Chase Brass is a leading manufacturer of brass rod, ingot and engineered products in the U.S. Located in Montpelier, Ohio, Chase employs over 200 hourly employees who are represented by the United Steelworkers Union (USW) Local 7248, and 98 salaried employees.[1]
NYSE: BRSS Russell 2000 Component | |
Founded | Waterbury, Connecticut, 1876 |
Founder | Henry Sabin Chase |
Headquarters | Montpelier, OH , USA |
Products | Brass rod, ingots and engineered products |
Parent | Wieland-Werke AG |
Website | www |
Founded in 1876, in Waterbury, Connecticut, it was one of the brass manufacturers that contributed to Waterbury's nickname "The Brass City". One of the largest brassworks in Waterbury, Chase left the city in 1975.
Corporate History
editThe company was incorporated in 1876, with Henry Sabin Chase as its founder and first President.
In 1929 the company built its first midwestern plant, in Euclid, Ohio. That same year Chase became a subsidiary of Kennecott Utah Copper, which was the largest producer of copper in the U.S., and Ten East 40th St, New York City, the Chase Tower, was finished and named after its first tenant, Chase Brass and Copper. It is now known as the Mercantile Building.
Standard Oil of Ohio (now BP America) acquired Kennecott in 1981 and thus acquired Chase. In 1988, the sheet division was sold to 500 employees of the company through an employee stock ownership plan; the new firm was named North Coast Brass & Copper Co. Only 40 Chase employees were left in the Cleveland area, at its Solon headquarters, though the firm still had two other divisions, in Montpelier, OH, and Shelby, NC.[2]
In 1988, BP was discouraged from selling Chase to TBG Inc., a New York-based manufacturing concern, with a threatened anti-trust action. The Justice Department warned TBG that it intended to file a civil suit to block its proposed $127 million acquisition of Chase Brass.[3] In 1990, BP finally sold the brass rod manufacturing operations in Montpelier, Ohio, the last remaining business unit of its Chase Brass and Copper Co. subsidiary. The rod mill, which then employed about 230 workers, made brass products for plumbing and other uses.[4]
In 1997, the board of directors and shareholders of Chase Brass Industries, Inc. legally changed its name to Chase Industries Inc. The Company's New York Stock Exchange symbol remained "CSI." [5] In 2000, Chase joined a consortium of specialty metal producers, the MetalSpectrum Partnership, to market metals on-line.[6]
As of 2001, Court Square Capital, an affiliate of Citicorp Venture Capital and the Chase Acquisition Corporation, owned 47 percent of Chase's stock, and sales totaled $232 million.[7] In 2002 Olin Corporation purchased Chase Brass and Copper Co.[8] Five years later, private equity fund KPS Capital Partners LP subsidiary Global Brass and Copper Holdings, Inc. ("GBC") acquired Olin's worldwide metals business, including Chase Brass, and now markets products under that name.[9] GBC is publicly traded on the NYSE under BRSS. Chase Brass acquires a license agreement with Sambo Copper Alloy Co., Ltd (now known as Mitsubishi Shindoh, LTD) to sell ECO BRASS C693 and C87850 exclusively in North America. ECO BRASS no-lead properties meet Federal and State lead regulations. Chase Brass sublicensed California Metal-X and Ingot Metal Company Limited to produce and sell ECO BRASS C87850. 2015 marked the 50th anniversary of Chase Brass, Montpelier, Ohio location. This location was opened in 1965 and manufactured one alloy, C360. As of 2016, Chase Brass, Montpelier, produced C360, C377, C345, C350, C353, C370, C363, C27450, ECO BRASS C693, ECO BRASS C87850, ECO BRONZE C87850 and engineered products.
On April 10, 2019, Wieland Group and Global Brass and Copper signed a Merger Agreement, in which Wieland Group acquired Global Brass and Copper. This agreement was subject to a number of closing conditions, all of which have now been met, including approval by Global Brass and Copper stockholders and antitrust clearances, and the acquisition has now been completed.
Waterbury
editHeadquarters
editThe Chase Headquarters Building in Waterbury, Connecticut, is on Grand Street across from the city hall. It is now occupied by the city of Waterbury’s offices. Chase Brass commissioned well-known architect Cass Gilbert to design it in 1916, across from his recently completed Waterbury city hall. Henry Chase, the company president, specifically requested that the headquarters be designed to contrast with the style of the city hall, resulting in a design which shunned colonial marble and brick. The company sold the building to preservationists in 1963 for one dollar, who in turn sold it to the city of Waterbury to be used as city offices, a function it still serves today. It is now known as the Chase Municipal Building and is part of Waterbury's Cass Gilbert Historical District.
Local influence
editThe Chase Collegiate School is a private day school formerly known as Saint Margaret's-McTernan, established in 1865. It was founded by Chase Brass and Copper Company. The Chase Dispensary, a medical clinic for employees of the Chase Brass and Copper Co., opened one of the first birth control clinics in the country in 1938.
Henry Sabin Chase gave property in Litchfield to his daughter, Miss Edith Morton Chase, where she created a summer estate. She bequeathed it to the state of Connecticut to be used to create Topsmead State Forest.[10]
A former plant site in Waterbury has been designated as a Superfund Clean-up site.[11][12]
Wartime
editDuring World War II, the Chase Brass and Copper Company made more than 50 million cartridge cases and mortar shells, more than a billion small caliber bullets and, eventually, some of the components used in the atomic bomb.[13]
Most of the brass buttons used on Federal uniforms, belt buckles and other fittings, were made in Waterbury, the "Brass City", notably by the Chase Brass and Copper Company.
Art Deco era
editChase entered the consumer market with a line of chrome Art Deco household items in the 1930s, created by leading designers of the day such as Russel Wright, Rockwell Kent and Walter VonNessen. They were usually signed with the distinctive company logo of a centaur drawing a bow.[14][15] These items are sought after today as collectibles.
Chase discontinued this line in the early '40s, when it turned its attention to wartime production. Chase production of their 'Specialty' items lasted only 12 years, but during that time they issued over 500 items, and 500 more lamps and lighting fixtures.[16]
References
edit- ^ | Press Releases | United States Senator Sherrod Brown
- ^ "Encyclopedia of Cleveland History:CHASE BRASS & COPPER CO". Archived from the original on 2011-06-06. Retrieved 2009-11-09.
- ^ COMPANY NEWS; U.S. Will Challenge Chase Brass Takeover - New York Times
- ^ "CBSi". FindArticles.com. Retrieved 2022-06-29.
- ^ Search Results[dead link]
- ^ SME - Sorry. Not Found Archived July 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Company News; Chase Industries Says Talks To Sell Company Are Over - New York Times
- ^ "CBSi". FindArticles.com. Retrieved 2022-06-29.
- ^ Chase Brass and Copper Company, LLC Archived July 8, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ DEP: Topsmead State Forest
- ^ ATSDR-PHA-HC-Chase Brass and Copper Redirect
- ^ "Find New England Sites - CHASE BRASS AND COPPER". Archived from the original on 2011-06-09. Retrieved 2009-11-09.
- ^ "THE WAR . The Witnesses . Four Towns . Waterbury, Connecticut | PBS". PBS. Archived from the original on 2016-04-05. Retrieved 2017-08-25.
- ^ On October 6, 1928, the Chase centaur trademark was announced in the Saturday Evening Post. Rodney Chase and the company cartoonist, F.G. Cooper settled on the figure that was half-man and half-horse because it was masculine, virile, aggressive, picturesque and most of all difficult for most people to describe readily. Therefore, the tendency would be for people to talk about it as the "CHASE mark," rather than trying to think what the word is to describe the mark. The centaur is synonymous with Chase Brass. This mark can be found on specialty deco items throughout history. www.chasebrass.com Brooklyn Museum: Chase Brass & Copper Co., Inc
- ^ CONNECTICUT GUIDE – Page 2 – New York Times
- ^ Antique Trader Antiques & Collectibles 2008 Price Guide - Kyle Husfloen - Google Books