2, Part 2.
1915 Moodys Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities.
1916 Electric Power Development in the United States.
1917 Poor's Manual of Public Utilities, May, 1917 Page 1700: American Water Works and Electric Co., Inc.
1918 Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities, July 1, 1918 Page 2118: American Water Works & Electric Co.
1920 Sixth Annual Report of the American Water Works & Electric Company (Incorporated) for the year ending June 30, 1920.
1922 "National Tube Founder, John H. Flagler, Dies," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 9, 1922, Page 8.
1923 Tenth Annual Report of the American Water Works & Electric Company Incorporated for the year ending December 31, 1923.
1925 Twelfth Annual Report of the American Water Works & Electric Company Incorporated for the year ending December 31, 1925.
Accordingly, in June, 1927, the Board recommended a plan to the stockholders under which the Company would be reincorporated in Delaware, which would permit the issuance of preferred stocks bearing a lower dividend rate than was possible under the old Company’s charter.
1930 Seventeenth Annual Report of the American Water Works & Electric Company Incorporated for the year ending December 31, 1930.
1932 Nineteenth Annual Report of the American Water Works & Electric Company Incorporated for the year ending December 31, 1932.
1934 Twenty-First Annual Report of the American Water Works & Electric Company Incorporated for the year ending December 31, 1934.
Among those targeted was the American Water Works & Electric Company, a prime example of the type of company the 1935 law was intended to abolish.
Whereas American Water Works Company's predecessor was broken up by the Public Utilities Act of 1935 because of its size and stranglehold on the market, the younger behemoth followed in the footsteps of its elder.
American Water Works and Guarantee Company was a prime example of the type of multi-layered holding company that the 1935 law was intended to abolish.
1937 Annual Report of the American Water Works & Electric Company Incorporated for the year ending December 31, 1937.
As it was approved in 1937, the plan called for a simple reorganization of the holding company to reduce its layers, and it required the company to divest itself of real estate holdings—development properties—in California.
Pages 51-53: Subsidiary Companies of American Water Works and Electric Company, Incorporated as of December 31, 1938
1940 Consolidated Income Account of Company and Subsidiaries, September 30, 1940.
1941 Consolidated Income Account of Company and Subsidiaries, June 30, 1941.
1942 Annual Report of the American Water Works & Electric Company Incorporated for the year ending December 31, 1942.
1944 Annual Report of the American Water Works & Electric Company Incorporated for the year ending December 31, 1944.
1946 American Communities Company name changed to American Water Works Company Inc, March 19, 1946.
1947 American Water Works and Electric Company, Inc. was liquidated after the water interests had been transferred to the American Water Works Company.
Ware scored a major coup in 1948 when he contracted to build a dam and reservoir on the Occoquan River in Alexandria, Virginia.
The prospects for growth helped to launch in 1948 the young company’s largest project, the building of a dam and reservoir on the Occoquan River, complete with pumping and treatment stations.
350, September 17, 1952, United States District Court, District of Delaware.
In 1961 AWWA founded Water Research Foundation to advance the science of all water to meet the evolving needs of its subscribers and the water sector.
This spurred the court actions, which ended with Ware's loss of the Alexandria system after a protracted legal battle. It was in 1963 that American Water Works and Ware's company, Northeastern Water Company, officially merged into one nationwide utility giant.
1978 Annual Report to the SEC of the American Water Works Company, Inc., December 31, 1978
1981 Annual Report to the SEC of the American Water Works Company, Inc., December 31, 1981
Ware was succeeded as chairman of the company by his son, John H. Ware III, who served the company as chairman until 1984.
In 1984, Gubanich was succeeded as president of the company by James V. LaFrankie as president of the company.
1987 "Company Profile The American Water Works Company," Water Voice of the National Association of Water Companies 28(4):36-40 (Winter, 1987)
By 1989 operating revenues had reached $528 million, with the company having sold more than 211 million gallons of water to 1.5 million customers in the residential, commercial, industrial, and public sectors.
1993: A joint venture with the United Kingdom's Anglian Water Plc forms AmericanAnglian Environmental Technologies.
By 1995 the company's expansion projects were forging ahead to the tune of more than $331 million invested for that year alone and operating revenues at year end were a robust $803 million.
1996: The company's Pennsylvania unit purchases the water holdings of Pennsylvania Gas and Water Company for $409 million, the industry's largest asset acquisition.
1998: The company surpasses the billion dollar mark, with operating revenues of $1.02 billion.
Operating revenues for 1999 surpassed $1.26 billion, while stock performance ranged from a low of $17 to a high of more than $34 per share.
Payson maintained a connection to the company until 1999 when Philadelphia Suburban Water Company acquired it.
2012 American Water Announces Completion of Acquisitions in New York and Sale of Regulated Operations in Ohio, May 1, 2012.
Recognizing the need to provide continuing education for water operators and students to ensure the future workforce, AWWA founded Water Equation in 2015.
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| Company name | Founded date | Revenue | Employee size | Job openings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chesapeake Utilities | 1859 | $670.6M | 1,007 | 166 |
| Middlesex Water | 1897 | $191.9M | 347 | 22 |
| California Water Service | 1926 | $1.0B | 3,000 | 51 |
| DC Water | - | $521.2M | 33 | 153 |
| SouthWest Water | 1925 | $11.0M | 150 | 25 |
| Columbia Gas of Ohio | 1961 | $1.9B | 2,500 | - |
| Louisville Water | 1854 | $294.2M | 200 | 5 |
| Unitil | 1984 | $473.3M | 520 | 16 |
| Georgia Power | 1945 | $23.0B | 8,310 | - |
| AGL Resources | - | $296.3M | 200 | - |
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American Water may also be known as or be related to American Water, American Water Enterprises, LLC, American Water Works, American Water Works Company Inc and American Water Works Company, Inc.