Wednesday, April 29, 2009

CoorsTek

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CoorsTek, Inc.
Type
Private
Founded
Golden, Colorado, U.S. (1920)
Founder(s)
Adolph Coors, Sr.
Headquarters
Golden, CO, United States
Number of locations
21
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
John K. Coors, PhD, (CEO)
Industry
Ceramics, Semiconductors
Products
Industrial Ceramics
Services
Ceramic powder processing, analytical laboratories
Revenue
~US$500 million (2000)
Owner(s)
The Coors family
Employees
2900 (2007)
Divisions
Structural Ceramics, Electronic Ceramics, Vehicle & Personal Armor
Subsidiaries
C5 Medical Werks, DEW Engineering
Website
CoorsTek, Inc.
CoorsTek, Inc. is a privately owned manufacturer of technical ceramics, semiconductor tooling, plastic tubing, medical devices and other industrial products. CoorsTek headquarters and primary factories are located in Golden, Colorado, USA, in the foothills west of Denver. The company is owned by a trust of the Coors family. The president and chairman is John K. Coors, a great-grandson of founder and brewing magnate Adolph Coors I.
Contents
1 History
1.1 Adolph Coors and John Herold
1.2 Rosebud china and Prohibition after WW1
1.3 Aluminum beer cans
1.4 Ceramic technology and company growth after WW2
1.5 The Joe Coors era
1.6 Coors Porcelain becomes Coors Ceramics
1.7 Chaired professor and ceramic research at CSM
1.8 The Coors empire separates
1.9 Coors Ceramics becomes CoorsTek
2 Products and services
3 Subsidiaries
3.1 Subsidiaries and Outlying Operations
3.2 Former subsidiaries
4 Presidents
5 External links
6 References
//
History
Adolph Coors and John Herold
Prussian-born Adolph Coors (18471929) opened the Colorado Glass Works circa 1884 to manufacture beer bottles for his brewery, the Adolph Coors Brewing Company, west of Denver. After the turn of the century, the bottle market changed, and the brewery was able to buy bottles elsewhere more economically than making its own. [1] The Glass Works was leased to German-born John Herold, who incorporated the Herold China and Pottery Company in 1910 at 600 Ninth St in Golden. Herold used clay from nearby mines to make dinnerware and heat-resistant porcelain known then as ovenware. The now-abandoned clay pits form the western boundary of the Colorado School of Mines campus. Adolph Coors became the majority stockholder and was elected to the board of directors of Herold China in 1912. John Herold resigned, and Adolph Coors Company acquired Herold China in 1914. The company began producing chemical porcelain in 1915 as a result of a World War I embargo on German imports. Herold China was renamed Coors Porcelain Company in 1920, and the trademark oors U.S.A. was first used. [2] Adolph Coors second son, Herman F. Coors, was named manager. Herman older brother Adolph II was second in command at the brewery.
Rosebud china and Prohibition after WW1
After World War I, one of Coors Porcelain specialties was Rosebud fine china. During Prohibition, the ceramic business was largely what kept the parent company afloat. The original factory site at 600 Ninth St in Golden was the only Coors Porcelain facility until the 1970s, and remained the company headquarters until a new facility was built northeast of Golden in the early 1990s. The 440,000sqft (41,000m2) Ninth St plant consists of several adjoining buildings that occupy four square blocks, and is still CoorsTek largest manufacturing site. Herman Coors managed the company in the early days. Herman younger brother, Grover C. Coors, began the fledgling company foray into ceramic technology by inventing a tool for forming spark plug insulation in 1919. [3] Herman left in 1925 to start the H.F. Coors China Company, a manufacturer of dishes for restaurants and institutional use, in Inglewood, CA.

CoorsTek ceramic products. All are glazed porcelain except C. A) Fisher filtration funnel; B) Buchner funnel; C) 99.8% alumina crucible; D) Dessicator plate; E) Commemorative stein; F) 95-mm diameter crucible rack.
Aluminum beer cans
In the 1950s, Coors Porcelain parent company investigated the possibility of replacing steel beverage cans with aluminum ones, as part of a closed-loop recycling system. The effort was the brainchild of W.K. ill Coors, the second son of Adolph II. [4] A Porcelain warehouse at the corner of Ninth St and Washington Ave in Golden was selected to house the pilot plant for the aluminum can line. [5] The first aluminum beer can was produced at the site in January, 1959. B.L. ob Mornin, a ceramic engineer at Coors Porcelain since 1954, was appointed manager of can production in 1963, and led it to profitability. [6] The can operation eventually outgrew the...(and so on)

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