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Wikipedia

Singer Corporation

Singer Corporation is an American manufacturer of consumer sewing machines, first established as I. M. Singer & Co. in 1851 by Isaac M. Singer with New York lawyer Edward C. Clark. Best known for its sewing machines, it was renamed Singer Manufacturing Company in 1865, then the Singer Company in 1963. It is based in La Vergne, Tennessee, near Nashville. Its first large factory for mass production was built in 1863 in Elizabeth, New Jersey.[1]

Singer Corporation
IndustryManufacturing
Founded1851 in New York City
Founders
HeadquartersLa Vergne, Tennessee, United States
ProductsSewing machine Upholstery
OwnerSVP Worldwide
Websitewww.singer.com
A Singer treadle sewing machine

History

 
A Singer 1851 sewing machine

Singer's original design was the first practical sewing machine for general domestic use. It incorporated the basic eye-pointed needle and lock stitch, developed by Elias Howe, who won a patent-infringement suit against Singer in 1854.

 
Singer's patent model for his sewing machine

Singer obtained patent no. 8294 in August 1851 for an improved sewing machine that included a circular feed wheel, thread controller, and power transmitted by gear wheels and shafting.[2]

Singer consolidated enough patents in the field to enable him to engage in mass production, and by 1860 his company was the largest manufacturer of sewing machines in the world. In 1885 Singer produced its first "vibrating shuttle" sewing machine, an improvement over contemporary transverse shuttle designs (see bobbin drivers). The Singer company began to market its machines internationally in 1855 and won first prize at the Paris World's Fair that year. The company demonstrated the first workable electric sewing machine in 1910. Singer was also a marketing innovator and a pioneer in promoting the use of installment payment plans.

Early sales figures

Year 1853 1859 1867 1871 1873 1876
Units 810 10,953 43,053 181,260 232,444 262,316
Source:[3]
 
Old Singer logo

By 1876, Singer was claiming cumulative sales of two million sewing machines and had put the two millionth machine on display in Philadelphia.[4]

Singer in Scotland

 
Workers leaving Singer sewing machine factory on Clydebank

In 1867, the Singer Company decided that the demand for their sewing machines in the United Kingdom was sufficiently high to open a local factory in Glasgow on John Street. The Vice President of Singer, George Ross McKenzie selected Glasgow because of its iron making industries, cheap labour, and shipping capabilities.[5] Demand for sewing machines outstripped production at the new plant and by 1873, a new larger factory was completed on James Street, Bridgeton. By that point, Singer employed over 2,000 people in Scotland, but they still could not produce enough machines.

In 1882, McKenzie, by then President-elect of the Singer Manufacturing Company, undertook the ground breaking ceremony on 46 acres (19 ha) of farmland at Kilbowie, Clydebank. Originally, two main buildings were constructed, each 800-foot (240 m) long, 50-foot (15 m) wide and three storeys high. These were connected by three wings. Built above the middle wing was a 200-foot (61 m) tall clock tower with the "Singer" name clearly displayed for all to see for miles around. A total of 2.75 miles (4.43 km) of railway lines were laid throughout the factory to connect the different departments such as the boiler room, foundry, shipping and the lines to main railway stations. Sir Robert McAlpine was the building contractor and the factory was designed to be fire proof with water sprinklers, making it the most modern factory in Europe at that time.[6]

With nearly a million square feet of space and almost 7,000 employees, it was possible to produce on average 13,000 machines a week, making it the largest sewing machine factory in the world. The Clydebank factory was so productive that in 1905, the U.S. Singer Company set up and registered the Singer Manufacturing Company Ltd. in the United Kingdom. Demand continued to exceed production, so each building was extended upwards to 6 storeys high. A railway station with the company name was established in 1907 with connections to adjoining towns and central Glasgow to assist in transporting the workforce to the facility. Increased productivity came from 'scientific management' techniques which increased workloads whilst keeping salary overheads low, and in 1911, a mass walk out of 10,000 workers, the 'Singer Strike',[7] took place in support of twelve women polishers, who had seen three staff dismissed, but the workload remained the same with no extra pay.[8] It was significant in its recognition of the rights of women workers[9] and 'collective bargaining' and predated the labour movement known as 'Red Clydeside'.[10][11][12] A centenary film was made by the BBC about the female workers who stood up to the American management.[13]

In the First World War, sewing machine production gave way to munitions. The Singer Clydebank factory received over 5000 government contracts, and made 303 million artillery shells, shell components, fuses, and aeroplane parts, as well as grenades, rifle parts, and 361,000 horseshoes. Its labour force of 14,000 was about 70% female at war's end.[14]

From its opening in 1884 until 1943, the Kilbowie factory produced approximately 36,000,000 sewing machines. Singer was the world leader and sold more machines than all the other makers added together. In 1913, the factory shipped 1.3 million machines. The late 1950s and 1960s saw a period of significant change at the Clydebank factory. In 1958, Singer reduced production at their main American plant and transferred 40% of this production to the Clydebank factory in a bid to reduce costs. Between 1961 and 1964, the Clydebank factory underwent a £4 million modernization program which saw the Clydebank factory cease the production of cast iron machines and focus on the production of aluminium machines for western markets. As part of this modernisation programme, the famous Singer Clock was demolished in 1963. At the height of its productiveness in the mid-1960s, Singer employed over 16,000 workers but by the end of that decade, compulsory redundancies were taking place and 10 years later the workforce was down to 5,000. Financial problems and lack of orders forced the world's largest sewing machine factory to close in June 1980, bringing to an end over 100 years of sewing machine production in Scotland. The complex of buildings was demolished in 1998.[15]

An archive about the factory, the strike and the history of its business in Scotland, is regarded as a recognised collection of national significance by Museums Galleries Scotland.[16]

 
Painted Singer Sewing sign in Kingston, New York
 
A Singer sewing machine with electric retrofit

Marketing

 
Advertising photograph by Paolo Monti, Milan 1963

The Singer sewing machine was the first complex standardized technology to be mass marketed. It was not the first sewing machine, and its patent in 1851 led to a patent battle with Elias Howe, inventor of the lockstitch machine. This eventually resulted in a patent sharing accord among the major firms.[17] Marketing strategies included focusing on the manufacturing industry,[18] gender identity,[19] credit plans,[20] and "hire purchases."[17]

Singer's marketing emphasized the role of women and their relationship to the home, evoking ideals of virtue, modesty, and diligence.[21] Though the sewing machine represented liberation from arduous hand sewing, it chiefly benefited those sewing for their families and themselves. Tradespeople relying on sewing as a livelihood still suffered from poor wages, which dropped further in response to the time savings gained by machine sewing.[17] Singer offered credit purchases and rent-to-own arrangements, allowing people to rent a machine with the rental payments applied to the eventual purchase of the machine,[17] and sold globally through the use of direct-sales door-to-door canvassers to demonstrate and sell the machines.[22]

In the late 60s/early 70s, Singer sponsored rock and roll concerts to help advertise a variety of products including a line of Singer record players. The 1971 concert series was broadcast by WPLJ New York from the A&R Recording Studios and included the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, Seatrain, Procol Harum, Incredible String Band, Mother Earth, and Delaney & Bonnie and Friends.[23] In 1968, Singer sponsored "Singer Presents ... Elvis", commonly referred to as the '68 Comeback Special.

World War II

During World War II, the company suspended sewing machine production to take on government contracts for weapons manufacturing. Factories in the United States supplied the American forces with Norden bomb sights and M1 Carbine rifle receivers, while factories in Germany provided their armed forces with weapons.[24]

In 1939, the company was given a production study by the government to draw plans and develop standard raw material sizes for building M1911A1 pistols. The following April 17, Singer was given an educational order of 500 units with serial numbers S800001 – S800500. The educational order was a program set up by the Ordnance Board in the U.S. to teach companies without gun-making experience to manufacture weapons.

Singer delivered 500 units to the U.S. government. Although Singer was unable to produce 100 guns a day, which the government contract required, the War Department was impressed with the quality of their pistols and asked the company to produce navigation and targeting equipment components.[25] The pistol tooling and manufacturing machines were transferred to Remington Rand whilst some went to the Ithaca Gun Company. Approximately 1.75 million 1911A1 pistols were produced during World War II, making original Singer pistols relatively rare and collectable.[26] In 2017, one sold at auction for $414,000.[25]

In December 1940, Singer won a contract to produce the M5 Antiaircraft Director, a version of the UK-designed Kerrison Predictor. The US Army had previously adopted the M7 Computing Sight for their 37 mm gun M1 anti-aircraft guns, but the gun proved temperamental and Sperry Corporation was too busy producing other systems to build the required number of M7's. After testing in September 1940, the Army accepted the Kerrison as the M5, and later, the Bofors 40 mm gun in place of the M1.[27]

Post-war

Singer resumed developing sewing machines in 1946.[28] After the not so well received Singer 206k, a first attempt in zig-zag machines, starting production in 1936, They introduced one of their most popular, highest-quality and fully-optioned machines in 1957, the 401 Slant-o-Matic. 2011 marked their 160th anniversary. Currently, they manufacture computerized, heavy duty, embroidery, quilting, serging, and mechanical sewing machines.[29]

In 2017, they launched their new Singer Sewing Assistant App.[30]

Diversification

 
Singer in Malta

In the 1960s, the company diversified, acquiring the Friden calculator company in 1965 and General Precision Equipment Corporation in 1968. Friden became Singer Business Machines which produced the Singer System 10.[31] GPE included Librascope, The Kearfott Company, Inc, and Link Flight Simulation. In 1968 also, Singer bought out GPS Systems and added it to the Link Simulations Systems Division (LSSD). This unit produced nuclear power plant control room simulators in Silver Spring, Maryland: Tech Road building for Boiling Water Reactor (BWR), Parkway building for Pressurized Water Reactor (PWR) and later moved to Broken Land Parkway in Columbia, Maryland while flight simulators were produced in Binghamton, New York.

By 1971 Singer was also producing portable/home audio/visual equipment as evidenced by the Singer-branded record and cassette tape players and film-strip viewers that can be found on e.g., eBay. In order to support this venture, Singer sponsored concerts such as the 1971 A&R Studio concerts on WPLJ-New York mentioned above.

For several years in the 1970s, Singer set up a national sales force for CAT phototypesetting machines (of UNIX troff fame) made by another Massachusetts company, Graphic Systems Inc.[32] This division was purchased by Wang Laboratories in 1978.

In 1987, corporate raider Paul Bilzerian made a "greenmail" run at Singer, and ended up owning the company when no "White Knight" rescuer appeared. To recover his money, Bilzerian sold off parts of the company. Kearfott was split, the Kearfott Guidance & Navigation Corporation was sold to the Astronautics Corporation of America in 1988 and the Electronic Systems Division was purchased the Plessey Company in 1988 and renamed Plessey Electronic Systems (and then acquired by GEC-Marconi in 1990, renamed GEC-Marconi Electronic Systems, and later incorporated into BAE Systems). The four Link divisions developing and supporting industrial and flight simulation were sold to Canadian Avionics Electronics (CAE) and became CAE-Link. The nuclear power simulator division became S3 Technologies, and later GSE Systems, and relocated to Eldersburg, MD. The Sewing Machine Division was sold in 1989 to Semi-Tech Microelectronics, a publicly traded Toronto-based company.[33]

20th century

 
Woman with Singer sewing machine in East Timor (2017)

Sales and profits grew until the 1940s. The market was affected in several ways. The USA market matured after WWII. Japanese manufacturers ate into the market with zig-zag sewing machines.[34] Under the leadership of Donald P. Kircher, Singer diversified into markets such as office equipment, defense, and aerospace. Revenue of which 90% of revenue from sewing machines was reduced to 35% after diversification.

In 1978 Singer moved its HQ from Rockefeller Plaza to Stamford, Conn. This relocation moved 430 jobs to the new location.[35]

During the 1980s Singer sewing machine markets were being hit with Japanese machines and European brands including Bernina, Pfaff, and Viking. In 1986, the original Singer company spun off its sewing machine business under the name SSMC. In 1989 Semi-Tech Global purchased SSMC renaming SSMC back to Singer.[36] Semi-Tech Global incorporated Singer into Singer N.V. based in Netherlands Antilles owned by the Hong Kong holding company.

Singer N.V. filed bankruptcy in 1999 and was acquired by Kohlberg & Company.[37] In 1997, Singer (Singer N.V.) US operations moved its consumer products to LaVergne, Tennessee. This location also served its wholesale distribution of sewing machines and parts.[37] In 2006 The parent company of Singer - Kohlberg & Company, acquired Husqvarna and Pfaff brands. This merged the three brands into the current company the SVP Group.[38] Its main competitors are Baby Lock, Bernina, Brother, Janome, Juki and Aisin Seiki.

 
The tower of the former Singer Building in Manhattan, the tallest in the world at the time of its construction
 
Singer House in Saint Petersburg, Russia

Singer was heavily involved in Manhattan real estate in the 1800s through Edward C. Clark, a founder of the company. Clark had built The Dakota apartments and other Manhattan buildings in the 1880s. In 1900, the Singer company retained Ernest Flagg to build a 12-story loft building at Broadway and Prince Street in Lower Manhattan. The building is now considered architecturally notable, and it has been restored.[39]

The 47-story Singer Building, completed in 1908, was also designed by Flagg, who designed two landmark residences for Bourne. Constructed during Bourne's tenure, the Singer Building (demolished in 1968) was then the tallest building in the world and was the tallest building to be intentionally demolished until the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center were destroyed in the September 11 attacks.[40]

At their Clydebank factory, Singer built a 200 feet (61 m) clock tower, which stood over the central wing and had the reputation of being the largest four-faced clock in the world. Each face weighed five tons, and it took four men fifteen minutes twice a week to keep it wound.[41] The tower was demolished in 1963,17 years before the factory closed in 1980 and is now the site of Clydebank Business Park. Singer railway station, built to serve the factory, is only one of two railway stations in the UK, named after a factory, and is still in operation today.

The famous Singer House, designed by architect Pavel Suzor, was built in 1902–1904 at Nevsky Prospekt in Saint Petersburg as headquarters of the Russian branch of the company. This modern style building (situated just opposite the Kazan Cathedral) is officially recognized as an object of Russian historical-cultural heritage.

In 2018, a large factory fire destroyed a Singer distribution office and warehouse in Seven Hills, Sydney. Singer had manufactured sewing machines in Australia at a purpose-built plant in the western Sydney suburb of Penrith, from 1959 until 1967.

List of company presidents

Popular domestic Singer sewing machines

See also

References

  1. ^ Cunningham, John T. (2004). Ellis Island: Immigration's Shining Center. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-2428-3.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on March 28, 2010.
  3. ^ . Machine-History.Com. Archived from the original on March 28, 2010. Retrieved September 3, 2012.
  4. ^ Fort Moultrie Centennial, Part II. Charleston: Walker, Evans & Cogswell. 1876. p. 29. Retrieved September 22, 2014.
  5. ^ Hounshell, David (1984). From the American System to Mass Production, 1800-1932: The Development of Manufacturing Technology in the United States. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 93–94. ISBN 9780801831584.
  6. ^ (PDF). Sir Robert McAlpine. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 8, 2016. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
  7. ^ "Red Clydeside: The Singer strike 1911". gdl.cdlr.strath.ac.uk. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  8. ^ "The Strike at Singer's by John Maclean 1911". marxists.org. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  9. ^ "The contribution of women in the Singer factory strike of 1911". The contribution of women in the Singer factory strike of 1911. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  10. ^ "Singer Sewing Machine Strike". International Sewing Machine Collectors Society. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  11. ^ "BBC - Scotland's History - Singer Sewing Factory strike". BBC. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  12. ^ The Singer strike Clydebank, 1911. Ishbel Ballantine, Glasgow Labour History Workshop, Clydebank District Library. [Clydebank]: Clydebank District Library. 1989. ISBN 0-906938-07-4. OCLC 22625271.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  13. ^ "Exclusive pics of 1911 shoot: Singer Factory Strike". Hopscotch Films | TV & Film Production Company. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  14. ^ Robert Bruce Davies, Peacefully working to conquer the world (Arno Press, 1976) p. 170
  15. ^ "Singer Sewing Machine Factory Kilbowie, Clydebank".
  16. ^ "Singer". west-dunbarton.gov.uk. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  17. ^ a b c d Joan Perkin, "Sewing Machines: Liberation or Drudgery for Women?" History Today 52 (Dec. 2002).
  18. ^ Andrew Godley "Selling the Sewing Machine Around the World: Singers International Marketing Strategies, 1850-1920." Enterprise and Society (June 2007) 7 281.
  19. ^ Judith G. Coffin, "Credit, Consumption, and Images of Women's Desires: Selling the Sewing Machine in Late Nineteenth-Century France." Historical Studies (Spring, 1994) 18 746-750.
  20. ^ Judith G. Coffin, "Credit, Consumption, and Images of Women's Desires: Selling the Sewing Machine in Late Nineteenth-Century France." Historical Studies (Spring, 1994) 18 752
  21. ^ Judith G. Coffin, "Credit, Consumption, and Images of Women's Desires: Selling the Sewing Machine in Late Nineteenth-Century France." Historical Studies (Spring, 1994) 18 746-752.
  22. ^ Andrew Godley "Selling the Sewing Machine Around the World: Singers International Marketing Strategies, 1850-1920." Enterprise and Society (June 2007) 7 269-281.
  23. ^ "Delaney & Bonnie with Gregg Allman, Duane Allman, and King Curtis live at A&R Studios on 7/22/71". YouTube.
  24. ^ Sanders, Richard Robert S. Clark (1877-1956), Press for Conversion! magazine, Issue 53, "Facing the Corporate Roots of American Fascism," March 2004. Published by the Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade.
  25. ^ a b "When the Singer Sewing Machine Company Built the Best .45 Pistol Ever Made". Popular Mechanics. November 2, 2021. Retrieved November 25, 2022.
  26. ^ Karash, Karl (2002). "Singer Manufacturing Co". coolgunsite.com. Moore, Ty. Retrieved April 15, 2019.
  27. ^ Mindell, David A. (April 1995). "Anti-aircraft fire control and the development of integrated systems at Sperry, 1925-40". IEEE Control Systems Magazine. 15 (2): 108–113. doi:10.1109/37.375318. ISSN 1066-033X.
  28. ^ "The Singer Brand History - 160+ Years of Sewing | Singer.com". singer.com. Retrieved October 20, 2018.
  29. ^ "Machines | Singer.com". singer.com. Retrieved October 20, 2018.
  30. ^ "SINGER Sewing Assistant App for iPhone & Android | Singer.com". singer.com. Retrieved October 20, 2018.
  31. ^ "A New Lease of Life for Singer's System 10". The Sydney Morning Herald. September 18, 1979. p. 27. Retrieved June 3, 2012.
  32. ^ "Old Phototypesetter Tales". Haagens.com.
  33. ^ Miller, Matthew; Clifford, Mark L.; Zegel, Susan (August 5, 2002). . Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on August 6, 2002. Retrieved March 25, 2007.
  34. ^ https://www.company-historie.com/The-Singer-Company-NV-Company-History.html[bare URL]
  35. ^ Sterba, James P. (June 14, 1978). "Singer Co. Is Moving to. Stamford to Surprise of New York Officials". The New York Times.
  36. ^ "The wrecking of Singer". Forbes.
  37. ^ a b "Singer sewing company to be sold to Kohlberg".
  38. ^ . Archived from the original on November 27, 2020. Retrieved July 20, 2020.
  39. ^ Gray, Christopher (June 29, 1997). "Style Standard for Early Steel-Framed Skyscraper". The New York Times. p. 7. Retrieved August 1, 2010.
  40. ^ "New York Architecture Images- HOME". nyc-architecture.com.
  41. ^ "Singer Clydebank history on West Dunbarton Council website".
  42. ^ . Time Magazine. July 10, 1989. Archived from the original on December 2, 2008. Retrieved May 1, 2007.
  43. ^ Daniel Hilken & Albert Wong (July 1, 2005). "Semi-Tech's Ting jailed six years". The Standard (Hong Kong). Retrieved August 15, 2010.

Further reading

  • Brandon, Ruth. A Capitalist Romance: Singer and the Sewing Machine (Lippincott, 1977).
  • Davies, Robert Bruce. Peacefully Working to Conquer the World: Singer Sewing Machines in Foreign Markets, 1854–1920 (Arno Press, 1976).
  • Godley, Andrew. "The Global Diffusion of the Sewing Machine, 1850–1914". Research in Economic History 20#1 (2001): 1–46.
  • Godley, Andrew. "Selling the Sewing Machine Around the World: Singer's International Marketing Strategies, 1850–1920", Enterprise & Society (2006) 7#2 pp. 266–314.
  • Godley, Andrew. "Singer in Britain: the diffusion of sewing machine technology and its impact on the clothing industry in the United Kingdom, 1860–1905". Textile History 27.1 (1996): 59–76.
  • Jack, Andrew B. "The channels of distribution for an innovation: The sewing-machine industry in America, 1860–1865". Explorations in Economic History 9.3 (1957): 113.
  • Weber, Nicholas Fox. The Clarks of Cooperstown: Their Singer Sewing Machine Fortune, Their Great and Influential Art Collections, Their Forty-year Feud (Alfred A. Knopf, 2007).
  • Wickramasinghe, Nira. "Following the Singer Sewing Machine: Fashioning a Market in a British Crown Colony," in Metallic Modern: Everyday Machines in Colonial Sri Lanka. (Berghahn Books, 2014) pp. 16–40. JSTOR j.ctt9qd0gq.6.

External links

singer, corporation, american, manufacturer, consumer, sewing, machines, first, established, singer, 1851, isaac, singer, with, york, lawyer, edward, clark, best, known, sewing, machines, renamed, singer, manufacturing, company, 1865, then, singer, company, 19. Singer Corporation is an American manufacturer of consumer sewing machines first established as I M Singer amp Co in 1851 by Isaac M Singer with New York lawyer Edward C Clark Best known for its sewing machines it was renamed Singer Manufacturing Company in 1865 then the Singer Company in 1963 It is based in La Vergne Tennessee near Nashville Its first large factory for mass production was built in 1863 in Elizabeth New Jersey 1 Singer CorporationIndustryManufacturingFounded1851 in New York CityFoundersIsaac M SingerEdward C ClarkHeadquartersLa Vergne Tennessee United StatesProductsSewing machine UpholsteryOwnerSVP WorldwideWebsitewww wbr singer wbr comA Singer treadle sewing machine Contents 1 History 1 1 Early sales figures 1 2 Singer in Scotland 1 3 Marketing 1 4 World War II 1 5 Post war 1 6 Diversification 1 7 20th century 2 List of company presidents 3 Popular domestic Singer sewing machines 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory Edit A Singer 1851 sewing machineSinger s original design was the first practical sewing machine for general domestic use It incorporated the basic eye pointed needle and lock stitch developed by Elias Howe who won a patent infringement suit against Singer in 1854 Singer s patent model for his sewing machineSinger obtained patent no 8294 in August 1851 for an improved sewing machine that included a circular feed wheel thread controller and power transmitted by gear wheels and shafting 2 Singer consolidated enough patents in the field to enable him to engage in mass production and by 1860 his company was the largest manufacturer of sewing machines in the world In 1885 Singer produced its first vibrating shuttle sewing machine an improvement over contemporary transverse shuttle designs see bobbin drivers The Singer company began to market its machines internationally in 1855 and won first prize at the Paris World s Fair that year The company demonstrated the first workable electric sewing machine in 1910 Singer was also a marketing innovator and a pioneer in promoting the use of installment payment plans Early sales figures Edit Year 1853 1859 1867 1871 1873 1876Units 810 10 953 43 053 181 260 232 444 262 316Source 3 Old Singer logoBy 1876 Singer was claiming cumulative sales of two million sewing machines and had put the two millionth machine on display in Philadelphia 4 Singer in Scotland Edit Workers leaving Singer sewing machine factory on ClydebankIn 1867 the Singer Company decided that the demand for their sewing machines in the United Kingdom was sufficiently high to open a local factory in Glasgow on John Street The Vice President of Singer George Ross McKenzie selected Glasgow because of its iron making industries cheap labour and shipping capabilities 5 Demand for sewing machines outstripped production at the new plant and by 1873 a new larger factory was completed on James Street Bridgeton By that point Singer employed over 2 000 people in Scotland but they still could not produce enough machines In 1882 McKenzie by then President elect of the Singer Manufacturing Company undertook the ground breaking ceremony on 46 acres 19 ha of farmland at Kilbowie Clydebank Originally two main buildings were constructed each 800 foot 240 m long 50 foot 15 m wide and three storeys high These were connected by three wings Built above the middle wing was a 200 foot 61 m tall clock tower with the Singer name clearly displayed for all to see for miles around A total of 2 75 miles 4 43 km of railway lines were laid throughout the factory to connect the different departments such as the boiler room foundry shipping and the lines to main railway stations Sir Robert McAlpine was the building contractor and the factory was designed to be fire proof with water sprinklers making it the most modern factory in Europe at that time 6 With nearly a million square feet of space and almost 7 000 employees it was possible to produce on average 13 000 machines a week making it the largest sewing machine factory in the world The Clydebank factory was so productive that in 1905 the U S Singer Company set up and registered the Singer Manufacturing Company Ltd in the United Kingdom Demand continued to exceed production so each building was extended upwards to 6 storeys high A railway station with the company name was established in 1907 with connections to adjoining towns and central Glasgow to assist in transporting the workforce to the facility Increased productivity came from scientific management techniques which increased workloads whilst keeping salary overheads low and in 1911 a mass walk out of 10 000 workers the Singer Strike 7 took place in support of twelve women polishers who had seen three staff dismissed but the workload remained the same with no extra pay 8 It was significant in its recognition of the rights of women workers 9 and collective bargaining and predated the labour movement known as Red Clydeside 10 11 12 A centenary film was made by the BBC about the female workers who stood up to the American management 13 In the First World War sewing machine production gave way to munitions The Singer Clydebank factory received over 5000 government contracts and made 303 million artillery shells shell components fuses and aeroplane parts as well as grenades rifle parts and 361 000 horseshoes Its labour force of 14 000 was about 70 female at war s end 14 From its opening in 1884 until 1943 the Kilbowie factory produced approximately 36 000 000 sewing machines Singer was the world leader and sold more machines than all the other makers added together In 1913 the factory shipped 1 3 million machines The late 1950s and 1960s saw a period of significant change at the Clydebank factory In 1958 Singer reduced production at their main American plant and transferred 40 of this production to the Clydebank factory in a bid to reduce costs Between 1961 and 1964 the Clydebank factory underwent a 4 million modernization program which saw the Clydebank factory cease the production of cast iron machines and focus on the production of aluminium machines for western markets As part of this modernisation programme the famous Singer Clock was demolished in 1963 At the height of its productiveness in the mid 1960s Singer employed over 16 000 workers but by the end of that decade compulsory redundancies were taking place and 10 years later the workforce was down to 5 000 Financial problems and lack of orders forced the world s largest sewing machine factory to close in June 1980 bringing to an end over 100 years of sewing machine production in Scotland The complex of buildings was demolished in 1998 15 An archive about the factory the strike and the history of its business in Scotland is regarded as a recognised collection of national significance by Museums Galleries Scotland 16 Painted Singer Sewing sign in Kingston New York A Singer sewing machine with electric retrofitMarketing Edit Advertising photograph by Paolo Monti Milan 1963The Singer sewing machine was the first complex standardized technology to be mass marketed It was not the first sewing machine and its patent in 1851 led to a patent battle with Elias Howe inventor of the lockstitch machine This eventually resulted in a patent sharing accord among the major firms 17 Marketing strategies included focusing on the manufacturing industry 18 gender identity 19 credit plans 20 and hire purchases 17 Singer s marketing emphasized the role of women and their relationship to the home evoking ideals of virtue modesty and diligence 21 Though the sewing machine represented liberation from arduous hand sewing it chiefly benefited those sewing for their families and themselves Tradespeople relying on sewing as a livelihood still suffered from poor wages which dropped further in response to the time savings gained by machine sewing 17 Singer offered credit purchases and rent to own arrangements allowing people to rent a machine with the rental payments applied to the eventual purchase of the machine 17 and sold globally through the use of direct sales door to door canvassers to demonstrate and sell the machines 22 In the late 60s early 70s Singer sponsored rock and roll concerts to help advertise a variety of products including a line of Singer record players The 1971 concert series was broadcast by WPLJ New York from the A amp R Recording Studios and included the Paul Butterfield Blues Band Seatrain Procol Harum Incredible String Band Mother Earth and Delaney amp Bonnie and Friends 23 In 1968 Singer sponsored Singer Presents Elvis commonly referred to as the 68 Comeback Special World War II Edit During World War II the company suspended sewing machine production to take on government contracts for weapons manufacturing Factories in the United States supplied the American forces with Norden bomb sights and M1 Carbine rifle receivers while factories in Germany provided their armed forces with weapons 24 In 1939 the company was given a production study by the government to draw plans and develop standard raw material sizes for building M1911A1 pistols The following April 17 Singer was given an educational order of 500 units with serial numbers S800001 S800500 The educational order was a program set up by the Ordnance Board in the U S to teach companies without gun making experience to manufacture weapons Singer delivered 500 units to the U S government Although Singer was unable to produce 100 guns a day which the government contract required the War Department was impressed with the quality of their pistols and asked the company to produce navigation and targeting equipment components 25 The pistol tooling and manufacturing machines were transferred to Remington Rand whilst some went to the Ithaca Gun Company Approximately 1 75 million 1911A1 pistols were produced during World War II making original Singer pistols relatively rare and collectable 26 In 2017 one sold at auction for 414 000 25 In December 1940 Singer won a contract to produce the M5 Antiaircraft Director a version of the UK designed Kerrison Predictor The US Army had previously adopted the M7 Computing Sight for their 37 mm gun M1 anti aircraft guns but the gun proved temperamental and Sperry Corporation was too busy producing other systems to build the required number of M7 s After testing in September 1940 the Army accepted the Kerrison as the M5 and later the Bofors 40 mm gun in place of the M1 27 Post war Edit Singer resumed developing sewing machines in 1946 28 After the not so well received Singer 206k a first attempt in zig zag machines starting production in 1936 They introduced one of their most popular highest quality and fully optioned machines in 1957 the 401 Slant o Matic 2011 marked their 160th anniversary Currently they manufacture computerized heavy duty embroidery quilting serging and mechanical sewing machines 29 In 2017 they launched their new Singer Sewing Assistant App 30 Diversification Edit Singer in MaltaIn the 1960s the company diversified acquiring the Friden calculator company in 1965 and General Precision Equipment Corporation in 1968 Friden became Singer Business Machines which produced the Singer System 10 31 GPE included Librascope The Kearfott Company Inc and Link Flight Simulation In 1968 also Singer bought out GPS Systems and added it to the Link Simulations Systems Division LSSD This unit produced nuclear power plant control room simulators in Silver Spring Maryland Tech Road building for Boiling Water Reactor BWR Parkway building for Pressurized Water Reactor PWR and later moved to Broken Land Parkway in Columbia Maryland while flight simulators were produced in Binghamton New York By 1971 Singer was also producing portable home audio visual equipment as evidenced by the Singer branded record and cassette tape players and film strip viewers that can be found on e g eBay In order to support this venture Singer sponsored concerts such as the 1971 A amp R Studio concerts on WPLJ New York mentioned above For several years in the 1970s Singer set up a national sales force for CAT phototypesetting machines of UNIX troff fame made by another Massachusetts company Graphic Systems Inc 32 This division was purchased by Wang Laboratories in 1978 In 1987 corporate raider Paul Bilzerian made a greenmail run at Singer and ended up owning the company when no White Knight rescuer appeared To recover his money Bilzerian sold off parts of the company Kearfott was split the Kearfott Guidance amp Navigation Corporation was sold to the Astronautics Corporation of America in 1988 and the Electronic Systems Division was purchased the Plessey Company in 1988 and renamed Plessey Electronic Systems and then acquired by GEC Marconi in 1990 renamed GEC Marconi Electronic Systems and later incorporated into BAE Systems The four Link divisions developing and supporting industrial and flight simulation were sold to Canadian Avionics Electronics CAE and became CAE Link The nuclear power simulator division became S3 Technologies and later GSE Systems and relocated to Eldersburg MD The Sewing Machine Division was sold in 1989 to Semi Tech Microelectronics a publicly traded Toronto based company 33 20th century Edit Woman with Singer sewing machine in East Timor 2017 Sales and profits grew until the 1940s The market was affected in several ways The USA market matured after WWII Japanese manufacturers ate into the market with zig zag sewing machines 34 Under the leadership of Donald P Kircher Singer diversified into markets such as office equipment defense and aerospace Revenue of which 90 of revenue from sewing machines was reduced to 35 after diversification In 1978 Singer moved its HQ from Rockefeller Plaza to Stamford Conn This relocation moved 430 jobs to the new location 35 During the 1980s Singer sewing machine markets were being hit with Japanese machines and European brands including Bernina Pfaff and Viking In 1986 the original Singer company spun off its sewing machine business under the name SSMC In 1989 Semi Tech Global purchased SSMC renaming SSMC back to Singer 36 Semi Tech Global incorporated Singer into Singer N V based in Netherlands Antilles owned by the Hong Kong holding company Singer N V filed bankruptcy in 1999 and was acquired by Kohlberg amp Company 37 In 1997 Singer Singer N V US operations moved its consumer products to LaVergne Tennessee This location also served its wholesale distribution of sewing machines and parts 37 In 2006 The parent company of Singer Kohlberg amp Company acquired Husqvarna and Pfaff brands This merged the three brands into the current company the SVP Group 38 Its main competitors are Baby Lock Bernina Brother Janome Juki and Aisin Seiki The tower of the former Singer Building in Manhattan the tallest in the world at the time of its construction Singer House in Saint Petersburg RussiaSinger was heavily involved in Manhattan real estate in the 1800s through Edward C Clark a founder of the company Clark had built The Dakota apartments and other Manhattan buildings in the 1880s In 1900 the Singer company retained Ernest Flagg to build a 12 story loft building at Broadway and Prince Street in Lower Manhattan The building is now considered architecturally notable and it has been restored 39 The 47 story Singer Building completed in 1908 was also designed by Flagg who designed two landmark residences for Bourne Constructed during Bourne s tenure the Singer Building demolished in 1968 was then the tallest building in the world and was the tallest building to be intentionally demolished until the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center were destroyed in the September 11 attacks 40 At their Clydebank factory Singer built a 200 feet 61 m clock tower which stood over the central wing and had the reputation of being the largest four faced clock in the world Each face weighed five tons and it took four men fifteen minutes twice a week to keep it wound 41 The tower was demolished in 1963 17 years before the factory closed in 1980 and is now the site of Clydebank Business Park Singer railway station built to serve the factory is only one of two railway stations in the UK named after a factory and is still in operation today The famous Singer House designed by architect Pavel Suzor was built in 1902 1904 at Nevsky Prospekt in Saint Petersburg as headquarters of the Russian branch of the company This modern style building situated just opposite the Kazan Cathedral is officially recognized as an object of Russian historical cultural heritage In 2018 a large factory fire destroyed a Singer distribution office and warehouse in Seven Hills Sydney Singer had manufactured sewing machines in Australia at a purpose built plant in the western Sydney suburb of Penrith from 1959 until 1967 List of company presidents EditIsaac M Singer 1851 1863 Inslee Hopper 1863 1875 Edward C Clark 1875 1882 George Ross McKenzie 1882 1889 Frederick Gilbert Bourne 1889 1905 Sir Douglas Alexander 1905 1949 Milton C Lightner 1949 1958 Donald P Kircher 1958 1975 Joseph Bernard Flavin 1975 1987 Paul Bilzerian 1987 1989 42 Iftikhar Ahmed 1989 1997 43 Stephen H Goodman 1998 2004 Popular domestic Singer sewing machines Edit A Singer model 12K fiddle bed from 1878 A Singer model 66 with Lotus decals from 1922 A Singer model 99 from 1939 A Singer Featherweight model 222k from 1954See also EditHistory of the sewing machine List of sewing machine brandsReferences Edit Cunningham John T 2004 Ellis Island Immigration s Shining Center Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 2428 3 Sewing machine history Archived from the original on March 28 2010 Sewing Machines Machine History Com Archived from the original on March 28 2010 Retrieved September 3 2012 Fort Moultrie Centennial Part II Charleston Walker Evans amp Cogswell 1876 p 29 Retrieved September 22 2014 Hounshell David 1984 From the American System to Mass Production 1800 1932 The Development of Manufacturing Technology in the United States Baltimore and London Johns Hopkins University Press pp 93 94 ISBN 9780801831584 A portrait of achievement PDF Sir Robert McAlpine Archived from the original PDF on May 8 2016 Retrieved April 24 2016 Red Clydeside The Singer strike 1911 gdl cdlr strath ac uk Retrieved March 10 2022 The Strike at Singer s by John Maclean 1911 marxists org Retrieved March 10 2022 The contribution of women in the Singer factory strike of 1911 The contribution of women in the Singer factory strike of 1911 Retrieved March 10 2022 Singer Sewing Machine Strike International Sewing Machine Collectors Society Retrieved March 10 2022 BBC Scotland s History Singer Sewing Factory strike BBC Retrieved March 10 2022 The Singer strike Clydebank 1911 Ishbel Ballantine Glasgow Labour History Workshop Clydebank District Library Clydebank Clydebank District Library 1989 ISBN 0 906938 07 4 OCLC 22625271 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Exclusive pics of 1911 shoot Singer Factory Strike Hopscotch Films TV amp Film Production Company Retrieved March 10 2022 Robert Bruce Davies Peacefully working to conquer the world Arno Press 1976 p 170 Singer Sewing Machine Factory Kilbowie Clydebank Singer west dunbarton gov uk Retrieved March 10 2022 a b c d Joan Perkin Sewing Machines Liberation or Drudgery for Women History Today 52 Dec 2002 Andrew Godley Selling the Sewing Machine Around the World Singers International Marketing Strategies 1850 1920 Enterprise and Society June 2007 7 281 Judith G Coffin Credit Consumption and Images of Women s Desires Selling the Sewing Machine in Late Nineteenth Century France Historical Studies Spring 1994 18 746 750 Judith G Coffin Credit Consumption and Images of Women s Desires Selling the Sewing Machine in Late Nineteenth Century France Historical Studies Spring 1994 18 752 Judith G Coffin Credit Consumption and Images of Women s Desires Selling the Sewing Machine in Late Nineteenth Century France Historical Studies Spring 1994 18 746 752 Andrew Godley Selling the Sewing Machine Around the World Singers International Marketing Strategies 1850 1920 Enterprise and Society June 2007 7 269 281 Delaney amp Bonnie with Gregg Allman Duane Allman and King Curtis live at A amp R Studios on 7 22 71 YouTube Sanders Richard Robert S Clark 1877 1956 Press for Conversion magazine Issue 53 Facing the Corporate Roots of American Fascism March 2004 Published by the Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade a b When the Singer Sewing Machine Company Built the Best 45 Pistol Ever Made Popular Mechanics November 2 2021 Retrieved November 25 2022 Karash Karl 2002 Singer Manufacturing Co coolgunsite com Moore Ty Retrieved April 15 2019 Mindell David A April 1995 Anti aircraft fire control and the development of integrated systems at Sperry 1925 40 IEEE Control Systems Magazine 15 2 108 113 doi 10 1109 37 375318 ISSN 1066 033X The Singer Brand History 160 Years of Sewing Singer com singer com Retrieved October 20 2018 Machines Singer com singer com Retrieved October 20 2018 SINGER Sewing Assistant App for iPhone amp Android Singer com singer com Retrieved October 20 2018 A New Lease of Life for Singer s System 10 The Sydney Morning Herald September 18 1979 p 27 Retrieved June 3 2012 Old Phototypesetter Tales Haagens com Miller Matthew Clifford Mark L Zegel Susan August 5 2002 Dishonored Dealmaker Bloomberg Businessweek Archived from the original on August 6 2002 Retrieved March 25 2007 https www company historie com The Singer Company NV Company History html bare URL Sterba James P June 14 1978 Singer Co Is Moving to Stamford to Surprise of New York Officials The New York Times The wrecking of Singer Forbes a b Singer sewing company to be sold to Kohlberg SVP Group SingerSA Archived from the original on November 27 2020 Retrieved July 20 2020 Gray Christopher June 29 1997 Style Standard for Early Steel Framed Skyscraper The New York Times p 7 Retrieved August 1 2010 New York Architecture Images HOME nyc architecture com Singer Clydebank history on West Dunbarton Council website A Raider s Days of Reckoning Time Magazine July 10 1989 Archived from the original on December 2 2008 Retrieved May 1 2007 Daniel Hilken amp Albert Wong July 1 2005 Semi Tech s Ting jailed six years The Standard Hong Kong Retrieved August 15 2010 Further reading EditBrandon Ruth A Capitalist Romance Singer and the Sewing Machine Lippincott 1977 Davies Robert Bruce Peacefully Working to Conquer the World Singer Sewing Machines in Foreign Markets 1854 1920 Arno Press 1976 Godley Andrew The Global Diffusion of the Sewing Machine 1850 1914 Research in Economic History 20 1 2001 1 46 Godley Andrew Selling the Sewing Machine Around the World Singer s International Marketing Strategies 1850 1920 Enterprise amp Society 2006 7 2 pp 266 314 Godley Andrew Singer in Britain the diffusion of sewing machine technology and its impact on the clothing industry in the United Kingdom 1860 1905 Textile History 27 1 1996 59 76 Jack Andrew B The channels of distribution for an innovation The sewing machine industry in America 1860 1865 Explorations in Economic History 9 3 1957 113 Weber Nicholas Fox The Clarks of Cooperstown Their Singer Sewing Machine Fortune Their Great and Influential Art Collections Their Forty year Feud Alfred A Knopf 2007 Wickramasinghe Nira Following the Singer Sewing Machine Fashioning a Market in a British Crown Colony in Metallic Modern Everyday Machines in Colonial Sri Lanka Berghahn Books 2014 pp 16 40 JSTOR j ctt9qd0gq 6 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to wbr Singer Corporation and wbr Singer sewing machines Official website Singer Direct Singer history timeline Singer in WWII Singer s contribution to the war effort Singer sewing machine serial numbers and dates Sewing Machines Historical Trade Literature Smithsonian Institution Libraries Singer Manufacturing company records at Newberry Library Singer Company records Archived June 10 2020 at the Wayback Machine 1851 1990 at Hagley Museum and Library Singer Manufacturing Company Records Archived November 17 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1860 1878 at Hagley Museum and Library Historic American Engineering Record HAER No NJ 51 Singer Manufacturing Company 321 First Street Elizabeth Union County NJ Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Singer Corporation amp oldid 1160555471, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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