DAVIES AND THOMAS COMPANY.

Lambert & Reinhard, 1914

 

In 1865 Daniel Davies bought an old planing mill in East Catasauqua and fitted it up as a foundry and machine shop. He had as a partner William Thomas (no relation to the present Thomases), and they traded under the name of Davies and Thomas. This partnership continued for two years, when William Thomas retired from the firm and returned to Wales, and Daniel Thomas & Son continued the business until 1876, when Daniel Thomas died.

 

The works were then shut down until February, 1879, when James Thomas bought a half interest in the business and with George Davies, the son of Daniel Davies, formed the new firm of Davies & Thomas, and did business under a partnership agreement until the death of George Davies on October 1st, 1894.

 

On December 21st, 1894, the firm of Davies & Thomas Company was organized into a chartered company, with a capital of $100,000. The stock was afterwards increased to $300,000.

 

James Thomas was president of the last named company until his death on December 18th, 1906, and was succeeded as president of the company by his son Rowland D. Thomas at the meeting of the company in January, 1907, who continued as president of the company until November, 1911, when Leonard Peckitt was elected to the presidency and continues in that office to the present date.

 

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The following persons have served as directors of the company during its lifetime as a chartered company:

JAMES THOMAS,

ROWLAND D. THOMAS,

HOPKIN THOMAS,

D. H. THOMAS,

C. R. HORN,

GEORGE DAVIES,

ROWLAND T. DAVIES,

JAMES T. DAVIES,

HARRY E. GRAFFIN.

 

The present board of Directors is made up as follows:

LEONARD PECKITT, President,

ROWLAND D. THOMAS,

HOPKIN THOMAS.

GEORGE DAVIES,

HARRY E. GRAFFIN,

 

The officers of the company are as follows:

LEONARD PECKITT, President

CHARLES R. HORN, Secretary.

HARRY E. GRAFFIN, Treasurer

 

The general agent of the company was A. R. McHenry until his death in 1898, when C. R. Horn was appointed to succeed him, and fills the position to the present time, operating from the company's general offices in New York City, the centre of all big work.

 

The Davies & Thomas Company has been a furnisher of material for all the large contracts for underground railway and tunnel work requiring cast iron material for their construction in the cities of New York, Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore, etc.

 

For the various tunnels under the harbors of New York City, this company furnished eighty per cent. (80%) of the cast iron material used in their construction, and as these tunnels were of eight (8) different designs, it constantly necessitated changes in the patterns for the cast iron castings used in the various designs to meet the requirements.

 

The Davies & Thomas Company is considered the pioneer in the above line of work and their ideas and plans have almost universally been adopted and accepted by engineers constructing the same.

 

When you ride through the various tunnels connecting New York with Jersey City, Brooklyn and Long Island City, you will pass through tunnels whose construction material is almost entirely the product of this company.

 

At the present time the company is engaged on a contract for the manufacture of the lining of a large sewer tunnel for the Borough of Queens, Long Island, which work will keep the foundry very busy for an entire year.

 

The future of the company has .a very bright outlook, as other large projects for tunnel work are expected to materialize in the near future, of which a goodly share no doubt will be awarded this company.

 

Another large activity of this company is the manufacturing of cast iron material used in the construction of Water Gas Plants; and since 1880, and up to the present time, they have manufactured all the castings used, first, by A. O. Granger in this work, and later by the United Gas Improvement Company of Philadelphia, Pa., in the equipment of their water and coal gas plants; and ninety per cent. (90%) of the water gas plants operated in the United States show the product of the last named company. This work is continued, year in and year out, and keeps employed at the foundry from sixty to seventy‑five men continually.

 

The plant, in 1876, was but a small stone foundry, employing very, few men, but its growth has been steady and continued from year to year, until at the present time the Davies & Thomas Company have a foundry occupying over 16,000 square feet of floor space; equipped with electric and boom cranes and four cupolas; three machine shops fully equipped; a large power plant with boiler and engine room for the manufacture of electricity for the running of the entire works. The plant has a capacity of two hundred tons per day of finished castings. They had employed over six hundred men at one time when the foundry was running full.

 

The plant at the present time is under the management of Mr. Hopkin Thomas as General Manager, who, with Leonard Peckitt, President, Harry E. Graflin, Treasurer, and C. B. Horn. General Agent, constitute the working force

 

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