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Clermont Steel Fabricators is situated in Batavia across Old State Route 32 from the former Ford Batavia Transmission plant which closed in 2008. [7] [8] Its main building has 152,000 square feet (14,100 m 2) of production space, and there is 76,500 square feet (7,110 m 2) of outdoor storage space surrounding it.
Ohio State University* Education: 29,685 The State of Ohio* Government: 22,030 ... Manufacturing: 7,400 Franklin County* Government: 6,048 Nationwide Children's Hospital*
On May 19, 1948, SEC official Anthon H. Lund accused Pressman of interfering in a lawsuit filed against the Kaiser-Frazer car manufacturing company in a Federal District Court in New York City. He specified that between February 3 and 9, 1948, Ruttenberg of Portsmouth Steel Corporation had contacted Pressman for advice on "how to go about ...
Defunct newspapers published in Ohio (2 C, 23 P) Pages in category "Defunct companies based in Ohio" The following 63 pages are in this category, out of 63 total.
In 1946, Belden acquired the plants of the Finzer Brothers Company in Sugarcreek, OH in Tuscarawas County, OH. [6] The company's sixth plant was built in Sugarcreek, OH in 1957. [7] In 1968, Plant 8 was built in Sugarcreek, OH and was the largest brick plant ever built under one roof. [7]
Owens Quarry, a limestone quarry and crusher plant near Marion, Ohio, around which the community of Owens, Ohio grew. Ridgeway Site, in Hardin County, Ohio, a former archaeological site which, during excavation of its gravel, yielded numerous artifacts and buried bodies of the Glacial Kame culture, for which it is the type site.
Galion Allsteel continued manufacturing a variety of aftermarket truck equipment throughout the 20th century. In 1950, Galion negotiated a marketing deal with All American Toy Co. who began production of "Rocky" the toy dump truck, which prominently displayed Galion logos on its sides. [3]
Mullins of Salem, Ohio, was the most well-known American zinc ornament producer in the late nineteenth century. The foundry was in Salem, Ohio and was one of many American companies in the 1880s that through their catalogs sold ornaments nationwide, such as “urns, eagles, civic ornaments, architectural details, and even cigar store Indians.”