

Ice shelves melting, flowers blooming in winter; what can I do? Start by reducing needless waste at the store with reusable canvas shopping bags. |
|
|
|
The History of the Bagley and Sewall Company
as written in the Bagley & Sewall Company pamphlet
c.1946
In the Spring of 1823, there arrived in the little
village of Watertown, George Goulding, a young machinist
and millwright who was destined to found what has become
one of the oldest and largest manufacturing establishments
in Watertown and Northern New York. His first machine
shop was located in a building that was on a site that
is part of the present Farwell and Rhines Flouring Mills
property on Fairbanks Street. In 1944 the company purchased
the site on which is located the Farwell and Rhines
Company. This property was being offered for sale by
the RFC and was purchased only for the historical value
connected with Bagley & Sewall.
George Goulding continued his business until April
10, 1840, when he bought real estate and water rights
and built a new shop on Sewalls Island on the
north branch of Black River. He was a mechanical genius,
and he was called upon to build and install all kinds
of machinery for the many industries that were rapidly
springing up in this country. At the beginning of the
year 1853, his business had increased to the point where
more capital and more executive ability were needed.
So, the partnership of Goulding, Bagley and Sewall was
formed September 12, 1853, and the value of the business
and plant at that time was $19,000.00. George A. Bagley
and Edmund Q. Sewall were both lawyers by profession,
but the practice of law was distasteful to both of them
so they gave it up to engage in business.
The new co-partnership prospered and their business
expanded rapidly until they not only furnished machinery
for Northern New York, but they equipped many of the
early flouring mills of Chicago, Milwaukee and Minneapolis.
They also built machine tools which were designed by
Mr. Goulding. The co-partnership of Goulding, Bagley
and Sewall was dissolved August 27, 1860, and the same
day the partnership of Bagley and Sewall was formed.
George Goulding continued as superintendent with Bagley
and Sewall until 1865. He died June 24, 1878.
The Bagley & Sewall Company was incorporated July
7, 1882. Mr. George A. Bagley was elected president
and Mr. Edmund Q. Sewall secretary and treasurer.
In 1870 Senator Warner Miller and Mr. Churchill of
Herkimer, New York, purchased in Germany the patents
for the principle of making groundwood pulp, and Bagley
and Sewall built the first Voelter grinder made in the
United States. They also built the first spring wet
machine to handle the pulp made from these grinders.
As Watertown is located in what was then the heart
of the paper-making industry in Northern New York, it
was concluded at that time that this was the logical
location for a plant to build paper-making machinery.
In 1889, new buildings were erected and new machinery
installed, and the building of high-grade Fourdrinier
and Cylinder paper-making machines was begun and has
since been the principle product of this company. Paper-making
machines have been supplied by the Bagley & Sewall
Company to the leading mills of the United States, Canada,
Newfoundland, Great Britain, France, Norway, Sweden,
China, Japan, Brazil, Mexico and Russia. Bagley &
Sewall were the first machinery manufacturers to produce
a machine capable of producing paper continuously at
1000 lineal feet per minute.
In 1912, the company had outgrown itself and it became
necessary to build new shops. As the result, Bagley
and Sewall was equipped to build the wider and faster
machines that were then being demanded by the paper
trade.
Bagley & Sewall selfishly claim to have one of
the largest and best equipped machine shops and foundry
in the country capable of producing paper-making machinery.
The most modern facilities make it possible for them
to construct paper machines up to 325 in width,
and the largest machine ever built and operated in the
Western Hemisphere is a Fourdrinier Machine having a
wire of 304 built by the company. This machine
is now running at the Great Lakes Pulp and Paper Company,
Fort William, Ontario.
Bagley & Sewall is justly proud in having been
a leader in the March of Progress in the development
of the paper industry to its present peak. This record
has been accomplished only by the cooperation and constructive
suggestions of the faithful employees of the company.
At the beginning of World War II, the company took
several contracts for both the Army Ordnance and the
Navy Department. One of the first large contracts signed
was for fifty (50) large Betts Boring Mills which were
urgently needed at the beginning of the war for the
turning of tank turretts. It became apparent that our
core-making facilities were inadequate for the size
and number of cores required for the large boring mill.
In May 1942, ground was broken for a new core room.
This building is 80 ft. wide by 220 ft. long. Three
large core ovens at the east end of the building give
a core-baking capacity ample for all our requirements.
A battery of four small ovens called day ovens
are also located in this core room.
In 1944, the company took a contract with the Army
Ordnance for over a million 105 mm shells. Ground was
broken for a new building on Moulton Street, March 20,
1944, which was to be used for the construction of these
shells. In October of the same year, the company was
in production on these shells. When the war ended in
August 1945, 716,525 shells had been produced in this
building. During the war period, the plant personnel
increased to over 1200 employees.
Both the core room and this building adapt themselves
for the manufacturing of paper-making machinery, and
both are being used to full capacity in the construction
of paper machinery. At present, there are 650 employees
working in the Bagley & Sewall shops.
The name of Bagley & Sewall is not only known in
the United States but is world renown, and this has
been brought about only by the long and faithful service
given by its employees. |