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Bedient Pipe Organ Company, Lincoln, Nebraska [129] Bigelow & Company, American Fork, Utah [130] Buzard Pipe Organ Builders, LLC Champaign, IL (1985–) [131] GM Buck Pipe Organs, [132] Grand Rapids, Michigan; John Brombaugh & Associates, Eugene, Oregon; Dobson Pipe Organ Builders, Lake City, Iowa; E. and G. G. Hook & Hastings, Boston ...
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*Note: this list includes joint-ventures based in Michigan, subsidiaries of Michigan-based companies also located in Michigan, and companies based in Michigan currently owned or controlled by private equity, venture capital, or other similar entities. Below is a separate list of outside companies with a significant presence in Michigan.
Flint, which initially promised to replace pipes by 2020, failed to meet removal deadlines outlined in 2023 order, judge rules […] The post Federal judge finds Flint, Michigan, in contempt over ...
Clayton Mark (June 30, 1858 – July 7, 1936), one of the pioneer makers of steel pipe in the United States, was an industrialist in the Chicago area who founded the Mark Manufacturing Company in 1888, a firm for the fabrication and sale of water-well supplies and Clayton Mark and Company in 1900.
The first hundred miles of pipe began to be laid in September 1930. [9] The pipeline was completed on August 29, 1931, and gas began moving on September 1. [5] It was the first 1,000-mile pipeline built in the United States, [10] and the first high-pressure, thin-walled, electrically-welded, cross-country pipeline. [11]
ANR was founded as the Michigan-Wisconsin Pipe Line Company on July 25, 1945. In 1947, the company received federal approval to build a $52 million, 1,800-mile-long pipeline from Texas to the Detroit-Ann Arbor area and to sections of Wisconsin, Missouri and Iowa. The Michigan-Wisconsin Pipeline began operations on November 1, 1949.
The water cribs in Chicago are structures built to house and protect offshore water intakes used to supply the City of Chicago with drinking water from Lake Michigan. Water is collected and transported through tunnels located close to 200 feet (61 m) beneath the lake, varying in shape from circular to oval, and ranging in diameter from 10 to 20 ...