Republic Stamping and Enameling: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Betty Rettick.jpg|thumb|Betty Rettick at work in the Republic Stamping and Enameling Plant, Canton, Ohio, Circa 1945. ]]The company was unusual in that it gave employees a Christmas bonus of life insurance equal to their annual salary.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://eu.the-review.com/picture-gallery/news/2020/08/23/photos-long-gone-stark-county-companies/42278819/ |website=eu.the-review.com |date=23 August 2020 |access-date=5 November 2021|title=Photos: Long gone Stark County companies}}</ref>
[[File:Betty Rettick.jpg|thumb|Betty Rettick at work in the Republic Stamping and Enameling Plant, Canton, Ohio, Circa 1945. ]]The company was unusual in that it gave employees a Christmas bonus of life insurance equal to their annual salary.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://eu.the-review.com/picture-gallery/news/2020/08/23/photos-long-gone-stark-county-companies/42278819/ |website=eu.the-review.com |date=23 August 2020 |access-date=5 November 2021|title=Photos: Long gone Stark County companies}}</ref>


Labor relations were generally congenial, although there was a brief wildcat strike in 1933<ref>{{cite news |title=Republic Stamping Closed by Walkout |agency=The (Canton) Evening Repository |date=November 16, 1933}}</ref> and a walkout in 1941.<ref>{{cite news |title=Republic Stamping Workers on Strike |publisher=The Repository |date=May 26, 1941}}</ref> Republic was represented by the American Federation of Labor’s Council of Fabricated Metal, DAiry Gasoline Utensil & Enamel Workers local of the American Federation of Labor until the United Steelworkers of America became the representative after the company was sold.
Labor relations were generally congenial, although there was a brief wildcat strike in 1933<ref>{{cite news |title=Republic Stamping Closed by Walkout |agency=The (Canton) Evening Repository |date=November 16, 1933}}</ref> and a walkout in 1941.<ref>{{cite news |title=Republic Stamping Workers on Strike |publisher=The Repository |date=May 26, 1941}}</ref> Republic was represented by the American Federation of Labor’s Council of Fabricated Metal, Dairy Gasoline Utensil & Enamel Workers local of the American Federation of Labor until the United Steelworkers of America became the representative after the company was sold.


During the Second World War, Republic converted to war production and produced canteens, powder cartridges and other items. In 1944, Republic received the Army-Navy “E” award for excellence in the production of war materials.<ref>{{cite news |title=Army-Navy "E" Flies at Republic Stamping Plant |publisher=The Repository |date=September 8, 1944}}</ref>
During the Second World War, Republic converted to war production and produced canteens, powder cartridges and other items. In 1944, Republic received the Army-Navy “E” award for excellence in the production of war materials.<ref>{{cite news |title=Army-Navy "E" Flies at Republic Stamping Plant |publisher=The Repository |date=September 8, 1944}}</ref>
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Life in the Republic Stamping plant during the mid-1940s is captured in an extensive photo album created by employee Charles Doyne Reese. The 1,400 photos show workers doing their daily tasks plus special events like Christmas parties and the annual summer picnic at Myers Lake.<ref name=Bostos />
Life in the Republic Stamping plant during the mid-1940s is captured in an extensive photo album created by employee Charles Doyne Reese. The 1,400 photos show workers doing their daily tasks plus special events like Christmas parties and the annual summer picnic at Myers Lake.<ref name=Bostos />
[[File:Charles Doyne Reese (l) and Bob Richmond.jpg|thumb|File:Charles Doyne Reese (l) and Bob Richmond at the Republic Stamping and Enameling Plant, circa 1945]]
[[File:Charles Doyne Reese (l) and Bob Richmond.jpg|thumb|File:Charles Doyne Reese (l) and Bob Richmond at the Republic Stamping and Enameling Plant, circa 1945]]
The album is now part of the William McKinley Presidential Library and Museum and is scheduled to be part of a featured exhibit in 2022. The museum is seeing to contact the families of Republic Stamping workers to gather oral histories and potential artifacts for the exhibit.<ref>{{cite web |title=The William McKinley Presidential Library & Museum is acquiring a unique piece of Canton history – and we need your help to tell the story! |url=https://mckinleymuseum.org/exhibits/republic-stamping-and-enameling-oral-history-project/ |website=William McKinley Presidential Library and Museum |date=3 February 2021 |access-date=August 28, 2021}}</ref>
The album is now part of the William McKinley Presidential Library and Museum.<ref>{{cite web |title=The William McKinley Presidential Library & Museum is acquiring a unique piece of Canton history – and we need your help to tell the story! |url=https://mckinleymuseum.org/exhibits/republic-stamping-and-enameling-oral-history-project/ |website=William McKinley Presidential Library and Museum |date=3 February 2021 |access-date=August 28, 2021}}</ref>
[[File:Mary Cugino at the Republic Stamping and Enameling Plant.jpg|thumb|Mary Cugino at the Republic Stamping and Enameling Plant, Circa 1945]]
[[File:Mary Cugino at the Republic Stamping and Enameling Plant.jpg|thumb|Mary Cugino at the Republic Stamping and Enameling Plant, Circa 1945]]



Revision as of 20:12, 5 November 2021

Republic Stamping and Enameling was an enamelware manufacturing company located in Canton, Ohio. It operated from 1907 until 1952 when it was purchased by Ecko Products of Chicago. The company was founded by a group of investors led by Henry C. Milligan (1853-1940), an inventor who held several patents for improvements in enamelware manufacturing.[1]

Founder

Milligan, a New Jersey native who had worked in a variety of metalworking factories, founded the company after working at the Carnahan Stamping & Enameling Co. in Canton, which he had helped found.[2] The Republic Enameling Plant initially employed 300 people at a new facility along a rail line at Harrison Ave S.W. and Navarre Road. The company was an immediate success[3] and several real estate developments were launched in the area to house workers, many of whom were European immigrants or had relocated from rural areas.

History

By the 1920s - boosted by tariffs that blunted competition from European manufacturers - the company was shipping daily 160,000 pots, pans and other affordable kitchen utensils throughout the country.[4] The company was headquartered on the seventh floor of the new First National Bank Building in downtown Canton, which opened in 1924.

From the beginning, Republic Stamping employed many women, especially in the dipping department where pans were coated in liquid enamel, a task considered best suited to female manual dexterity.[5]

Betty Rettick at work in the Republic Stamping and Enameling Plant, Canton, Ohio, Circa 1945.

The company was unusual in that it gave employees a Christmas bonus of life insurance equal to their annual salary.[6]

Labor relations were generally congenial, although there was a brief wildcat strike in 1933[7] and a walkout in 1941.[8] Republic was represented by the American Federation of Labor’s Council of Fabricated Metal, Dairy Gasoline Utensil & Enamel Workers local of the American Federation of Labor until the United Steelworkers of America became the representative after the company was sold.

During the Second World War, Republic converted to war production and produced canteens, powder cartridges and other items. In 1944, Republic received the Army-Navy “E” award for excellence in the production of war materials.[9] Throughout its history, the company had expanded into many product lines ranging from Christmas tree holders to aluminum boxes used to haul bulk products at grocery stores.[10]

But with consumer tastes and new materials capturing the houseware market, Ecko Products Inc. bought out Republic Stamping owners and the 400,000-square foot facility in May, 1952. A few months later Ecko transferred the manufacturing of Ovenex tinware to the Canton plant and dropped enamel production.[11] The plant closed in 1959 with the transfer of housewares production to a sister facility in Massillon.[12] The Canton plant would reopen in 1961.[13] Ecko ceased operations at the Republic site in 1986. The building still stands.[4]

Photo Album

Life in the Republic Stamping plant during the mid-1940s is captured in an extensive photo album created by employee Charles Doyne Reese. The 1,400 photos show workers doing their daily tasks plus special events like Christmas parties and the annual summer picnic at Myers Lake.[4]

File:Charles Doyne Reese (l) and Bob Richmond at the Republic Stamping and Enameling Plant, circa 1945

The album is now part of the William McKinley Presidential Library and Museum.[14]

Mary Cugino at the Republic Stamping and Enameling Plant, Circa 1945

References

  1. ^ "Canton Evening Repository". August 12, 1906.
  2. ^ Lehman, J. H. (1916). A Standard History of Stark County, Ohio. Chicago: Lewis Pub. Co.
  3. ^ "Record Outputs are Expected". The (Canton) Evening Repository. December 22, 1907.
  4. ^ a b c Bostos, Tim (October 26, 2020). "Photo mystery solved: 1,400-image album documents life at Republic Stamping and Enameling". The Canton Repository. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  5. ^ "Girls Wanted (ad)". The (Canton) Evening Repository. February 14, 1917.
  6. ^ "Photos: Long gone Stark County companies". eu.the-review.com. 23 August 2020. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  7. ^ "Republic Stamping Closed by Walkout". The (Canton) Evening Repository. November 16, 1933.
  8. ^ "Republic Stamping Workers on Strike". The Repository. May 26, 1941.
  9. ^ "Army-Navy "E" Flies at Republic Stamping Plant". The Repository. September 8, 1944.
  10. ^ "New Lunch Carrier to Replace Old Dinner Pail Produced Here". The Repository. March 6, 1949.
  11. ^ "Ecko Products Purchases 92% of Republic Stamping". The Repository. May 21, 1952.
  12. ^ "Ecko Firm to Close Local Plant Monday". The Repository. August 26, 1959.
  13. ^ "Ekco Firm Plans to Reopen Plant". The Repository. February 3, 1961.
  14. ^ "The William McKinley Presidential Library & Museum is acquiring a unique piece of Canton history – and we need your help to tell the story!". William McKinley Presidential Library and Museum. 3 February 2021. Retrieved August 28, 2021.