Plant One Complex Photos
Little Known Plant Photos
The Acre Plant Photos
Battery Plant Photos
Remote SLI Plant Photos
New Brunswick, NJ Demolition Photos
Plant
Photos
Early Anderson and
Remote WWII Plants
Artists renditions of early
buildings, the original Plants 2, 3, 5, 7, 11 and Yellow Springs, and
Kings Mills Plants from WWII
Artist's rendition of the original Remy
Brothers 14 by 20 foot shack at 12th and Meridian in Anderson, IN.
Photo courtesy of Ted Vinson / Madison County Historical Society.
This 1895 Sanborn Map shows 12th and Meridian
in Anderson. Note the small structure in red behind the photo
gallery on the south west corner of the intersection. Brian Mulcahy
has scaled this and found it to be about 14 by 20 feet. This is
probably the location of the shed at this intersection that the Remy
Brothers started what later became a $1.8 billion Division of GM.
This is now a small park in Anderson.
This artist's drawing shows the Remy Electric
Company during the period from 1901-1908. The location has been
described as being at Anderson location Second and Sherman in the 1944
Delco-Remy History- Staff Department Functions, Third and Sherman in The
Delco-Remy Story 1986-1999 and then First and Sherman in Delco-Remy
History, 1965 which is an updated version of the 1944 DR History.
In the 1927 Delco-Remy
Brochure "A Trip through Delco-Remy Plants" states that in 1899 the
operation moved to Second and Hendricks.
Photo from The Delco-Remy History 1965.
The First Plant Three
There were four different Plant 3's in DR
History.
This is in Muncie on SR 32 (Kilgore Ave) at
the intersection of South Perkins Street and is currently owned by the
Muncie School System. The plant was built in the 1923 time frame for
the development and production of electrical lights for Harvester
Tractors. When the ARVAC building sent motor production to Plant 6
it appears the operation and Plant Number 3 shifted to that location and
this was closed. While there is nothing on this in any of the DR
written histories, Everett Vinson, father of Ted, worked at this plant so
we have verification it was in use by Remy.
The First Plant Two and Second Plant Three
These photos come from the August, 1924
edition of the Remy Clan and describes the a Plant Two that from the
photos place it at the complex at 25th and Arrow that was located at the
former Arvac plant. When the Muncie Plant 3 closed the number was
moved to this location. Plant Two was then used for the plant
constructed at the Columbus Complex.
Many will recognize these two buildings
labeled as Plant/Plant 3 as being what later became Guide Lamp plants on 25th
Street at the railroad tracks and were the former American Rotary Valve
(Arvac) plants that DR purchased in 1923 for the production of starting
motors. Later headlights were
produced here in 1928 after GM/DR purchased the Guide Corporation in
Cleveland, OH. In 1929 the lighting portion of DR became its own GM
division, Guide Lamp. These buildings survived until 2009 when GM
leveled the entire complex west of Pendleton Avenue. Anderson Herald
Photo via Brian Mulcahy.
This is what the interior of the west building
looked like when ARVAC had the facility between 1914 and 1923. Remy
Electric may have had an aluminum foundry in this plant during its
ownership of it. This would be the plant closest to the photographer in
the photo above. Photo courtesy of Brian Mulcahy.
This April 1927 edition of the Clan shows the
Plant 3 at 25th and Arrow, the original Plant 5, along with Plants 1,4 and
6 with a drawing of Plant Two that was being constructed on Columbus Ave
and would open in July. It does not refer to Plant 7 in Dayton which
had been part of Remy since 1926. It is shown below in a May 1927
publication.
From "A Trip Through Delco-Remy Plants" dated
May 15, 1927.
Here is another photo of the plant in 1930
after it became Guide Division. The two structures shown were
originally built by the Jenny Electric Company in 1908 when the Anderson
Chamber of Commerce gave Jenny $500 and 13 acres to build its factories
on. When it went out of business in 1914 the American Rotary Valve
Company bought the property and operated it until 1923 when it went out of
business. Then Remy Electric purchased it.
The Third Plant Three
There is no known photo of the second DR Plant 3 which
was in Indianapolis and appears to be the Bu-Nite Piston Company purchased
in 1929. With the operation at Arrow and 25th Streets being
transferred to the new Guide Division in January of 1929 this would free
up the Plant 3 number to be assigned to another location. This is from the April 1929 Delco-Remy Phone Book
showing that it was a foundry. The complete 1929 phone book can be
viewed at The Moments in Time page.
The First Plant 5 and Second Plant 7 - Anderson, IN
From "A Trip Through Delco-Remy Plants" dated
May 15, 1927. Dept 137 was later at the location one sees in the photo
above. Behind it would have been the foundry. Both the Plant 5
Foundry and the Box Plant, numbered Plant 7 which was the remaining
sections to the south of the foundry, coexisted after the foundry was
built until a fire on December 13, 1932 took down the remaining part of
Plant 7.
This is what the original DR Plant Five looked
like when it was owned by Indiana Silo and Tractor Company. Farm
Tractors were built in this facility from 1918-1924. Remy Electric
would have purchased it after 1924. Photo courtesy of Brian Mulcahy.
This artist's rendering from the 1933 Klaxon
Horn Service Manual (See Service Manuals for the complete document) show
Plant 7 Box Shop to the right or north of the Plant 5 Foundry.
Apparently it was too late to stop the printing of the service manual for
Jan 1, 1933 when the Box Shop burned in December of 1932.
Here is a postcard showing the box plant,
Plant 7 at the time. Note the distinctive design and north-south
orientation. Also picture in this postcard is Washington Elementary
School which burned on August 29, 1931
This is all that is left in December, 1932 of
the remaining section of the box plant north of the Foundry after it
burned on the 13th. One is looking west from Noble Street and the
Indiana Gas tanks are in the background. An earlier fire in April of
1928 destroyed the south section of the box plant. Photo courtesy of
Ted Vinson.
The First Plant 7 - Dayton, OH
This structure still exists in Dayton and is
just south of the Fifth Third Stadium. After it was was no longer DR Plant 7 it
became the original plant for Delco Products after it separated from
DR in 1929. This plant in Dayton is why there are DR tags on
distributors, motors
and generators in the RE Olds Museum in Lansing, MI and the Auburn Cord
Dusenberg Museum in Auburn, IN that have both Anderson
and Dayton listed as locations. See our Museum Page for photos.
From "A Trip Through Delco-Remy Plants" dated May 15, 1927.
The original DR Plant 7 as it still
stands in downtown Dayton, OH in 2011.
The First Plant 11, Bedford Foundry - Bedford, IN
This facility was numbered Plant 11 according
to an article in January 26, 1945 issue of "The Clan". This was acquired and used during WWII to
produce aluminum castings for the Allison aircraft engine. From Our
War Job.
Antioch Foundry - Yellow Springs, OH
The last section of this article is missing
one can understand DR's use for this facility to aid production of engine
castings for the US Army Air Force. It should be noted that this
article, dated May 2, 1941 was seven month before Pearl Harbor.
Anderson Bulletin article from the Anderson Public Library Collection.
This was also acquired and used during WWII to
produce aluminum castings for the Allison aircraft engine. This
foundry also had some state of the art technology. This foundry was
sold off after WWII and still exists. See the Plant History and
Links page to learn more. From Our War Job.
This is a better photo provided courtesy of
the Morris Bean and Company of the Antioch Foundry than the one above
from "Our War Job". Note the two young trees. There is the
one to the left of the flag pole, and the one in the middle of the
photo. Note the dirt road and driveway.
This photo was taken in 2016 from almost the
same location as the one above. The building is still there and is
now the Antioch Theatre. The small tree in the right corner of the
original photo has grown up and now overshadows the building. The
tree that was in the center of the photo is to the left of the driveway.
Both the road and driveway are now paved. Author's photo added
8-20-2017.
For more information on the Antioch Foundry as
part of DR during WWII, go to my World War Two Products and Applications
page.
Kings Mills - Kings Mills, OH
On April 28, 1944 it was announced that the US
Navy had taken control of the former Kings Mills Army Ordnance plant in
Kings Mills, OH, and that Delco-Remy would build cranking motors for
diesel powered landing craft. At the end of the war the plant had
in just a year's time had produced 64,000 naval cranking motors and
375,000 switches. This was done with a work force of 900
employees. From Our War Job.
This photo shows the workers at Kings Mills
on lunch break. Photo from the October 6, 1944 Delco-Remy Clan.
For more information on the Kings Mills Plant
as part of DR during WWII, go to my World War Two Products and
Applications page.
Plant One Complex Photos
Little Known Plant Photos
The Acre Plant Photos
Battery Plant Photos
Remote SLI Plant Photos
New Brunswick, NJ Demolition Photos
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