Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki
Advertisement
Geiser Manufacturing Company
Founded 1869
Founder(s) Peter and Daniel Geiser
Headquarters Waynesboro, Pennsylvania, USA
Products steam engines, farm equipment
Parent Emerson-Brantingham Company
Geiser catalog

List of Geiser products and associated numbers, 1924

Geiser Manufacturing Company was an early manufacturing company in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania, USA. Geiser Manufacturing was incorporated in 1869 by Peter and Daniel Geiser.[1] The company built grain separators, threshers, plows, and steam traction engines. The company's brand name was Peerless. The main building was 334ft long and 3 stories in height, and had a 34ft cupola. In January 1891 its total monthly payroll amounted to over 10,000 US dollars ($239500 in 2010 dollars) and employed 162 people.[2]

In 1899 the company expanded outside Waynesboro and bought the Crowell Industrial Park in Greencastle, Pennsylvania, and began producing Geiser's first gasoline engines there. Up to this point, all its products had been steam-powered.[3]

In March 1912, Geiser's Waynesboro plant was hit by a strike involving over a thousand employees after "a new superintendent had new ideas concerning the manner in which the place should be run." Other plants were not affected by the dispute.[4]

In 1912 Geiser Manufacturing was purchased by the Emerson-Brantingham Company of Rockford, Illinois, USA, which had gone so far in August 1912 as to issue over 22 million dollars ($490 million in 2010 dollars) in stock in order to raise the capital to purchase the company along with Reeves and Company of Columbus, Indiana and Gas Traction Company of Minneapolis.[5] In 1936 Geiser became bankrupt and was forced to sell everything. On August 21, 1940 while removing equipment, a fire leveled the plant which was thought to have been started by a welders torch. It had been said the glow of the fire could be seen from almost forty miles away. Currently, only the main office building stands, and the main property is now occupied by a funeral home, post office, shopping center, and an empty CVS store.

Geiser

Geiser looking on Broad St. 1939

5460093501 d0bf550c8c b

Same location. 2011

Preservation[]

One 1895 "Peerless" engine has been restored in the UK - Peerless no. 4726 Princess Tammy owned by Ian Mackins of Dorset.

See also[]

References[]

  1. Mike Rohrer. "The Geiser Manufacturing Company History".
  2. "Town and Country" (February 27 1891). Retrieved on June 3 2011. 
  3. Shockey, Bonnie. A (2007). Greencastle-Antrim Revisited. Arcadia Publishing, 7. 
  4. "Strike at Geiser Plant" (March 11 1912). Retrieved on June 3 2011. 
  5. "$12,000,000 (of) Emerson-Brantingham Company Seven Percent Cumulative Preferred Stock" (August 7 1912). Retrieved on June 3 2011. 

External links[]


Smallwikipedialogo This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Geiser Manufacturing Company. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons by Attribution License and/or GNU Free Documentation License. Please check page history for when the original article was copied to Wikia


Advertisement