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For Vise-Grip family, plant's closing a sad affair

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BY JOELYN HANSEN / Beatrice Daily Sun

Thursday, Sep 04, 2008 - 12:58:23 am CDT

DeWITT — Harriet Petersen Fort and her family devoted much of their lives to building the Petersen Manufacturing Co., and to selling the innovative Vise-Grip invented by her father, Bill Petersen.

Now, more than 80 years after the invention of the locking pliers, the DeWitt plant where it all started is going to close and Fort, 99, will clean out the family office she has held onto throughout the years.

“I felt it was there forever,” said Fort, who left the business 15 years ago. “It’s like losing my family.

Story Photo
Harriett Petersen Fort

“The plant was my life, next to my family and kids.”

News of the closing came as somewhat of a surprise to Fort, she said. Just like everyone else, she had heard rumors it might close, but no one ever knew for sure, especially considering the high plant production and comments from Newell-Rubbermaid officials about how the DeWitt plant was a key component to overall operations.

“Everybody has been holding their breath to see what happens,” Fort said Tuesday at her home a few blocks from the factory that still employs about 330 people. “It looked like they couldn’t possibly do away with it.

“They were making millions of tools over there.”

Newell-Rubbermaid bought the plant in 2002 and has operated it under the name of Irwin Industrial Tools, a company American Tool bought in 1993.

Workers got the news Wednesday that the plant will close by the end of October.

The closing brings an end to an era that started when Bill Petersen invented the locking pliers tool early in the 20th Century, according to popular histories. He patented the device in 1924 and began production at his blacksmith shop in DeWitt.

Petersen had immigrated to the United States from Denmark in 1902 and began work as a blacksmith in Minden, Fort said. But his true vision was to become a farmer.

“It became his ambition to own some farmland and make a fortune farming,” she said.

He did buy some land with his brother, Nels, Fort said, but his attempt at farming failed and he returned to blacksmithing in Axtell. At some point, he tried farming again, this time in Arkansas, but returned to the blacksmith trade and bought a shop in DeWitt. He, his wife, Ane, and their children, Ralph, Christian, Harriet and Richard, made the Saline County town their home.

It was there that Bill Petersen, known for his innovations, developed and patented the Vise-Grip, Fort said.

During the Great Depression, he began to make a go at the business, she said, and sons Ralph and Christian left jobs at a garage in Gary, Ind., to come home and work with their father.

“That was the beginning of the Petersen Manufacturing Company,” Fort said. “It was slow at first, but it was a lot of fun, and they met one challenge after another.”

Fort left her job as a rural school teacher and joined the business to oversee marketing.

She said she worked with different peddlers, often running promotions to entice them to buy the tool and go out and sell it.

In the early days, Fort said, the family used a variety of money-saving practices to keep costs low. For example, they purchased no packaging except cartons for individual wrenches. To mail the tools, they salvaged packing cases from local merchants and cut them down to the size of individual orders, then taped or tied them with twine.

In 1933, DeWitt participated in the New Deal Works Progress Administration, but Petersen’s company paid better than the WPA, so many people came to beg the family for a job, Fort said. Her father, she said, was proud to be able to hire every WPA worker in town.

With two and three generations of families working for the company, Fort said, it became a large family in its own right.

Petersen Manufacturing continued to thrive under the leadership of the Petersen children, who all served as executives, Fort said.

She served as secretary-treasurer of the business and has been honored by the University of Nebraska College of Business Administration and the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce. During the early years of Petersen Manufacturing, Fort was among few women in executive positions in the state.

In 1985, the Petersen family sold to American Tool Company Inc., which acquired Irwin Tool in 1993. In 2002, Newell-Rubbermaid bought Irwin Tool.

It will be hard to watch the factory close, Fort said.

And it will be hard to clean out her office.

“That’s when the reality will really set in, when I clean my office out.”


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Mike in DC wrote on September 4, 2008 7:08 am:
" They didn't align themselves with a retailer. You can get Irwin tools many places, but when you walk into Lowes (Kobalt) or Home Depot (Husky) or Sears and Kmart (Craftsman) the Irwin branded tools are located in a back, dark corner, while the retailer's brand is up front. This is a much marketing as anything. They should have immediately slapped the Rubbermaid brand on it and aligned themselves with many retails, like a Home Depot, a Target, and with the Rubbermaid brand, moved into BB&Beyond and other non-traditional stores. In rural areas it may be true that the local hardware store is OK, but MOST of the country walks into Home Depot or Lowes (with Sears falling off the map too) and THOSE are the tools that get bought. Sad. As far as moving things to China, who wouldn't? They make stuff with much lower costs and without the crazy costs American workers demand; and they have engineers that can reverse-engineer anything you produce anyway (more iPod fakes are made and sold in China, and thus, the world, than the real thing)... the real issue is that the capacity they have built and we lost won't equal out again once the playing field is more level. So, they'll have the advantage in both blue and white collar jobs, including engineering and R&D. "

Hjalmer wrote on September 4, 2008 7:13 am:
" Welcome to the results of Republican economic programs that voters in this State reaffirm election after election. Exportation of jobs to the lowest bidder in the name of "Free Trade" shows its obvious logical conclusion. This trend will continue until voters put a stop to it. "

More Info wrote on September 4, 2008 7:52 am:
" FYI Mike...This plant also produced for Craftsman. As far as "much lower costs" - not really. Less than a quarter per tool. "Crazy costs American workers demand" - you mean like safe working conditions, a living wage...those are crazy? "

FYI wrote on September 4, 2008 10:01 am:
" Hjalmer, for your info, the Free Trade agreement was signed into law by a Democrate President, maybe you remember him...Bill Clinton "

Wilberite wrote on September 4, 2008 12:46 pm:
" Mrs. Fort, thank you for your service to DeWitt, Saline County, and the state of Nebraska. You were a woman ahead of your time. I can’t imagine the strength it took to keep the plant operating during the Great Depression. I know it was shaky until WWII when orders picked up. Despite this heartbreaking news, you and your family have made DeWitt, NE a part of manufacturing history. The town will always be known as the birthplace of Vise-Grip. "

Tiger wrote on September 4, 2008 8:04 pm:
" Yes another company leaving for China but in the end they only hurting there own selling market! What do I mean well just this they ship those jobs from the USA and ship them to China! But in China they pay these people 50 cents an hour which means they have no selling market in China because no one can afford their items on 50 cents an hour. So all these companies take these jobs from the USA but want try to ship their product back to sell, but people no longer have all this money because the jobs are in China. So in truth their hurting the greatest selling market in the world the United States by taking the jobs away and then killing there own bottom line. Funny how these company's don't see that! This more effectivly eliminates their best selling market. "