Difference between revisions of "Rubbermaid"

From Wayne County, Ohio Online Resource Center
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 69: Line 69:
 
* 1984 -- Fortune 500's most admired company
 
* 1984 -- Fortune 500's most admired company
 
* 1984 -- Acquired Little Tikes Company
 
* 1984 -- Acquired Little Tikes Company
 +
* 1984 -- Restored Walnut Street School into the community Arts Center (later [[Wayne Center for the Arts]])
 +
* 1988 -- Named one of the best managed companies in America by Business Month
 +
* 1989 -- Constructed United Way building for City of Wooster
 
* 1999 -- Newell Company purchased [[Rubbermaid]]
 
* 1999 -- Newell Company purchased [[Rubbermaid]]
 
* 1999 -- [[Rubbermaid]] would change name to [[Newell Rubbermaid]]
 
* 1999 -- [[Rubbermaid]] would change name to [[Newell Rubbermaid]]

Revision as of 12:16, 21 June 2021

Rubbermaid
Type Rubber Goods; Plastic Goods
Industry Manufacturing
Fate Active
Predecessor(s) Wooster Rubber Company
Successor(s) Newell Rubermaid
Founded Atlanta, Georgia (1920 (1920))
Founder(s) James R. Caldwell
Headquarters Wooster, Ohio, United States
Area served Worldwide
Key people 1933-1959: James R. Caldwell -- 1959-1980: Don Noble -- 1980-1993: Stanley C. Gault -- 1993-1999: Wolfgang Schmitt
Products Rubbermaid Home Products and Rubbermaid Commercial Products
Subsidiaries Newell Rubbermaid
Website www.rubbermaid.com

Locations

Comprehensive history

In May 1920, five individuals pooled their resources to rent a building in Wooster and start The Wooster Rubber Company, manufacturing Sunshine Brand toy balloons. Six years later, Horatio Ebert and Errett Grable purchased the company as a personal investment, hiring Clyde Gault (one of the founders) to continue to manage the company for them. Though a new factory and office building were built soon after, the Depression led to plummeting sales. However, Ebert became interested in the rubber housewares products being sold in New England by James Caldwell under the name "Rubbermaid" and arranged to combine their businesses in July 1934[1].

Slogans

Timeline

  • 1920 -- Originally established as Wooster Rubber Company
  • 1934 -- Introduced dustpans
  • 1950 -- Began manufacturing products made from plastic and rubber
  • 1955 -- Became a publicly traded company
  • 1957 -- Changed name to Rubbermaid
  • 1967 -- Divided into 2 divisions: Rubbermaid Home Products and Rubbermaid Commercial Products
  • 1983 -- Named to Fortune 500
  • 1984 -- Fortune 500's most admired company
  • 1984 -- Acquired Little Tikes Company
  • 1984 -- Restored Walnut Street School into the community Arts Center (later Wayne Center for the Arts)
  • 1988 -- Named one of the best managed companies in America by Business Month
  • 1989 -- Constructed United Way building for City of Wooster
  • 1999 -- Newell Company purchased Rubbermaid
  • 1999 -- Rubbermaid would change name to Newell Rubbermaid
  • 2003 -- Newell Rubbermaid announced it would relocate from Wooster, Ohio to Atlanta, Georgia

Companies acquired by Rubbermaid

  • 1965 -- Dupol - German
  • 1981 -- Carlan
  • 1984 -- Little Tikes - Later sold in 2006 by Newell Rubbermaid
  • 1985 -- Gott corporation
  • 1986 -- MicroComputer Accessories
  • 1986 -- Seco Industries
  • 1987 -- Viking Brush - Canadian
  • 1987 -- Anchor Hocking - Later sold in 2001 by Newell Rubbermaid
  • 1990 -- Eldon Industries; EWU AG
  • 1992 -- Iron Mountain Forge Corporation
  • 1994 -- Carax Health Care Products
  • 1995 -- Injectaplastic S. A. - French
  • 1996 -- Graco (baby products)
  • 1997 -- Curver - Europe - Later sold in 2005 by Newell Rubbermaid

Gallery

Historical documents

  • Wooster, Ohio Sesquicentennial Celebration, June 14-21, 1958, p. 48.

Business letterheads

Business photos

Newspaper articles

Newspaper full-text articles

Newspaper ads

Newspaper citations with no attached images

References

  1. "70 Years: from balloons to billions," Rubbermaid Review, March 1990, p.1

What Links Here

External links