Rome, New York’s Rome-Turney Radiator Co.
was a
reorganization of the Long-Turney Manufacturing Co. a partnership
founded in 1905
by Ohio native George W. Turney and Illinois native Joseph B. Long.
Turney, the
firm’s general manager, represented the interests of the directors of
the Rome
Brass & Copper Co. - Long, the firm’s vice-president, was the
founder of
the Long Mfg. Co., a Chicago-based manufacturer of automobile radiators
built
using his patented crimp-based fin tubing.
Founded by Jonathan S. Haselton (b.
1847-d.1908), the Rome
Brass & Copper Co. was a reorganization of the Rome Iron Works, a
firm
originally founded in 1863. Jonathan Sawyer Haselton was born at
Lawrence,
Massachusetts, December 5, 1847 to Nathaniel and Myra (Sawyer)
Haselton. In his
boyhood he removed with his parents to Rome where he attended the
public
schools. His first business venture was as a newsboy on the Rome,
Watertown
& Ogdensburg Railroad and in 1867 he became connected with the Rome
Iron
Works as office boy. As the railroad
industry converted from iron to steel the Rome Iron Works began the
manufacture
of brass, and eventually copper, renaming itself the Rome Brass &
Copper
Co. in 1890. By that time Haselton had advanced through the various
positions
of clerk, bookkeeper, secretary-treasurer, ending up as the firm’s
president.
Haselton and the firm’s directors invested
in numerous local
firms that used the region’s abundant copper reserves, which included
the Rome
Manufacturing Company, the Rome Metal Company, the Rome Tube Company,
the Rome
Electrical Company, and the Long-Turney Manufacturing Company.
The latter firm’s establishment on September
22, 1905 was
announced to the trade in Automobile Topics as follows:
“Rome, N. Y. — The Long-Turney Manufacturing
Company, with
$50,000 capital, to manufacture automobile parts. Incorporators :
Thomas H.
Stryker, G. W. Turney and J. S. Hazelton, of Rome, and J. B. Long, of
Chicago.”
And through a series of display ads
(transcribed below) that
appeared in the leading automotive and metal industry periodicals:
“Long's New Radiator Factory
“Owing to the great demand for our Spiral
Tubing and Radiators,
made of same, we find it necessary to increase our factory facilities.
On Jan.
1st, we moved into our new factory, which gave us more than three times
the
floor space for manufacturing purposes. We now find that we are obliged
to
enlarge our factory again. Therefore, we have decided to open a new
factory in
Rome, New York, to take care of the Eastern and Export trade, which
will be in
operation Nov. 1st. Our new factory will be equipped with the most
modern
machinery and electric power for making Spiral Tubing, Radiators and
Hoods. It
will be known as the Long-Turney Mfg. Co., of Rome, New York, and will
be
managed by Geo. W. Turney, who has been connected with the Rome Brass
and Copper
Co., for the past 14 years. The Long-Turney Mfg. Co. is licensed to
enjoy all
the privileges of the Long Mfg. Co.'s patents and patents pending on
Spiral
Tubing and Radiators.
“Long-Turney Manufacturing Co.”
The October 1905 issue of The Motor Way gave
a few more
details:
“TO MAKE RADIATORS IN ROME
“Incorporation papers were issued last week
to the
Long-Turney Manufacturing Company, of Rome, N. Y., with a
paid up
capital of $50,000. The new company is the successor of the Long
Manufacturing
Company, of Chicago, and will manufacture automobile radiators, spiral
tubing
and other metal specialties. Thomas H. Stryker, G. W.
Turney and J.
S. Haselton, of Rome, and J. B. Long, of Chicago, are named
as
incorporators. Dr. W. L. Kingsley will be president.”
Joseph B. Long (b.1871-d.1911), the Long in
Long-Turney, was
born during 1871 in Assumption, Christian County, Illinois to Charles
(b.1824-d.1900) and Caroline (Rayburn b. 1827-d.1900) Long. The 1880 US
Census
lists his father’s occupation as farmer and includes 5 siblings; Amanda
E.; Charles M., George W.; Joseph B.; and Luella H. Long.
In 1903 Joseph B. Long established the Long
Manufacturing
Co. at 1430-34 Michigan Ave., Chicago, Illinois and during the next
half decade
was awarded 6 US Patents relating to the construction of radiators as
follows:
US pat no. 844685
Radiator for Automobiles - Filed Feb 17, 1905 - Issued Feb 19, 1907 to
Joseph
B. Long
US pat no. 898237 - Radiator for Automobiles
- Filed Oct 23,
1905 - Issued Sep 8, 1908 to Christopher Wright and Joseph B. Long
assignors to
Long Mfg. Co. of Chicago, Ill.
US pat no. 898238 Radiator for Automobiles -
Filed May 11,
1907 - Issued Sep 8, 1908 to Frank Todd and Joseph B. Long assignors to
Joseph
B. Long of Chicago, Ill.
US pat no. 966721 - Radiator for Automobiles
- Filed Dec 11,
1909 - Issued Aug 9, 1910 to Frank Todd assigned to Joseph B. Long of
Chicago, Ill.
US pat no. 993318 - Radiator for Automobiles
- Filed Dec 11,
1909 - Issued May 23, 1911 to Frank Todd assigned to Joseph B. Long of
Chicago,
Ill.
US Pat. No. 934,584 - Radiator for
Automobiles —
Frank Todd, Chicago, Ill., assignor to Joseph B. Long,
Chicago, Ill. Filed August 30, 1907. Issued February 15, 1908.
Long’s partner, George W. Turney, was born
in Marion, Marion
County, Ohio on May 7, 1855 to Weaver Adams (b.1823–d.1890) and
Catherine A.
(Williams b.1830–d.1899) Turney. Weaver was one of the county’s pioneer
jewelers remaining in business for more than a half century, until his
death on
May 6, 1890 when his son Merrill A. assumed control of the firm. Weaver
and
Catherine were married on Oct 17, 1846 and their union was blessed with
6
children; Joseph R; George W. (our subject); Henry M., Merrill A.,
Alice M. (nee
Thompson); and Gertrude J. (nee Duff) Turney.
Interestingly Long and Turney were related
through marriage.
Joseph B. Long’s second wife, Kathryn (Turney) was the daughter of
Cleveland,
Ohio’s Edward Turney, a cousin of his partner.
Thanks to the great success of the Long Mfg.
Co. Joseph B.
Long’s widow, Kathryn Turney Long, is far better known today than her
husband or
his former business partner. When Joseph B. Long passed away
unexpectedly on March
15, 1911 Kathryn inherited a large portfolio which included a large
amount of
Long Mfg. stock. She was a life-long fan of the arts, serving as
president of the
Chicago Drama League as well as a charter member of Manhattan’s
Metropolitan
Opera Guild.
Between seasons she stayed at her Lakeshore
Drive apartment
in Chicago, spending her winters in Palm Beach and her summers in
Manhattan.
Mrs. Joseph B. Long, as she was popularly
known, made
national headlines in late September 1933 when she received a
threatening note
demanding a $10,000 payment ‘or else’. The September, 28, 1933 issue of
the New
York Times reported:
“WARNED OF DEATH IN A KIDNAP NOTE
“Mrs. J.B. Long, Chicago Social Leader,
Quits Home There for
Safety Here.
“(Special to the New York Times) CHICAGO,
Setp 1927. –
Attended to her compartment in a railroad train by a police guard, Mrs.
Joseph
B. Long, a social leader who received a threatening letter demanding
payment of
$10,000, Left Chicago for New York City this afternoon. She said that
she had
taken a three-year lease upon a New York apartment and would make her
home
there.
“Meanwhile, city detectives and Feral Agents
were seeking
the sender of the letter received at Mrs. Long’s residence Tuesday
afternoon.
The message contained a threat of kidnapping unless she paid. Death was
threatened if she contacted the police.
“Mrs. Long is the window of a Chicago
manufacturer, from
whom she inherited a large fortune. When she received the letter, she
told the
police today, she became terrified, and hastened arrangements for her
departure
for New York. She left her apartment today under police protection for
the
first time since the threat was received.
“The letter was scrawled in pencil on two
small pages of
ruled note paper. The extortion demand and the threats were written in
a
childish manner. Penciled were ‘Black Hand’ and a crude skull and
cross-bones;
according to the police, an obvious attempt to conceal the writer’s
identity.
The envelope was businesslike and addressed in ink. Detectives asserted
that
the sender was someone familiar with Mrs. Long.”
She subsequently moved to Manhattan and
following her death
in 1942 bequeathed the bulk of her fortune to the Metropolitan Opera
who used
it to establish an opera training school (Kathryn Turney Long
School) and
scholarship fund.
Mrs. Long, the former Kathryn Turney, was
the daughter of
the late Mr. and Mrs. Edward Turney of Cleveland.
After a public education in the Marion
schools, the Turney family’s
sons went to work in their family’s jewelry business. In 1879 George
and Harry
Turney ventured west to Colorado where they established Turney Brothers
Jewelry
in Colorado Springs, El Paso County. The brothers’ jewelry shop can be
seen in
a circa 1880 7”x4” stereoview of downtown Colorado Springs’s business
district.
O.L. Baskin’s History of the Arkansas
Valley, Colorado (pub.
1881) contains the following biographical entry for George W. Turney:
“Mr. Turney, one of the
enterprising and worthy
young merchants of Colorado Springs, was born in Marion,
Ohio, May 7,
1855. He received a limited education in the public schools of his
native city.
His father being a jeweler, it was but natural, as well as wise, that
he should
follow in his footsteps, and at the age of ten began an apprenticeship
at that
trade in his father's store, where he remained until January, 1879. He
then came
to Colorado, located in Colorado Springs, and, in company
with his
brother Henry, succeeded R. Morris in the jewelry business,
under the
firm name of Turney Bros. That firm existed until February 1,
1881,
when he purchased his brother's interest, and has since continued the
business.
Mr. Turney has a large and well stocked store, and through
integrity
and close attention to business, is building up a large and steadily
increasing
trade. Mr. Turney was married in Chicago, November 4, 1880,
to Miss
Flora P. Page, daughter of D. W. Page of the publishing house of
Culver, Page,
Hoyne & Co.”
In 1890 George sold his jewelry business and
moved to
Chicago to take a position as Western Sales representative for the Rome
Manufacturing Co., a manufacturer of nickel plated and polished copper
specialties located in Rome, New York. Shortly afterwards George and
Flora
divorced and in 1892 she married Oscar E. Cary.
An 1895 display advertisement in the
Metal Worker for
the Rome Mfg. Co. lists "GEO. W. TURNEY, Western Representative,
Tremont
House, Chicago."
While working in Chicago, Turney met his
soon to be second
wife and on February 22, 1905 married Elizabeth Deborah Blamer (b. 1877
to
Thomas and Edna [Davis] Blamer) in his fiancés hometown of
Independence,
Buchanan County, Iowa.
A new position awaited Turney in Rome, New
York, and at the
end of their honeymoon they moved to there and shortly thereafter their
union
was blessed with the birth of 2 daughters; Catherine (b.1906) and
Elizabeth
(aka Betty) (b.1916).
The following ad appeared in the September 1907
issue of The Commercial
Vehicle:
“Every truck builder in the country has at
one time or
another experienced difficulty in getting suitable component parts such
as he
would not be likely to construct in his own shop Several of the more
progressive manufacturers of parts and accessories have been quick to
see the
opportunities for sales expansion in the design of special commercial
vehicle
parts In the radiator line the Long Turney Mfg. Co. of Rome NY has made
a
careful study of the water cooling problem for heavy vehicles fitted
with
internal combustion engines and has brought out special vertical tube
truck
coolers One of these is illustrated herewith They are designed in
several
different shapes In their construction attention is given entirely to
efficiency
and durability and fancy ornamentation is not considered They are plain
and
strong The tubing is of the spiral type the tube of brass and the fin a
continuous copper spiral The water passages are ample and will not clog
up and
should the radiator be damaged by collision or otherwise it can be
repaired by
any good mechanic with a minimum of delay The radiator illustrated is
built for
trucks up to 4,000 pounds capacity.”
The firm's initial operations where
in McMahon
& Larkin's law offices, and following the failure of the Bingham
Harness
Co., Long-Turney moved into its factory which encompassed a handful of
small sheds and buildings located between the south side of the Erie
Canal and the north side of Canal Street, just east of South James St.
The Cycle and Automobile Trade Journal
included the
following announcement of the firm’s expansion in their September 1,
1908 issue:
“The Long-Turney Manufacturing Company,
Rome, N.Y., on
account of its rapidly increasing business in the manufacture of
automobile
radiators and supplies, will enlarge its plant by the erection of a two
story
addition, 50x150 feet. The ground floor will be concrete with concrete
walls 25
feet high.”
Shortly after Haselton’s June 15, 1908
passing,
Long-Turney’s directors ceased the firm’s partnership with Joseph B.
Long and
acquired the rights to manufacture a new flat helical wound tube fin
developed
in the Schenectady, New York laboratories of the General Electric Co.
On September 11, 1908 the firm was
reorganized as the Rome-Turney
Radiator Co. and shortly thereafter acquired the exclusive US rights to
manufacture a third more efficient type of radiator, the square
honeycomb (aka
cellular) system developed by engineers at Daimler Motoren Gesellschaft.
The Saturday, April 4, 1903 edition of the
Motor-Car Journal
contained a good description of the recently introduced ‘Mercedes
Radiator’:
“The Mercedes radiator is well
known to everyone
who knows anything about automobiles, and has become the subject of
controversy. It is, however, rapidly becoming a standard article of
commerce,
and no doubt in a short time no motor-car will be complete without a
radiator
made on the same principle or on similar lines. Everyone knows that the
new
products of the Cannstatt Daimler works are now by common consent
christened
after the Spanish christian name of M. Jellineck's daughter,
Mercedes—Mercedes
is the Spanish for Wednesday. The Mercedes radiator has,
however,
another name, and it is this other name which occupies my attention
to-day. It
is called the ‘nid d'abeilles.’ This has been erroneously
translated
into English as ‘bee-hive.’ I fear it is too late to stop the wrong
translation
from getting vulgarised. The French for ‘bee-hive’ is ‘ruche’ and
the
radiator resembles a ‘bee-hive’ just about as much as it resembles a
rabbit-hutch. ‘Nid d'abeilles’ literally translated, means
‘bees' nest,’ and is only used in connection with wild bees — a wasps'
nest is
also
called a ‘nid de gtiepes.’ If one takes a nest of wild
bees or
wasps, the nest consists, of course, of waxen cells in which honey,
pollen, or
larvae are lodged, and the radiator in question has somewhat the
appearance of
such a nest cut in two. The correct English translation of
‘nid d'abeilles’ in
this connection is therefore ‘honeycomb,’ and instead of talking about
‘bee-hive
radiators,’ which has no signification whatever, we should talk about
‘honeycomb
radiators.”
The Mercedes-style radiator proved most
popular with early
automobile and airplane manufacturers while the General
Electric-developed
helically wound fin tube radiator found favor with industrial end-users
who installed
them on crawlers, tractors, trucks and large stationary engines.
The firm's reorganization was covere in the
December 1908 issue of Metal Industry:
“The Long-Turney Manufacturing
Company has been
reorganized as the Rome Turney Radiator Company, Rome, N. Y. This
company is
allied with the Rome Brass & Copper Company. Extensive improvements
are
being made, including a new concrete and mill construction building 51
x 200
ft. in size, two stories high. The radiators and condensers made by
this
concern are extensively used by automobile manufacturers, and new uses
are
continually being found for them, particularly in connection with
search
lights, gasoline railway cars, etc. The company reports more than
enough orders
on hand to keep the factory busy for several months, hence the increase
in
manufacturing facilities noted above. A large part of the new building
will be
devoted to the manufacture of radiators for the new self-propelling
gasoline-electric passenger cars which the General Electric Company has
been
developing during the past two or three years, and to
making radiators for
use in search lights which have been ordered by the U. S. Government.
“The Rome Metal Company has about three
hundred men at work
and its volume of business is said to be increasing steadily.
“The presidency of the Rome Brass &
Copper Company,
Rome, N. Y., made vacant by the death of Jonathan Haselton last June
still
remains unfilled. It is reported that a new president will be elected
early in
1909, and that Barton Haselton, at present secretary and treasurer,
will retain
his present office, which carries with it the executive responsibility
and
active management of the company.
“The total ground space covered by the
plants of the Rome
Brass & Copper Company and its allied companies amounts to 277
acres. In
these plants a total of 2,500 people are employed, the annual pay-roll
amounting to about $1,000,000. This big industrial family includes,
besides the
parent company, the Rome Tube Company, Rome Metal Company, Rome Novelty
Company, Rome Tack & Nail Company, Rome Manufacturing Company, and
the
Rome-Turney Radiator Company.”
Letters in the Rome-Turney archives reveal
that William
Crapo Durant, the owner of Buick’s recently organized holding company,
General
Motors Corp., tried to get Rome-Turney to join GM during 1908-1909, but
Rome-Turney’s
directors were hesitant to become part of the automaker’s empire and
chose to
remain independent.
Joseph B. Long’s Chicago operations were
unaffected by the loss
of their Eastern relative, and in 1910 he relocated his expanding
operations to
a plant located in Detroit, Michigan (later joined by plants located in
Freemont, Ohio and Windsor, Ontario, Canada). Joseph
B. Long died
testate March 15, 1911.
The May 1, 1915 issue of Michigan
Manufacturer &
Financial Record included a brief description of Long Mfg.’s Detroit
operations:
“Radiator Design for Motor Trucks
“When account is taken of the high standing
of the
personality of the Company, the thorough organization of its sales,
office and
production departments, completeness of equipment and capacity of
plant,
perfection of product, and the high appreciation of all things as
expressed in
continuous enlargement of field and increase of output, there is but
one word
which epitomizes the elements that have entered into the upbuilding of
the Long
Manufacturing Company of Detroit, makers of
automobile radiators, and that one word is ‘Character.’ It
indelibly
stamps itself upon every radiator of the enormous number put out by
this
concern.
“Back in 1903 an Illinois corporation, under
the guidance
of J. B. Long, was producing radiators. The company at
that time
savored much of a one-man concern, and Mr. Long foreseeing
that Detroit was destined forever to be the automobile
center,
decided to establish his plant here, which he did in 1910, moving into
a plant now
housing a portion of the big Cadillac outfit, containing 32,000 feet of
floor
space. He continued doing business here until 1912 under a license
granted by
the State of Michigan. In July of that year the Company was organized
as a
Michigan corporation and steps were immediately taken to build the
present
pretentious plant at East Grand Boulevard, and upon its completion in
November,
business was continued there, the total floor space having been more
than
doubled.
“It seems to have always been a most
important factor in the
progress of this concern to anticipate not only the requirements of
individual
car producers, but the volume of business which might be expected as
well, for
the plant was equipped with complete thoroughness upon both a quality
and quantity
basis. Although growing rapidly, the capacity as providently arranged
has not
been reached.
“In speaking of the sales methods of the
firm. Mr. Dryden,
secretary-treasurer and manager of the Company, says:
“’We keep in closest possible touch with the
engineers of
the automobile concerns, and by so doing our engineering department has
been
able to anticipate and prepare for every new thing that has come out in
car
production. Our past experience in this line of special work has given
manufacturers entire confidence in our capability and we are often able
to make
suggestions and co-operate in methods retarded as advanced, in the
construction, not only of pleasure cars but of trucks and tractors as
well.’
“There are 24 up-to-the-minute departments
that, by
arrangement and equipment, work in such perfect conjunction with one
another
that production units, become a harmonious whole. In discussing their
perfected
system of cooling, Mr. Dryden further said:
“’We claim and can demonstrate decided
advantage on account
of our three special patented types of circulating tube construction,
in
addition to which we also use the well-known tube and plate
construction, and
with our arrangement of tube centers we have made it more efficient as
a
cooler, and built it better from a constructive standpoint than has to
our
knowledge been produced previously. Our own patents and the use of the
tube and
plate type give us a flexibility of resource in radiator manufacture
that
enables us to meet the requirements of any manufacturer as to service
in
cooling or design.’
“The Long Manufacturing Company is a large
employer of
highly trained labor. In the plant there is employed the most rigid
primary and
final inspection and no finished product leaves the factory without
subjection
to thorough tests.”
By this time Long Mfg. depended on seamless
tubing supplied
by steel mills operated by third parties. The onset of the First World
War caused
supply delays and Long’s directors decided to open their own Detroit
tube
redrawing mill. A 6,600 sq. ft. mill was constructed and the firm
entered
business in November, 1916 as the Wolverine Tube Company. Its business
grew so
successful that Long sold off Wolverine for a tidy profit and in
November of
1919 it new owner relocated the tube mill to larger quarters.
Coincidentally both Wolverine and
Rome-Turney (now Rofin)
survive today, manufacturing the same products - specialized tubing and
heat
exchangers.
Long Manufacturing’s radiator plant was
located at 2746-2768
East Grand Blvd., Detroit (sometimes listed as 2776-78 East Grand
Blvd.) and in
1923 established a clutch manufacturing subsidiary at 12435 Dequindre
St.,
Hamtramck. During 1929 the firm was purchased by Borg-Warner and after
the
Second World War its US operations consolidated at 12501 Dequindre St.,
Hamtramck.
Long eventually expanded its operations to 11 plants located in Canada,
Mexico
and the United States and relocated its headquarters to Oakville,
Ontario,
Canada selling its Hamtramck factory to the Chrysler Corp. who
continues to use
it as a warranty test center and warehouse.
In 1996 Long Mfg. was sold to auto parts
giant Eichlin &
Eichlin which two years later (1998) was acquired by the Dana Corp.
Today Dana’s
Long Mfg. Division is North America’s largest manufacturer of oil
coolers and
heat exchangers for the automotive industry.
Success did not escape Long’s former
operations in Rome, New
York which received numerous large orders from Buick, General Electric
and the
U.S. Government. During their heyday, Rome-Turney supplied all of the
radiators
used by Buffalo, New York’s Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Co. and all the
radiators used
on planes manufactured by the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Corp. of
Hammondsport, NY. During the First World War Rome-Turney was selected
by the US
Military to supply radiators for the Allies’ Liberty Truck program.
During the 1920s they manufactured the
massive radiators
used to cool the Maybach V-12 engines that powered the U.S. Navy's
rigid
airships: U.S.S. Shenandoah, U.S.S. Akron and U.S.S. Macon. The massive
eight-engined airships/flying aircraft carriers were constructed by the
Goodyear-Zeppelin Corp., a joint venture between the Luftschiffbau
Zeppelin and
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Corp. Coincidentally each ship carried
biplanes (F9C-2
Curtiss Sparrowhawk) that were also equipped with Rome-Turney radiators.
Other large customers included General
Electric Company,
Hurlburt Motor Truck Company, Sanford Motor Truck Company, Olds Motor
Works,
Caterpillar Tractors, C.L. Best Tractor Company, Lozier Motor Company,
Linn
Tractor Co., Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Corporation,
Frigidaire
Corporation and the Ford Motor Company.
George W. Turney received 3 US Patents
related to radiator
construction as follows:
US pat no. 1217537 – Method of Making
Radiator Tubes - Filed
Dec 6, 1915 - Issued Feb 27, 1917 George W. Turney , assigned to
Rome-Turney
Radiator Co., Rome, N.Y.
US pat no. 1225895 - Radiator for
Automobiles - Filed Mar
21, 1916 - Issued May 15, 1917 George W. Turney , assigned to
Rome-Turney
Radiator Co., Rome, N.Y.
US pat no. 1395618 Radiator-Tube and Method
Of Producing
Same - Filed Dec. 18, 1919 - Issued Nov. 1, 1921 George W. Turney ,
assigned to
Rome-Turney Radiator Co., Rome, N.Y.
The January 1, 1917 issue of the Horseless Age
included a small Rome-Turney item:
“Rome-Turney Radiators
“The Rome-Turney Radiator Company,
Rome, N.Y.,
manufactures radiators of tubular type with helically flanged seamless
tubing.
These radiators are especially suited for commercial vehicles on
account of
their sturdy construction and the company guarantees them for the life
of the
engine to which they are originally fitted. This guarantee is
unconditional
except for injuries caused by accident or freezing.”
The text from a display advertisement
included in the same
issue follows:
“The Rome-Turney Radiator Co. Guarantee on
Seamless Helical
Tube Cooling Sections has no string attached. When you install a
Helical Tube
Radiator on your truck. you have the certainty that the radiator will
make good
or we will. We probably won't have to-Rome-Turney Radiators have a
habit of making
good themselves. But if the cooling section develops leaks. we will
repair it
free. Helical Tube Cooling Sections are guaranteed for the LIFE OF THE
MOTOR!
“ROME-TURNEY RADIATOR CO. ROME, NEW YORK.“
The incredible popularity of the Model T
Ford resulted in a
burgeoning aftermarket parts business, and Rome-Turney took out
advertisements
hawking the firms’ Ford replacement radiators. The following ad
appeared in a
1917 issue of Cycle & Automobile Trade Journal:
“Rome-Turney Ford Radiator
“Rome-Turney Radiator Co., Rome NY
“The Rome-Turney Radiator is characterized
by its genuine
square tube honeycomb Mercedes construction and the use of thin special
alloy
brass made by a patented process. It is stated that its long life and
freedom
from internal leaks is testified to by the fact that in manufacture it
takes
the press operations and leaves the metal tree from strain. The solder
used is
made of new Straits tin and new lead and is subjected to a careful
analysis.
Other features are: Direct vertical water flow; heavy gage brass top
and bottom
tanks; heavy iron side brackets; seamless brass inlet connection;
seamless
brass overflow tube; malleable iron outlet connection; tinned and
riveted;
black enameled shell; nickeled filler column; large amount of radiating
surface, and high grade materials and workmanship.”
During the build-up to the First World War
Rome-Turney
employed as many as 400 men, but business fell off when many US
Government
contracts were canceled following the signing of the Armistice in late
1918.
By 1921 the firm was operating at a loss,
although they did
their best to keep their customers oblivious to the situation as
evidenced by
the following ‘business as usual’ announcement from the March 1921
issue of
Metal Industry:
“The directors of the Rome-Turney Radiator
Company elected
the following officers for the ensuing year: Dr. W.L. Kingsley,
president;
Barton Haselton, vice president; treasurer and general manager George
W.
Turney.”
The end of World War I caused a surplus of
used ex-military
trucks and airplanes, and numerous small manufacturers were forced out
of
business, a trend which presented large losses for Rome-Turney
Radiator,
prompting a mid-1921 takeover of the firm by the related Rome Hollow
Wire &
Tube Co., a subsidiary of the Rome Brass & Copper Co. (formerly
known as
the Rome Tube Co.), the September 1921 issue of Metal Industry
reporting:
“At a joint meeting of the directors of the
Rome Hollow Wire
& Tube Company and the Rome-Turney Radiator Company, held
on
Thursday afternoon, August 25, a deal was consummated whereby the Rome
Hollow
Wire & Tube Company purchased the entire plant and business of
the Rome-Turney Radiator Company, the directors of the latter
company
immediately resigning and the directors of the former company taking
charge.
The new directors of the radiator company are F. J. De Bisschop, Barton
Haselton, Hon. John D. McMahon, James A. Spargo and F. M. Shelley. The
retiring
officers of the Rome-Turney Radiator Company are Dr. W. L.
Kingsley,
president; Barton Haselton, vice-president; George W. Turney,
treasurer;
William L. Lynch, secretary, and Harry W. Gerwig, assistant secretary.
“In an interview George W. Turney said that
he is going to
California for his first vacation. He has been in active service 54
years without
relaxation or vacation. For many years day and night he has devoted
time and
thought to the manufacture of radiators, in the manufacture of which he
has
succeeded. He is still a very active man and although he appears as a
man of
about 50 years he is really 67 years old. He will be accompanied to
California
by Mrs. Turney and their two daughters, Catherine and Elizabeth. Mr.
Turney is
a stockholder in the Rome Brass & Copper and Rome Manufacturing
Companies.
He has no definite plans for the future, beyond taking a long vacation
in
California.”
The Personal Notes column of the June, 1922
issue of the SAE
Journal included the following:
“G.W. Turney has severed his connection with
the Rome-Turney
Radiator Co., Rome, NY, where he was treasurer and general manager. He
has not
announced his plans for the future.”
Little is known of Turney’s activities after
leaving the
firm bearing his name and he passed away on September 21, 1931 at the
age of
77.
(In 1929 Rome Brass & Copper Co. joined
a number of
related businesses to establish the Revere Copper and Brass Corp. During the 1930s Rome used one-tenth of the
copper ore mined in the United States, earning its nickname of ‘The
Copper
City’.)
The reorganized firm fared little better
than its
predecessor and by the start of 1922, the firm’s former secretary,
William L.
Lynch, offered to take over the still struggling firm.
William L. Lynch was born in Rome,
Oneida County, New
York on October 24, 1884 to John C. (b. 1850) and Margaret (b. 1854)
Lynch. The
senior Lynch was well-connected in Rome’s business circles and for many
years helped
handle the business affairs of Dr. W.J.P. Kingsley, one of Rome’s
leading
citizens. A short biography of Dr. Kinglsey from Frederick Simon Hills’
‘New
York State Men’ follows:
“WILLEY J. P. KINGSLEY
“Physician and surgeon, was born at
Frankfort, Herkimer
County, N. Y., July 9, 1824, son of Obadiah and Lovina
(Tucker) Kingsley. He was graduated from Whitestown Seminary,
studied
medicine with Drs. Coventry and Thomas at Utica, at the Geneva Medical
College
and the New York Medical College, being graduated from the latter in
1855.
Since 1856 he has carried on the practice of his profession
at Rome. For many years Dr. Kingsley has limited
his
practice to the treatment of cancer, chronic diseases and surgical
cases, and
has treated over forty thousand cases of cancer. He was elected Mayor
of Rome in March. 1895. Dr. Kingsley was one of the
incorporators of the Central New York Institution for Deaf Mutes in
1875, and
served as its vice-president until 1895, when he was elected president.
He has
been president of the Farmers' National Bank of Rome since
its
organization in 1875, is a former president of the Rome Iron
Works,
and is vice-president of the Rome Brass and Copper Company.
He married
Georgeanna M. Vogell, December 4. 1860. In 1901 Dr. and
Mrs. Kingsley erected a memorial chapel at Rome and
equipped the new gymnasium at Yale in memory of their deceased
son, Dr. George L. Kingsley. Dr.
W. L. Kingsley, another
son, is associated with his father in practice. Address 137 North James
Street, Rome.”
After graduation from the Rome Free Academy
in 1903 William
L. Lynch had planned on attending Medical School at Syracuse
University,
however his father was short on funds after putting another
son
through the American University at Rome, Italy, so he took a job at
Rome’s
Farmer's Bank where he hone his bookkeeping skills and in 1905 his
father
helped get him a job at Long-Turney Mfg., whose main financiers
included Dr.
Kingsley. From his initial position as bookkeeper, Lynch rose
through the
ranks, working in sales, and eventually to secretary and treasurer of
its
successor, Rome-Turney Radiator.
He held a substantial block of Rome-Turney
stock when he
left the firm in 1921 so it was in his best interest to return it to
profitability. Shortly thereafter he accomplished his goal, and by the
late
1920s held a controlling interest in the firm, remaining its president
until
his retirement in 1965.
By the mid-Twenties most large automobile
companies were
producing radiators in-house to cut costs so Rome-Turney was forced to
seek out
additional markets for its helical fin tubing. Coincidentally their
largest
customer would turn out to be General-Electric who had recently
embarked upon
the manufacture of industrial heat-exchange units that required copious
amounts
of the Rome manufacturer’s fin tubing.
The mid-thirties failure of Buffalo’s
Pierce-Arrow coincided
with the cessation of automotive radiator production in Rome, and for
the next
25 years no automobile radiators are known to have been constructed by
the
firm. However limited radiator production returned in the mid-1950s
when
automotive restorers contacted the firm hoping to either rebuild or
obtain
original replacements for their decades-old Rome-Turney radiators. As
the firm
retained some of the tooling needed to recreate them, they got back in
the
radiator business on a limited basis, advertising the firm’s radiators
in the
nation’s old-car publications such as Antique Automobile during the
late 1950s
and early 1960s.
In 1965, Lynch’s son, William Lynch
Jr. took over, with
the senior Lynch serving as consultant until his death in
1973. William
Lynch Jr. was born on January 16, 1932 and like his father
attended the Rome
Free Academy after which he attended and graduated from New
Milford,
Connecticut’s Canterbury School. He studied engineering at Notre
Dame and received
his MBA from Dartmouth’s Tuck School. He was only 33 when he
assumed
control of the family’s business in 1965. In 2004 William L. Lynch jr.
retired
and sold a controlling interest in the firm to his step-son, Ryan E.
Peach, who
reorganized it as Rofin LLC. http://rofinllc.com/
His mother, the former Ann Carol (Tarbania)
Peach, had married
William L. Lynch, Jr., on May 13, 1983, and inherited a controlling
interest in
the firm upon his passing on Wednesday, May 23, 2007.
Robert E. Peach - Ryan’s father, and
Ann’s first
husband – was the former president (1954-1968) chairman and chief
executive
officer (1968-1970) of Utica-based Mohawk. Airlines, Inc. They were
married on June 6, 1970 on Manhattan Island, a Thousand
Island Landmark
owned by Peach, shortly after his retirement.
(On April 20, 1971 Robert E. Peach was found
dead from a
self-inflicted gunshot wound, at his home in Clinton, New York. At the
time his wife Ann was 6 months pregnant
with Ryan, who was born on August 18, 1971.)
Ryan was 11 years old when his mother
married William L.
Lynch Jr., who raised him as his own. He eventually went to work at
Rome-Turney
and upon his step-father’s retirement , he was the logical choice to
head the
firm, Ryan becoming president and his mother, Ann Tarbania Peach Lynch,
executive vice-president.
Peach relocated the firm’s 11-employee
manufacturing
division to a plant in Clarks Mills, NY and relocated the firm’s
corporate
offices from 109 Canal St., to 106 W. Liberty St., Rome, NY.
Today Rofin manufactures helical fined
tubing and custom
heat exchangers. Most work is fabrication of various types of coolers —
hydrogen, air coolers, oil coolers, air compressor intercoolers and
aftercoolers.
© 2012 - Mark Theobald for
Coachbuilt.com with special thanks to Rick J. Hoke
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