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In 2007, acquired Taytronics, Inc of St. Peter, MN, [4] and SMC, Inc, of Lexington, KY. [5] In 2008 they acquired Circuit Services Inc of Chicago, IL, and CCSI of Changzhou, China, [6] and ProWorks, Inc of Santa Clara, CA. [7] By 2012, Creation acquired Aisling Sources, Mexicali, Baja California, [6] and ProWorks, Inc of Santa Clara, CA [7]
In 2014, the company opened a new division called Big Ass Light to sell LED fixtures, and started doing business under the name Big Ass Solutions. [6] In 2017, the company shut down its facility on Winchester Road, [7] and Smith sold the company to private equity firm Lindsay Goldberg. The company was re-incorporated in Delaware as Big Ass Fans ...
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Alltech was founded by biochemist Pearse Lyons [2] in 1980 in Lexington, Kentucky. Lyons was born in Dundalk, Ireland and was educated in University College Dublin and the University of Birmingham, England, where he received a PhD in the biochemistry of yeast.
A Fortune 500 developer, manufacturer, and supplier of printing and imaging solutions 5 Lexington-Fayette Urban County: 2,821 Local government 6 Lexmark: 2,154 A Fortune 500 developer, manufacturer, and supplier of printing and imaging solutions 7 Walmart: 2,027 Retailer 8 Baptist Health 1,924 Hospital operator 9 Lexington VA Medical Center: 1,565
In 1996, Lexmark International was prepared to shut their Lexington keyboard factory where they produced Model M buckling-spring keyboards. IBM, their principal customer—and the Model M's original designer and patent holder—had decided to remove the Model M from its product line in favor of cheaper Asian-made rubber-dome keyboards.
Ashland was founded in 1924 as the Ashland Refining Company in Catlettsburg, Kentucky, by Paul G. Blazer. [3]In October 1923, J. Fred Miles of the Swiss Oil Company of Lexington, Kentucky [4] employed Paul G. Blazer and assigned him the task of locating, purchasing and operating a refinery in northeastern Kentucky.
The Eastside Technical Center opened its doors in 1978 under the name Northside Vocational Center. Like most technical centers across the state of Kentucky today, the school was operated and managed by the Kentucky Department of Education. Tom Wilson was the principal of Eastside Technical Center from its opening in 1978 to 1999.