Frederick England was the driving force
behind the
organization of two related body-building firms, the Amesbury Metal
Body Co.,
of Amesbury, Massachusetts and the England Manufacturing Company of
Detroit,
Michigan. The latter firm being so successful that it was acquired by
the
Fisher Body ineterests in 1920.
(The England Mfg. Co. was unrelated to the
The Gordon
England Company of America, which was formed in 1929 to take over the
assets of
the Holbrook Co.)
Frederick (Fred) England was born April 1867
in Rochester,
Strafford County, New Hampshire to Michael (b.1805-d.1874) and Phoebe
J. (Roberts
- b.1820-d.1904) England.
Born in England in 1805, Michael England
emigrated to the
United States at the age of 18, finding employment in a cotton mill at
Salmon
Falls, New Hampshire, where he continued to work for several years. He
saved up
enough money to purchase a farm in Gonic, Strafford County, New
Hampshire and after a number of years
married Phebe J.
Roberts, a native of Strafford County, N.H., and to the blessed union
were born
the following children: Martha (b. 1846-d.1880); Sarah A. (m. Walter
Wiggin -
b.1848-d.1925); William H. (b.1868); Walter (b. Feb 13, 1859) Freeman
(b. Dec.
1865) and Frederick (b. Apr. 1867) England.
The 1870 US Census lists 4yo Frederick
living with his
parents, Michael (70yo) & Jane T. (48yo) and two siblings, Freeman
(6yo)
and Walter (8yo) in Rochester, Strafford County, New Hampshire (the
family’s
farm was actually located 2½ miles south of Rochester in Gonic).
Noticeably
absent is the three sibling’s mother Phoebe J. (who may erroneously
listed as
Jane T. England as they age is about the same).
Although Frederick remained in school after
Michael England’s
1875 passing, his older brother Walter abandon his schooling at the age
of 15,
finding employment on a neighboring farm. In 1877 Walter relocated 10
miles
southeast to the village of Rollinsford, N.H. where he began farming on
his own
accord. Frederick joined him and the 1880 US Census lists him ‘at
school’ as
Fred R. England (14yo) living with his older brother Walter (19yo), and
Walter’s
bride, Clara A. England (17yo).
After he completed his secondary education
in the
Rollinsford school, Frederick was apprenticed to a machinist and during
the
next decade worked at various firms located in and around Lowell,
Massachusetts
in addition to serving four years in the Massachusetts National Guard
as a
lieutenant.
In 1888 our subject married Mary Jane (aka
Jennie) McGarvin
(b.1864 in Canada, emigrated to the US in 1868) and to the blessed
union were
born three children; Ralph W. (b. Apr. 21, 1889); Grace Madeline (b.
Aug. 19,
1892); and Frederick jr. (b. Aug. 29, 1894) England.
Sometime before 1892 he relocated to
Amesbury, Massachusetts
to accept a position as a machinist at Atwood Bros., a well-known
manufacturer
of carriage lamps located at 2 Chestnut Street. Organized
in 1872 by W. I. and I. H. Atwood, the brothers’
lamps could be
found on many of the carriages built in and around Amesbury. The firm
was
subsequently reorganized as the Attwood Mfg. Co. and in late 1908 as
the
Attwood-Castle Co., the November 12, 1908 issue of Motor World
recording:
“Castle Acquires
an Atwood Interest.
“F.E. Castle, formerly
with Gray & Davis,
of Amesbury, Mass., has again gone into the lamp business by
acquiring an interest in the Atwood Mfg. Co.,
of Amesbury. As a result of the arrangement the name of the
company
will be changed to the Atwood-Castle Co., for the future.”
(Although they shared the same name, Gray
& Davis’
William Gray was not connected with William H. Gray, the famous
Manhattan
carriage dealer located at Nos. 20-22 and 63 Wooster St. who
distributed many
Amesbury-built carriages during the late 1800s.)
On Sept. 16, 1896 a machinist named William
Gray (b. Aug.
1868) formed a firm dedicated to manufacturing lamps for the exclusive
use of motor
cars, his partner in the enterprise was J. Albert Davis (b. May 1865),
an Essex
County businessman who supplied $2700 of the firm’s $3000
capitalization, the
remaining $300 paid in by Gray.
Gray & Davis’ first factory was located
in a small brick
building, with a production of ten sets of lamps per week. In those
early days automobile lamps were
powered by one of three systems, kerosene was the most common, closely
followed
by acetylene, with battery-powered systems being a distant third.
While kerosene was the cheapest, requiring
only an old
carriage lamp to put the light to the road, its candlepower was far
from
satisfactory and most automobilists insisted upon the much brighter
acetylene
system which required an on-board canister of acetylene gas for fuel. A
complete 2-lamp acetylene system cost between $75 and $100, a very
costly piece
of equipment at the time. The battery-powered systems were too
impractical as
the acid-cell battery required frequent replacement as a practical
on-board
charging system was not yet available.
As the sales of motor cars increased, so did
Gray &
Davis’ business and in 1899 it became necessary to substantially
enlarge the
first factory. It became necessary to hire a number of additional
mechanics and
craftsmen to keep up with demand, and Frederick England was hired on as
their chief
machinist, the 1900 US Census lists his occupation as machinist. By
that time
J. Albert Davis share in the firm had been acquired by Lambert
Hollander a
well-known Amesbury carriage builder who for many years had been a
minority shareholder
and director in the firm. He remained a partner in Gray & Davis
until 1917
when he sold his share to S. Preston Moses and retired to Florida.
In early 1907 a group of Amesbury business
owners decided to
establish an automobile body-building plant devoted to the manufacture
of
aluminum –sheathed composite bodies, which were slowly supplanting the
decades-old
wood-sheathed bodies that had been built up until that time. The April
18, 1907
issue of The Automobile announced the firm’s organization:
“Amesbury, Mass., is to have a large
factory devoted
exclusively to the building of metal bodies. A company has been formed
under
the title of the Amesbury Metal Body Company, and has secured a
large,
centrally-located factory with 20,000 square feet floor area, which is
now
being remodeled and machinery installed. The plant will be in operation
at the
beginning of June. The heads of the new company are J. Albert Davis,
formerly
of Gray & Davis; James H. Walker of Walker Carriage Company, John
Foster
and Fred England.”
J. Albert Davis and James H. Walker supplied
the bulk of the
capital with John W. Foster, Gray & Davis’ secretary and Frederick
England,
its chief machinist, providing the management and engineering with
Foster being
credited with a number of the firm’s body designs.
They leased space in the former No. 5
Babcock plant on
Chestnut Street and began the manufacture of aluminum doors, fenders,
bonnets
(hoods) and body panels with a staff of 40. Amesbury historian John
Bartley
claims the firm built an average of 8 complete bodies per week , the
majority
of their work destined for Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts,
Stevens-Duryea Motor
Co.
Its listing in the 1909 International Motor
Cyclopedia
follows:
“Amesbury Metal Body Co., Cor. Clarke and
Elm Sts., Amesbury,
Mass. Mfrs. aluminum, iron and steel bodies. Est. April 1, 1907.”
Numerous aluminum body panels were supplied
to the
Walker-Wells Body Co., owned by James H. Walker, one of its directors,
and
small numbers of completed bodies were built for Boston’s ALCO, Packard
and Studebaker
distributors as well as the body for George W. Hamblet’s 1909 Hamblet
automobile. In addition to its main plant on Chestnut street the firm
also
leased office space on the other side of the railroad tracks at the
corner of Clark
& Elm Sts.
The Amesbury Metal Body Company was a known
exhibitor at the
1911 Boston Automobile show and on November 14, 1911 Fred England, was
awarded
US Pat. No. 1008805 (Filed Apr 25, 1911) for a ‘Door for Automobiles
and Other
Vehicles’.
The December 1911 issue of Carriage Monthly
included the
following tribute to the firm:
“Where Skill and Hard Work Won Out
“The success of the Amesbury Metal
Body Co.,
Amesbury, Mass., manufacturers of automobile bodies and fenders,
affords a
splendid example of the possibilities open to mechanics in the East to
establish an industry along the lines which were in vogue in the early
history
of New England industries. Many of the largest manufacturing industries
of the
present day located in New England are the outcome and development of a
small
beginning.
“It was the custom for one or two mechanics
living in the
same neighborhood and possessed of practical knowledge in a particular
line of
manufacturing to associate themselves in a partnership for the
manufacture of
the article in which they were skilled.
“In many cases their only assets were their
mechanical
skill, good character and a capacity for hard work. They found a sale
for the
goods in their immediate neighborhood and business was confined to a
restricted
area. The profits derived from the sale of their goods was turned back
into the
plant, the partners drawing just a sufficient amount to cover their
daily
household needs.
“With the development and growth of the
country there came a
corresponding development in their business, which meant larger
factories and
more employees. The employees were the sons and daughters of the
neighbors,
and, as new capital became necessary, shares of stock were sold, and
these
neighbors participated in the profits of the business. Today in scores
of
instances these small beginnings have grown into large and most
important
industries.
“The Amesbury Metal Body Co.
demonstrates that it
is still possible to start on the old lines, and with small capital
succeed in
building up a profitable business. Starting in business three years ago
with a
small capital they have achieved a success which is truly remarkable.
At first
they adopted the standard method of producing bodies, but they soon
realized
that the old-fashioned method was too slow and that in order to build
up a
profitable business it would be necessary for them to devise a system
which
would enable them to produce their goods not only at the least cost,
but also
in larger quantities in the same given time, and having become
convinced of
this fact, they undertook to work out the problem.
“They could not draw from the results and
experiments of
others made in this line as the plans of manufacturing which had been
evolved
by them were entirely original, consequently, they were dependent on
their own
resources to work out new ideas, as every dollar invested in the
enterprise
belonged solely to the members of the firm. They were not handicapped
by
directors nor factory managers in their experiments.
“With a feeling that their future success
depended
absolutely upon the perfection of their ideas, they started upon the
task of
working them out. It was no easy task, and they toiled long hours and
many
times under discouraging conditions, and, having such a small capital
to start
with, they were worried as to the outcome, as failure to perfect the
method
which they had in view would mean the loss of their entire savings
which they
had put in their capital, as the expense attendant upon the experiments
would
have absorbed the entire amount. But eventually their skill conquered
the
difficulty and they succeeded in perfecting their ideas.
“Today they are producing bodies under that
system which are
practically perfect, not only as regards strength and durability, but
also in
the other essential of a high-class body, absolute smoothness of
surface. The
best evidence that could be offered as to the quality of their work and
the
satisfactory service which they render their patrons is the fact that
they have
manufactured 2,500 bodies of one type for one manufacturer under their
new
method.
“It is pleasant in these days of large
capitalization to
learn that it is possible for skilled mechanics to go into business and
successfully compete with firms which have been established for years
and with
ample capital to finance their contracts. Today the Amesbury Metal
Body Co., as the result of skill and persistence, is one of the
largest
automobile aluminum body manufacturers in the country, and in addition
to
reaping a substantial reward for themselves they are giving employment
to a
large number of skilled mechanics in the town of Amesbury. From the
present
indications, they will run their factory to its full capacity for 1912.
The
company sells only to the automobile manufacturers and does not accept
orders
from individuals.”
The firm’s directors soon realized there was
significantly
more money to be made in Detroit and during the Spring of 1912
organized a Detroit-based
firm to take advantage of that opportunity, the April 25, 1912 issue of
The Iron
Age reporting:
“The England Mfg. Company, Detroit, has been
incorporated
with $50,000 capital stock to manufacture a line of pressed steel doors
and
other specialties for automobiles. The incorporators are Frederick
England,
John W. Foster and J. Albert Davis.”
June 20, 1912 issue of Motor World:
“England Leaves Bay State for Michigan.
The England Mfg. Co., which produce; metal
stampings and
automobile accessories, has removed from Amesbury, Mass., to Detroit,
Mich.,
where it is occupying the factory at 1559 Jefferson avenue which once
was used
by the King Motor Car Co. J. Albert Davis, who at one time
was of the
lamp making firm of Gray & Davis, is prominently identified with
the
England company.”
July 1912 The Hub:
“ENGLAND LEAVES BAY STATE FOR MICHIGAN
“The England Mfg. Co. has removed from
Amesbury, Mass.. to
Detroit, Mich., where it is occupying the factory at 1559 Jefferson
avenue,
formerly used by the King Motor Car Co. The England Mfg. Co. produces
metal
stampings and automobile accessories. J. Albert Davis, who at
one
time was of the lamp making firm of Gray & Davis, is prominently
identified
with the England company.”
The firm’s executives were all listed in the
1915 Detroit
Board of Commerce members directory as follows: Fred England, England
Manufacturing Co. ; Albert Davis, Vice President, England Manufacturing
Co.; John
W. Foster, Treasurer, England Manufacturing Co.
At the time England Mfg. Co. was the only
Detroit-based
manufacturer producing one-piece stamped door panels
for automobile bodies
and by 1916 the firm was so inundated with orders that they constructed
a new
factory at 44 Leavitt St., W., Detroit, Michigan, the June 15,
1916
American Machinist reporting:
“The England Manufacturing Co., manufacturer
of automobile
parts, is constructing a new factory at Leavitt and Campbell Ave.,
Detroit,
Mich.”
Within the year the factory was completed as
announced in
the May 26, 1917 issue of Michigan Manufacturer and Financial Record:
“The England Manufacturing Co., Leavitt
street, near
Junction avenue, new factory completed; employs 125 men, to add 50
more.”
The firm celebrated a successful 6 years in
business with a
display ad in the September 26, 1918 issue of Iron Age:
“Six Successful Years - The England
Manufacturing Co. METAL
STAMPINGS AND AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES, DETROIT, MICHIGAN.”
The advertisement coincided with the
election of Charles P.
Parsons as the firm’s vice-president.
Charles P. Parsons was a well-known Detroit
executive, who
had been identified with a number of Detroit automobile manufacturers.
Born in
St. Clair, St. Clair County, Michigan on April 8, 1878 to Warren J. and
Jennie
(Husel) Parsons, Charles P. Parsons acquired his
education
in the public schools of his native city and remained on the farm until
eighteen years of age, when he became a salesman, eventually becoming
the purchasing
agent for the Monroe Manufacturing Company, a body manufacturer located
in Monroe,
Michigan. He was subsequently appointed chief clerk in the body
division of the
Cadillac Motor Company, from which position he resigned to become
purchasing
agent of the C. R. Wilson Body Company, holding this position two
years, while
through the succeeding five years he was in charge of the metal
stamping division
of the Fisher Body Corporation.
Backed by Fisher Body interests, in November
of 1918, Parsons
purchased a third interest in the England Mfg. Co., becoming its vice
president
and general manager, and coincident with the firm’s January 1, 1920,
takeover
by Fisher Body, became its president, the sale revealed in the
following
article published in the January 29, 1920 issue of The Automobile which
announced
the formation of the Motor Vehicle Equipment Co.:
“Equipment Co. Formed to Build Truck Cabs
“DETROIT, Jan. 24 — The Motor Vehicle
Equipment Co., to
specialize in the manufacture of cabs for motor trucks, has been
incorporated,
with a capital of $600,000, of which 5000 shares will be common and
1000
preferred, of par value of $100 each. The plant is at 41 Federal
Avenue, Detroit, and is headed by Fred England, who has
been
connected with the England Mfg. Co., sold recently to the Fisher Body
Corp.
John W. Foster, treasurer, formerly was a designer
of automobile bodies for the England company and Chris B.
Madson,
factory manager, has had wide experience in the body manufacturing
field.
Charles P. Parsons, president of the England Co., is a director. The
company
expects to be in full production by Feb. 15. More than $300,000 of the
common
stock was subscribed for and paid in at the first stockholders'
meeting.”
41 Federal Avenue, Detroit, was also the
address of the
Federal Motor Truck Company, so we can assume MVEC had some connection
with
Federal. In fact the only mention of the Motor Vehicle Equipment Co.
comes from
the preceding announcement, the firm apparently vanished soon
afterwards.
Frederick England’s son, Frederick England
Jr., went to work
for his father following his discharge from the US Army at the end of
World War
I. When Fisher Body purchased the firm, Fred jr. went to work for the
Durant
Motor Car Company in Lansing, Michigan. In 1922 he left his position
with
Durant and formed a partnership with H. J. Cook as the England-Cook
Motor Sales
Company, distributors of Chevrolet motor cars.
In 1921 Fisher Body combined the England
Manufacturing
Company’s operations with that of the Ternstedt Manufacturing Co., as
recorded
in the August 27, 1921 issue of Automobile Topics:
“TERNSTEDT EXPANDS PLANT FACILITIES
“Detroit Concern Takes Over Fisher Body
Hardware
Plants—Also England Mfg. Co. — Maintains a Capacity Production Schedule.
“Arrangements have been completed, whereby
the Ternstedt
Manufacturing Co., Detroit, has taken over the body hardware
plants
of the Fisher Body Corp., as part of an extensive expansion program.
This
enlargement of its facilities which is described as necessary because
of a
steadily increasing flow of business, likewise includes the purchase of
the
plant of the England Manufacturing Co., as well as the
erection
of a large plant in Detroit. These added facilities are
described as
giving the Ternstedt organization the distinction of being the world's
largest
builder of automobile body hardware.
“No sooner was the consummation of the two
deals which
placed the facilities of the body hardware plants of the Fisher Body
Corp., and
the plant of the England Manufacturing Co. at the
disposal of
the Ternstedt company completed, than work immediately started on the
building
of a fine new plant in Detroit, the building being completed
and the
equipment purchased from the Fisher organization installed just 45 days
after
ground was first broken. This new plant, which is designated as plant
No.
"2" together with the England company plant No. "3," and
the original Ternstedt plant No. "1," provides facilities that will
enable the company to care for the demands which have been placed upon
it.
“A capacity production schedule has been
maintained for some
time past, according to Paul W. Seiler, now president and general
manager and
who, before the reorganization, was general manager of the Ternstedt
plant.
This production schedule will be maintained indefinitely; it is pointed
out, as
many of the company's customers have already lined up their entire
requirements
for some time ahead. In increasing the scope of its work, it is the aim
of the
company as described by Seiler, to so standardize the building of body
hardware, that purchasers of the company's products may avail
themselves of the
advantage of buying their complete requirements from one source instead
of
scattering their purchases as heretofore has been necessary.
“The Ternstedt name has long been identified
with Fisher
interests, as will be recalled, and the present plan whereby it takes
over the
automobile body hardware facilities of that organization, places it in
a strong
position. Whereas the company builds hardware for both closed and open
bodies,
more than eighty per cent of its business is for closed type bodies.
This is
attributed to the constantly increasing demand for the closed vehicle
as
an all-Season conveyance.”
Under the General Motors Corp. entry
in the 1922 Edition of Moody’s Manual of
Railroads and Corporation Securities:
“COMPANIES CONTROLLED BY GENERAL MOTORS CORP.
“FISHER BODY CORP. (Controlled by General
Motors
Corp.).—Inc. Aug 21. 1916, in N. Y., and acquired all the property and
assets
and assumed the liabilities of Fisher Body Co. and Fisher Closed Body
Co.; also
the entire $150,000 capital stock of the Fisher Body Co. of Canada,
Ltd. The
Fisher Body Co. was incorporated July 22. 1908, in Mich., and the
Fisher Closed
Body Co., on Dec 22. 1910, in Mich. Upon the transfer of their assets
these two
companies each reduced their capital to the nominal sum of $1,000. The
Fisher
Body Co. of Canada, Ltd. was incorporated April 25, 1912. and operates
a plant
at Walkerville, Ont.
“The body plants, 33 in number, are located
at Detroit, Mich.,
and Walkerville, Ont. The corporation is the largest manufacturer of
automobile
bodies in the world. The total floor space of plants is over 4,000,000
sq. ft.;
the number of employees. 14.000. and the volume of business,
$100,000,000. The
Fisher Body Ohio Co., a subsidiary, was incorporated Oct 17, 1919, in
Ohio, to
build and operate a new plant in Cleveland, O. (see appended
statement). The
National Plate Glass Co., a subsidiary, was incorporated Jan 17, 1920,
in Md.
(see appended statement).
“Control.—About Nov, 1919, the General
Motors Corp. acquired
control of Fisher Body Corp. through acquisition at $92 per share of
300,000 of
the 500,000 shares of Com. stock of no par value. The Fisher Body Corp.
agreed
that for a period of five years, commencing Oct 1, 1919, not less than
two-thirds of net earnings in each fiscal year, after taxes, interest
and Pfd.
dividends and sinking fund payments, shall be paid in dividends to the
Com.
stockholders, until they shall have received in each fiscal year,
dividends at
rate of not less than $10 per share per annum. General Motors Corp
agreed to
purchase from Fisher Body Corp. substantially all its requirements for
automobile
bodies at a price based on cost plus 17.6% for a period of ten years.
“Acquisitions in 1920.—The Fisher Body
Corp. acquired
during 1920, the entire Com. stocks of the following accessory
companies:
International Metal Stamping Co. (incorporated Sept 12, 1916, in
Mich.);
Ternstedt Manufacturing Co. (incorporated April 17, 1917, in Mich.);
The Shepard Art
Metal Co. (incorporated May 1, 1919, in Mich; The England
Manufacturing
Co.(incorporated May 1, 1912, in Mich.). The latter Company and the
International Metal Stamping Co. have since been merged with the
Ternstedt Mfg.
Co.
“The controlled accessory companies
manufacture plate glass,
metal door panels, metal body panels, stampings and automobile body
hardware.”
Charles P. Parsons would eventually serve as
vice-president
of Ternstedt Mfg. until he left to take a job as sales manager for
Lansing,
Michigan’s Auto Body Co. in 1926. Parsons also controlled the Parsons
Mfg. Co.,
21st & Fort Sts. (later 5301 Bellevue St.), Detroit, who, like
Ternstedt, supplied
automobile hardware (locks, hinges, etc.) to Detroit’s automakers. His
1926 move
to Lansing coincided with the sale of Parsons Mfg. Co. to the Motor
Products
Corp., Detroit.
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