Clark Equipment Company
Clark Equipment Company was an American designer, manufacturer, and seller of industrial and construction machinery and equipment.
Predecessor | George R. Rich Manufacturing Company |
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Founded | 1916 |
Founder | Eugene B. Clark |
Headquarters | United States |
Parent |
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History
Clark's predecessor was the George R. Rich Manufacturing Company, founded in 1903 in Chicago, Illinois by executives of the Illinois Steel Company.
The company moved to Buchanan, Michigan in 1904 when that city's chamber of commerce advertised a financially sound deal with respect to industrial rent and power supply.
Eugene B. Clark, an Illinois Steel employee at the time, determined that the metallurgy of Rich Manufacturing's principal product, a railroad rail drill named the Celfor Drill, was faulty, and also found fault with both the management and basic operations, which he ultimately corrected after the two parties established him becoming an equal partner.
In 1916 he merged Rich Manufacturing, which by then had been renamed Celfor Tool, and Buchanan Electric Steel Company, an offshoot of the former, and formed Clark Equipment Company, named after Clark.
In 1919 a division called Clark Tructractor Company was formed. This still exists as Clark Material Handling Company.[1]
From the 1920s until the 1960s, Clark made many acquisitions and continued to grow as a company, but in the 1960s and again in the 1980s, many were sold.
In 1935-1936, Clark built a one-of-a-kind aluminum body trolley (a PCC streetcar) that ran in Brooklyn and Queens, New York, until 1956. This trolley is preserved at the Trolley Museum of New York and is listed on the New York State Register of Historic Places.[2]
In 1954, Clark Equipment opened a plant in Valinhos, Brazil, to produce gears and truck transmissions for the South American Market. That plant also produces lifts and construct machinery. The Brazilian plant still was leader for mechanical transmissions until 1995 when was sold to Eaton Corporation.
In 1995, Clark was acquired by Ingersoll Rand.[3]
In 1996, Ingersoll Rand donated two tons of Clark archives to the Berrien County Historical Association, and the Berrien County 1839 Courthouse Museum is now the Clark archives repository.[4]
In 2007, Ingersoll Rand sold Clark Equipment Company to Doosan International of South Korea. The sale included the Construction Equipment Group of Ingersoll Rand. The Construction Equipment Group included Bobcat, Portable Air Compressors, Generators, Light Towers, and Construction Equipment Attachments.
References
- "history". Clark. Archived from the original on 7 January 2017. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
- Paula Ann Mitchell (September 24, 2013). "Kingston-based trolley car gets NY historic designation". Daily Freeman. Retrieved October 3, 2013.
- "Purchase of Clark stock ends buyout". South Bend Tribune. 1995-05-26.
- "The Collections and Archives". The Berrien County Historical Association. Archived from the original on 2008-03-04. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
Bibliography
- Farquhar-Boyle, Allyson S. "Company History: Clark Equipment Company". Answers.com. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
- Rodriguez, Ginger G. "Hoover's Profile: Ingersoll-Rand Company Limited". Answers.com. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
Further reading
- Clark Equipment Company (1953). 1903–1953 First Fifty Years: Clark Equipment Company.
External links
- The World of Clark (promotional film). Produced by Schulze MacLaren Ltd. Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Part 4
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Clark vehicles. |