Farrel Corporation

The Farrel Corporation is an American manufacturing company based in Ansonia, Connecticut. Today, they manufacture process equipment for the plastics industry, and employ roughly 100 people.[1]

Farrel Corporation
Private
IndustryRubber, Plastics
FounderAlmon Farrel
HeadquartersAnsonia, Connecticut
United States
Number of employees
100
Websitewww.farrel.com

History

Farrel Pomini, Ansonia CT

Farrel was founded in 1848 as a foundry by Almon Farrel. During the American Civil War, they produced bayonets and cannon barrels. In 1927, Farrel Foundry merged with Birmingham Iron Foundry of Derby, Connecticut. During the 1920s, Farrel-Birmingham began creating gears for use in US Navy propulsion systems in Buffalo, New York.[2] In 1941, the Navy contracted with Farrel-Birmingham and General Motors to begin manufacturing a rapid reversal gear system that would allow vessels to reverse engines without first slowing down. In 1942, Farrel-Birmingham received the E award from the Navy for their efforts.[3]

In 1963, Farrel Birmingham adopted the current name of Farrel Corporation and began manufacturing process equipment for plastic plants. During the 1970s and 1980s, Farrel went through several owners.[4] In 1986, a group of private equity investors including Rolf Liebergesell, Charles S. Jones and Alberto Shaio, acquired the company from Emhart Corporation (which later merged with Black & Decker) for $1.0 million plus assumption of debt. At the CEO’s direction, Charles S. Jones’s firm divested the Roll Grinder products division, the Railroad products division, the steel extrusion division, and a 25% equity stake in the Italian Pomini enterprise. The Railroad products division was acquired by Simmons Machine Tool Corporation in Albany, New York.[5] Then, Farrel, under Liebergesell’s direction, focused exclusively on its core operations of plastic and rubber equipment. By 1991, under the leadership of Al Shaio, head of sales, revenue doubled to $105 million, with $5.4 million in operating income.

In 1992, Charles S. Jones led Farrel’s IPO on NASDAQ, underwritten by Paine Webber and First Albany for a pre-money valuation of $52.1 million, giving the original investors a 52.1x return in less than six years, with an IRR of 92.1%. Following the acquisition, Charles S. Jones led the acquisition of Farrel’s major competitors, including Rockstedt OHG in Germany, Francis Shaw Rubber Machinery Ltd. and PRC Fabrications Ltd in the United Kingdom and Skinner Engine in Erie, Pennsylvania.

In 2009, Farrel was acquired by the HF Machinery Group division of L. Possehl & Co., of Lübeck, Germany.

In 2016, Farrel built a new facility in Ansonia.

gollark: That seems very strawman.
gollark: Tiktok bad because tiktok content mostly bad and also its apps are basically a ridiculously intrusive vehicle for Chinese spying.
gollark: There are lots of block-based "programming" things now.
gollark: I wrote about this on my blog last year, which obviously makes me an expert™. While these things maybe *can* help with the general skill of being able to translate your complex and underspecified intentions into actual code, they aren't really *marketed* that way and thus are probably not taught usefully that way, and they're bad at, well, teaching programming directly.
gollark: According to my IQ test, I have an IQ of 600.

References

  1. "Farrel Corporation Company Profile". Manta. Retrieved 2007-10-11.
  2. "Farrel Company Records, Finding Aid". Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut. Archived from the original on 2012-08-05. Retrieved 2007-10-11.
  3. "Plant 5: Farrel-Birmingham and the Rapid Reverse Engine". The Buffalo History Works. Archived from the original on 2007-08-20. Retrieved 2007-10-11.
  4. "History of the Farrel Corporation". Farrel Corporation. Archived from the original on 2007-11-17. Retrieved 2007-10-11.
  5. "Simmons History".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.