My Account | shopping basketMy Basket | Wish List | Advanced Search | Login
Home | Register | Join As A Seller | Resources | About Us | Help

categories
 Advertising
 Architectural/Garden
 Art
 Auction Catalogs
 Books
 Clocks
 Decorative Arts
 Furniture
 Glass
 Jewelry
 Lighting Devices
 Photography
 Porcelain-Pottery
 Prints
 Scientific-Medical
 Silver/Silverware
 Textiles-Sewing
 Watches

 More Categories »



   

Cleveland Graphite Bronze Company

Email Dealer
View Dealers Other Items
Add To Wish List
Email Item To A Friend

Get an email when more items like this one arrives.
Manage Alerts | Help

Antiques > Scripophily


Dealer: Scripophily
Contact: Bob Kerstein - Email Dealer
Add Item To Basket
Continue Shopping
Price: $29.95 USD  - Currency Converter

Shipping inside United States: $5.00
Shipping outside United States: $11.00

Description: Beautifully engraved certificate from the Cleveland Graphite Bronze Company issued in 1937-1950. This historic document was printed by the American Banknote Company and has an ornate border around it with a vignette of two allegorical women by a globe. This item has the printed signatures of the Company’s President and Secretary and is over 52 years old.
Certificate Vignette In the first third of the 20th century, the businesses under the Gould and Chase-Shawmut banners grew steadily, while the company that was to launch the Foil Division was formed. 1910—Gould's Foil Division has its origin in a company that began business as the Dann Spring Insert Company. It offered a patented tubular steel insert for automotive bearings. The company that would become the nation's leading maker of bearings and bushings changed its name in 1919 to the Cleveland Graphite Bronze Company. 1919—In Cleveland, Ohio, Charles Brush, Jr., formed a small research company with the objective of improving phonographic record sound through piezolelectric crystals. His death in 1927 prevented him from witnessing laboratory production of clear crystals and their perfection in products such as phonograph pick-ups, microphones and headphones. 1920—Chase-Shawmut became a stand alone entity as a result of a government anti-trust action against Stone & Webster. A period of vigorous growth followed, fueled by new products such as plug fuses, one-time fuses, time delay fuses, renewable fuses and floodlights. I-T-E, meanwhile, was expanding its product line to include switches, porcelain insulators and fuses to its product line, in addition to its mainstay circuit breaker product. 1930—National Battery Company, an outgrowth of Electrical Manufacturing Company, acquired the Gould business. At that time, National Battery was providing batteries for a number of leading national retailers, including Montgomery Ward, Western Auto, Goodrich and Goodyear. 1930—Partners in Brush Labs formed the Brush Development Company to bring to commercial fruition the laboratory's successes. The Great Depression, World War II, and the post-war boom saw an acceleration of progress among the businesses that were eventually unified as the Gould of today. 1936—Brush developed a high frequency, direct writing pen recorder system, which marked the beginning of the company's dominance in the physical test and measurement market. The discovery led to development of the surface analyzer and, in the 1940s, the oscillograph. 1942—Brush's technological leadership extended to military applications with the development of the MK-30 torpedo. The MK series became the U.S. Navy's primary underwater defense system for the next several decades. 1950—National Battery Company was renamed Gould-National Batteries, Inc., a name change that grew out of the desire of Albert H. Dagget, Shields' successor, to build the company's industrial battery business based on the Gould name and experience. Gould-National Batteries pioneered work in sealed-cell nickel cadmium batteries, helping to create a market for rechargeable appliances. 1950—The 101 Amp-trap fuse was introduced to protect another emerging technology, solid state semiconductor devices. 1952—Brush Development Company and Brush Labs merged, and later that year, the new entity merged with Cleveland Graphite Bronze Company, the world's largest manufacturer of sleeve bearings and bushings. Shortly after the merger, the company which united expertise in both metallurgy and electronics was renamed Clevite. 1953—The Chase-Shawmut and I-T-E paths converged when I-T-E Circuit Breaker Company acquired Chase-Shawmut. 1957—Cleveite launched a business that was to evolve into today's Foil Division. Clevite perfected a means of making foil without lead, and quickly emerged as the leading foil supplier to the fledgling printed circuit board industry. This period saw the convergence of Gould, I-T-E and Clevite, the forerunners of today's fiber optics, circuit protection and foil businesses, respectively. 1969—Gould National Battery acquired Clevite and the resulting combination was renamed Gould Inc. The company had sales of some $342 million. 1976—Gould acquired I-T-E, with $500 million in sales, which propelled Gould to $1.2 billion in revenues. In the years just prior to the merger, I-T-E had developed a host of new products including specialized fuses for the new breed of rapid transit trains and an impregnated fiberglass fuse body material called Supr-Tube. Late 1970s and early 1980s—Gould accelerated its efforts to become totally focused on electrical and electronics products. While many of these efforts involved acquisitions and divestitures, the company also attempted to develop new businesses through R&D. 1978—A group was formed which manufactured towed array sonar systems for the U.S. Navy. Early successes included development of a practical fused biconical taper (FBT). Shortly thereafter, Gould invented the fiber optic wavelength division multiplexer (WDM). 1983—Single mode fiber was being utilized in telecommunications and Gould began manufacturing components in the laboratory to address those needs. A year later (1984), the company decided to begin commercial manufacturing, and by 1985, the operation was housed within The Ocean Systems Division in Glen Burnie, Maryland. 1984—In its effort to achieve more of a high-tech focus, Gould divested the remnants of the original Gould National Batteries, then known as GNB Batteries. Shortly thereafter, however, the genesis of a more modern battery business occurred. Within the Gould Technology Group, research began on primary lithium batteries, and commercial production of "A" lithium batteries began. 1985—Gould's Fiber Optics business became a stand-alone division. 1986—The Fiber Optics Division was awarded a patent for its 2 x 2 coupler an
Status: For Sale Reference#: clevgrapbron
Condition: See Description Year: See Description


Dealer Policies: Scripophily Policy Details

Dealer Accepts: AmExMasterCardVisaPersonal CheckMoney OrderWire TransferPaypal



   





Home | Find a Dealer/Mall | Resources | Join | About Us | Contact Us | Help/FAQs
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

© 1996-2009 GoAntiques, Inc. All Rights & Media Reserved.