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Chicago Lock Co was located on the northside of Chicago, from 1920 until 1964, at Racine and Clyborn avenues. In 1964, the company relocated to the northwest side of the city at Belmont and Lowell avenues. In 1995, the company again relocated this time to Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin. The company was family owned and operated for 80 years.
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A tubular lock and key. A tubular pin tumbler lock, also known as a circle pin tumbler lock, radial lock, or the trademark Ace lock popularized by manufacturer Chicago Lock Company since 1933, is a variety of pin tumbler lock in which a number of pins are arranged in a circular pattern, and the corresponding key is tubular or cylindrical in shape.
A.J. Canfield Company (Chicago) Argus Brewery (Chicago) Baderbräu (Chicago) Suntory Global Spirits (Chicago) [17] Culligan ; Goose Island Brewery (Chicago) Half Acre Beer Company (Chicago) Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea (Chicago) Koval Distillery (Chicago) Metropolis Coffee Company (Chicago) Metropolitan Brewing (Chicago) MillerCoors (Chicago)
General Superintendent [2] for Chicago Safe & Lock [16] in Chicago, IL General Superintendent for Damon Safe & Iron Works [9] in Boston, MA and Philadelphia, PA Co-Owner / Bank Vault Engineer at Hoyer & Holmes, [17] a Partnership with Isaiah W. Hoyer in Philadelphia, PA Owner / Bank Vault Engineer at Frederick. S. Holmes, a private practice in ...
The family left Mosler, Bahmann & Company to start the Mosler Safe & Lock Company. Both companies remained in Cincinnati until the 1890s. When Mosler Safe & Lock Co. outgrew its original factory in 1891, it relocated to Hamilton, where it remained until its bankruptcy. Mosler, Bahmann & Company remained in business until around 1898. [1]
The situation was exacerbated by company employees receiving 50 percent discounts on their tickets. Halas elected to move a game against the Chicago Cardinals to Cubs Park in Chicago to alleviate monetary stress. [25] Nevertheless, A. E. Staley's funding continued to drain, and the company ended the 1920 season having lost $14,406.36.
The Universal Fastener Company started out in Chicago and then moved to Elyria, Ohio. It then moved to Catasauqua, Pennsylvania, and then to Hoboken, New Jersey. The name changed eventually to Automatic Hook and Eye Company. [12] Judson's "clasp-locker" met with little commercial success at first.