- [Narrator] Electric
Legacy is brought to you by,

(upbeat music)

- [Narrator] At MidWest
America, we're proud

to be a credit
union, not a bank.

Which means we offer
everything you expect

from a modern
financial institution

like mobile banking, bill pay

and easy access to
mortgages and other loans.

But unlike a bank, we're local,
non-profit and member-owned.

(crowd cheers)

So we're accountable to
you not shareholders.

(bubbles popping)

And we invest in the
community we call home.

 

MidWest America
Federal Credit Union,

more than just a bank.

 

- [Narrator] And by,

(slow music)

 

(dramatic music)

 

- [Narrator] In the heart
of Fort Wayne, Indiana,

you will find a
complex of buildings.

Cold, empty husks
being torn apart

by the elements from
years of neglect.

 

It's a sight that many
Americans have grown callous to,

a relic of the Rust Belt,

another industrial factory
closed and forgotten.

 

These buildings that have stood
for over one hundred years,

once teamed with
thousands of workers.

Its walls echoed with
clanking, humming and whirring

from mighty machinery,
manufacturing multiple
product lines,

cranking out millions of units,

but this story is
not about buildings.

It's about the people who
worked in these buildings,

not just how they worked,
but how they lived.

If these walls could talk,

they would tell tales of
geniuses, pioneers, mavericks

and of workers who
became a family.

So what happened here?

Why are these buildings
now empty and silent?

 

Why did it all end?

 

Perhaps what's more
interesting is how it began.

And, all of the
stories in between.

(dramatic music)

 

(western music)
This whole story begins

with the light bulb.

Ask anyone and
they will tell you

that Thomas Edison
invented the light bulb.

Right?

But it really isn't that simple.

Not only was Thomas Edison
not the first person

to think up the light bulb,

the idea was patented two years
before Edison was even born.

 

Edison made a better light
bulb by improving on ideas

that came before him.

Before Thomas Edison
tinkered with light bulbs

and became America's
most celebrated inventor,

he was a telegraph operator for
the Wabash Railroad Company.

 

It was this job that brought
him to Fort Wayne, Indiana

in the summer of 1864 when
he was just 17 years old.

It would be another 15 years

before inventor Thomas Alva
Edison would triumphantly emerge

from his lab with a practical
incandescent light bulb

that could change
the world, however,

someone other than
Edison would be the first

to bring electric
lighting to Fort Wayne.

Incandescent lamps
weren't the only means

of electrical illumination
being experimented with

at the time,

another invention with a lot

of momentum behind
it was arc lighting.

Inventor Charles
Brush was the first

to bring his arc light system
to the commercial market.

Arc lights were much brighter

than the incandescent light
bulb that Edison had designed.

They were too bright
for small rooms.

- The first advantage
of having of creation

 

of electricity was
lights, of course.

Street lights and
lights in large spaces

such as a
manufacturing facility,

'cause arc lights you couldn't
have in a room like this.

It would, it just wouldn't work.

- [Narrator] In 1880, a Brush
arc light system was put

into operation in
Wabash, Indiana,

making it the first city
in the United States

to illuminate their streets
entirely via electricity.

In 1881 James Jenney
and a business partner,

Walter S. Hicks, traveled
to Fort Wayne, Indiana,

in hopes of finding
investors in a venture

to manufacture and
sell arc light systems.

- Fort Wayne was already
considered a railroad center.

There were six rail lines
that went North, East,

South and West, so there
was a lot of activity.

The town had a
reputation for success

that brought businesses here.

You had a skilled workforce.

- [Narrator] Jenney and Hicks,

however were finding it
difficult to lure investors

and their trip to the
Summit City was proving

to be fruitless.

The two discouraged men
returned to the Aveline Hotel,

where they were staying

and sat down for
an evening meal.

That night, a chance encounter

with a fellow diner
would change their luck

and the course of
Fort Wayne history.

 

They struck up a
conversation with John Kiess,

a shipping clerk

with the Evans-McDonald
wholesale dry goods company.

They told Keiss
about their reason

for traveling to Fort Wayne.

Keiss eagerly made arrangements

for them to meet
with his employer.

- "Yeah, I know somebody who
might want to look at that."

Because he knew his
boss was an entrepreneur

who would jump on a good
idea and carry it through,

to the max actually.

And so that's how
it was arranged.

- [Narrator] Ranald Trevor
McDonald was an entrepreneur

with a penchant for investing in

and promoting new
business ventures.

- There would be no
company without him,

I'm certain of that.

It appears that he was
a man who saw an idea

and used all of his energy

to make a successful operation.

- [Narrator] Not
only was he receptive

to meeting with Jenney and Hicks

but he immediately
made arrangements

for a demonstration of
the arc light system

in his warehouse
that very night.

On Monday evening,
July 11th, 1881,

with everything in place,

the switch was thrown

and a blazing light emitted

from Jenney's arc lights.

 

A newspaper account
from the evening said

"the warehouse was made
as bright as the sun."

One week later McDonald

and several other
investors made an agreement

with Hicks to finance
the manufacture

and sale of the arc
light and dynamo system.

- He was able,
certainly in the case

of the Jenney Electric
Lights and others

to see into the future,

that with the proper
capitalization,
investment and energy,

one could develop a
profit-making business

out of this electric light idea.

(chiming music)
- [Narrator] And so,

in the summer of 1881,

the Fort Wayne Electric
Light Company was formed.

The products were advertised
under the Jenney name,

making Jenney Electric
interchangeable

with Fort Wayne
Electric Company,

at least in the public's mind.

In June of 1883,

the company made baseball
history by installing lights

at Fort Wayne's League Park.

The first night game

involving a professional
team was played

under the bright
arc lights installed

by the young Charles Jenney.

R.T. McDonald was
not just an investor

and officer of the company

but he was also the chief
promoter and salesman.

He would travel all
over the country

in a quest to land
new contracts.

Sometimes he would visit a
town in a private rail car,

often hiring a band
to herald his arrival

with fanfare and a parade.

He would hold public meetings

and extol the virtues
of electricity in hopes

the town leaders would purchase
a Fort Wayne Jenney system

to light the streets
of their town.

Around this time,

a future Fort Wayne
Electric Company employee

was making a name for
himself in New York.

James J. Wood is frequently
mentioned alongside

Thomas Edison, Elihu
Thomson and Charles Brush

as one of the key
pioneering inventors

in applied electrical science.

- Wood, I think,
was on the level,

at the genius level basically.

And I think he could see
how electricity flowed

 

and then figure out
how to build a machine

to make it do what he wants.

- [Narrator] Wood excelled
at all things mechanical.

He is credited with
designing the machinery

that made the connections for
the suspension cables used

in the construction of
the Brooklyn Bridge.

In 1880 he received
his first patent

at the age of 24

for his design of
an arc light dynamo.

He had several more
patents under his belt

when he won the contract

to install the first
floodlight system

for the newly built
Statue of Liberty in 1885.

As James Wood's star was rising

in the East the sun
was about to set

on the Jenney era in Fort Wayne.

Although James Jenney
had founded the company

with the business
skills of R.T. McDonald,

it was Jenney's son, Charles,

that was the technical
genius behind the patents.

Charles parted ways

with the Fort Wayne Electric
Light Company in 1885

and moved to Indianapolis,

where he soon procured funding
to start his own company,

the Jenney Electric
Company of Indianapolis.

R.T. McDonald wasted no time
in recruiting another genius

to replace Charles Jenney.

Marmaduke Marcellus Michael
Slattery was employed

as the chief electrician

and came to the Fort Wayne
Jenney Electric Works in 1887.

- At that time, he was
just had the Jenney system,

producing arc lights
and he foresaw

that the incandescent
light had a future

and Slattery had developed
his own incandescent system.

- [Narrator] Slattery, who
was known as Duke to many,

came to America from
Limerick, Ireland.

He was a pioneer in the
field of alternating current.

Slattery had another
interesting passion,

battery-powered
electric vehicles.

Duke was often seen riding

his battery-powered
three-wheeled bike
around Fort Wayne.

During his travels McDonald
had made a connection

with another successful
businessman, Charles A. Coffin

who just happened to
be the president of one

of the largest
electrical apparatus
manufacturing companies

in the United States,
the Thomson-Houston
Electric Company.

Coffin admired
McDonald's salesmanship
and marketing savvy.

- Coffin appreciated McDonald's
unusual executive ability

 

and knew him for a
bluff individual,

 

erratic and daring
but just and shrewd.

 

McDonald's methods
were not Coffin's

but the two men were probably

the most successful
merchandisers

in the electrical
industry in that period.

- [Narrator] In a daring move

to raise cash to keep up with
production demands McDonald

and other Fort Wayne
investors struck a deal

with Coffin, selling
a controlling interest

of the Fort Wayne
Electric Company's stock

to the Thomson-Houston
Electric Company.

- Coffin was much
more conservative

in his business dealings.

He could see into the future.

He was trying to build
an empire, basically.

So what he decided to do,

"Well, I'll just buy controlling
interest in these companies

"and buy their patents
at the same time."

So he built a conglomerate.
(dramatic music)

- [Narrator] In 1888 a
disastrous fire destroyed most

of the Fort Wayne Electric
Light Company's factory,

putting the future of
the company in peril.

- In their warehouse
was $100,000 worth

 

of goods ready to go.

Now that's a lot
of money in 1888.

A lot of money.

Their production capacity to
supply their existing customers

for parts and the
like were gone.

 

So they weren't able
to generate income

from selling supplies to
their existing companies.

At the time they had
a six month backlog

of orders for new installations,

which they could not fulfill.

- [Narrator] Several
offers came in

from other cities
enticing the factory

to locate to their town.

Charles Coffin announced

that if Fort Wayne
could raise $30,000,

the Thomson-Houston Company
would rebuild the factory.

R.T. McDonald made a public
plea and the town responded,

raising enough money

to ensure the Fort
Wayne Electric Light
Company would rise

from the ashes.

- They almost immediately
found other locations

 

within the city, empty
factories or warehouse space

where they could build up

and start operations
pretty quickly

and the community
was oh definitely

in support of keeping it here.

- [Narrator] In August of 1889,

the board members resolved
to shorten the company name

for the purpose of
public promotion

to the Fort Wayne
Electric Company,

dropping the word
light from the title.

They also resolved to drop
the use of the Jenney name

from the company's public
and private profile.

The Thomson-Houston
Electric Company had grown

to one of the largest
electrical companies

in the Eastern United States

by acquiring smaller
companies with bright minds.

One such asset they
acquired was the services

of the young James J. Wood.

During this time,

Wood was managing a very
successful enterprise

for the company in his
Brooklyn, New York factory.

With the Fort Wayne
Electric Company

in need of resources and talent,

McDonald struck a deal
with Charles Coffin

to transfer control of
James J. Wood's company

to Fort Wayne.

In August of 1890
it was announced

that the Wood System would be
manufactured in Fort Wayne.

Wood's Brooklyn factory
would be relocated.

Machinery and workers,
including Wood himself,

would be moving to Indiana.

On December 3rd,
1890 two train loads

of machinery and tools,
along with 127 employees,

arrived at their new
home in Fort Wayne.

- Skilled workers and
engineers, monumental task.

 

It's interesting to me

that Wood was able to
convince 127 people

who were probably from
New York and lived there

and had family there to come.

- [Narrator] Titans emerged
from the fiercely competitive

electrical industry, the
Thomson-Houston Company,

the Edison General
Electric Company

and the Westinghouse Electric
and Manufacturing Company.

One prominent Edison General
Electric Company investor,

J.P. Morgan, instigated
secret negotiations

with Charles Coffin

to discuss a merger of
Edison with Thomson-Houston.

The process took over
a year to solidify

but on June 1st 1892 the
consolidation was announced.

The General Electric
Company was born.

Charles Coffin was chosen to
be president of the new entity.

R.T. McDonald's stellar
salesmanship had managed

to keep the factories
running at full capacity.

In the early evening of January
3rd, 1893 a fire started

on the third floor of the
largest building in the complex.

Damage was estimated at $150,000

and even though the loss
would be covered by insurance,

it would take weeks
to repair the damage.

When Charles Coffin
and the leadership

at the newly-formed General
Electric Company learned

about the latest calamity
to strike Fort Wayne Works,

they urged McDonald
not to rebuild

but instead move the operation

to the sprawling facility
that Edison had erected

in Schenectady, New York.

McDonald staunchly
resisted this proposal.

He had invested too much
in the Fort Wayne facility

to abandon it now.

- I think he wanted
to maintain the legacy

that he had started.

Well I think it
was also a burden

because he was the main man
to protect his investors

and his workers from monetary
collapse, if you will.

 

- [Narrator] R.T.
McDonald and the employees

of the new Fort Wayne
Electric Company had

now survived two fires together

but a different struggle for
survival was about to begin.

(dramatic music)

Global events
would spark a panic

that would spread like wildfire
through the financial world.

It was called the Panic of 1893

and the resulting economic
depression would see the failure

of 15,000 companies.

The results of this economic
calamity were soon felt

at the new General
Electric Company due

to the practice of
extending credit

to the buyers of
electrical systems.

The Fort Wayne Electric
Company was also having trouble

staying afloat in the
floodwaters of bad notes

created by R.T.
McDonald's salesmanship.

- He would go into
community and say

"I can sell you this
system for $15,000."

Said "Well, we only got $5,000."

"So, well, we'll give
you credit on the rest."

- [Narrator] McDonald
turned to Coffin

and General Electric borrowing
over half a million dollars

in a short amount of time

but it was not enough
to maintain business

and stay ahead of
the tsunami of debt.

- Even Coffin's company, the
General Electric Company,

was in trouble.

And he wanted his
money back (laughs).

 

McDonald owed him $500,000.

- [Narrator] McDonald
was now prepared

to sell the whole company
to General Electric

if Coffin would promise to
keep the Fort Wayne Works open,

guarantee the company's
outstanding debts

and insure that the
local investors would
be taken care of.

Mr. Coffin wanted to close
the Fort Wayne factories

and transfer the
entire operation

to the General Electric
facilities in Schenectady.

This proposal was just not
acceptable to McDonald.

- McDonald realized
that the takeover

of the company was imminent.

That they were gonna,
in fact they were,

they sent representatives
from General Electric here

to take the company over and
in a vote of the stockholders.

 

- [Narrator] When McDonald
learns of this plot,

he has only a few days
to react to the threat.

He soon hatches
a plan of his own

in which he uses his
persuasive powers as a salesman

to save the company with
a legal-system shell-game.

McDonald has a Fort Wayne
judge appoint receivers

to protect the company under
a bankruptcy agreement.

He then creates a new company,

the Fort Wayne
Electric Corporation.

The receivers in turn
ink a two-year contract

with the new Fort Wayne
Electric Corporation

to conduct the business affairs

of the now protected Fort
Wayne Electric Light Company.

- That mighta been, might
not have been illegal

but it was a pretty
shady operation.

But by the time the General
Electric representatives

came to town, it
was a done deal.

- [Narrator] McDonald
had effectively saved

the City of Fort Wayne

from a devastating
economic blow.

He was heralded as a hero
in the local newspapers.

- I think he felt
a real obligation

to the local people who had
helped capitalize this company

and build it up

and wanted to see
their interests,

monetary interests, protected.

I think he also was genuinely
concerned about his employees.

 

- [Narrator] New catalogs and
sales materials were printed

and soon even the
buildings bore the name

of the Fort Wayne
Electric Corporation.

By this time,

McDonald was connected
with over 50 businesses,

in seven different states.

In December of 1898,

he took a trip to Dallas, Texas
where he became gravely ill.

On the morning

of Christmas Eve 1898,
(violin music)

Ranald Trevor McDonald
passed away at the age of 49.

 

The news of his
sudden passing shocked

and saddened many,

especially those friends
and workers in Fort Wayne.

McDonald was their champion,

someone who had brought so
much prosperity to the city

and had defended
her so valiantly.

- He had this vision of
building a successful company

in Fort Wayne.

 

Not only for himself but
for the people invested

and his workers here.

And, I don't think this
enterprise would have started

 

or been sustained without
his vision and energy.

 

- [Narrator] In January of 1899,

less than a month after
the death of McDonald,

creditors of the Fort
Wayne Electric Corporation

filed a claim
against the company

in Federal Court for
past due payments.

The company did not have
enough cash to pay this demand

and so on February 16th, 1899,

the officers of the Fort
Wayne Electric Corporation

filed for bankruptcy.

The company had to borrow money

to meet payroll for that month.

The outstanding debt which
included $185,000 owed

to General Electric was greater

than the company's total assets.

An auction date was set to
sell the company and its assets

to pay off its creditors.

When the auction gavel fell
with the call of "Sold!"

It was Charles Coffin,

representing the General
Electric Company,

that won the auction.

The news wasn't all bad.

Coffin announced
that the factory

could resume
operations immediately.

And to the delight of the
city workers and investors,

he proclaimed it would
remain in Fort Wayne

for the time being, as long

as the company
could be profitable.

Charles Coffin and the
General Electric Company

now had full legal
ownership and control

over the Fort Wayne
Electric Corporation.

It wasn't long after
the auction purchase

before Coffin approached
Wood with an offer.

Sell all of the
Wood System patents

to General Electric

and receive a 10-year
guaranteed employment contract

as a lead design engineer for
General Electric in New York.

Once Coffin had these patents,

he could produce the
products anywhere

in the country he wanted
without Wood's permission.

- But it was the new
ones that were valuable.

Valued into the millions
of dollars, probably.

The ideas and then
their implementation.

- [Narrator] But
for some reason,

Wood rejected the offer

and instead made a counteroffer
seeking a 10-year guarantee

that the operations
would stay in Fort Wayne.

- He went and met with the
General Electric executives

and said "hey look, I
have these patents here

"and if you decide
to close that plant,

"I'm not gonna
let you have 'em."

- [Narrator] Coffin
promised to keep the works

in Fort Wayne for three years

and Wood signed a
10-year contract.

However, he would retain the
ownership of his patents,

giving him leverage in
future negotiations.

Once again, the jobs

of the Fort Wayne
workers had been saved.

This time their hero
was James J. Wood.

- Wood sort of took
over McDonald's legacy

but it wasn't through
finance and salesmanship,

it was through his
technical skill.

- [Narrator] It is not
exactly clear why Wood fought

for Fort Wayne over
his own personal gain.

- I think he liked the town.

He liked the people,

he had become integrated
into the social network.

 

You know, he was a club member,

he went to ball games

and I think he also was
cognizant of the fact

 

that if the factory
moved out of this town,

a lot of this town
is gonna hurt,

people are gonna be hurt
because of his decision

and he may not have
wanted to take on

that emotional
burden, if you will.

- [Narrator] Years later
he was certain he had made

the right decision.

"With all the
confidence in the world,

"I signed a contract to
operate the plant in Fort Wayne

"on a fixed percentage
of the earnings

"and although I received
nothing for the first two

"or three years
but a small salary,

"neither the company nor
myself had any reason to regret

"that the industry was
kept in Fort Wayne."

James J. Wood.

 

The company would soon
get another new name.

On May 9th, 1899, the
Fort Wayne Electric Works

was incorporated under
General Electric in New York.

The corporation would
have seven directors,

three from Fort Wayne and four
in the New York headquarters,

ensuring a majority remained
under Coffin's influence.

Henry C. Paul would
be the new president

and Fred S. Hunting
would be sales manager.

Both of these were roles
that R.T. McDonald had filled

before his death.

James J. Wood would
be the electrician

and the general
superintendent leading the way

into this new era for the
resilient Fort Wayne company.

(chiming music)

 

(upbeat music)

- [Narrator] The last two
decades of the 19th century

had been about the light bulb.

At the turn of the century,

more and more communities
had access to electricity

and it was becoming clear it
could be used to power more

than just light bulbs.

 

Once electricity became
available in homes and offices,

smaller motors were
developed for applications

that required less
than one horsepower.

These were called fractional
horsepower motors.

- Actually it was James
J. Wood who was probably

the first, that I know of
anyway, to develop a small motor

that was practical
for household use.

They were used in vacuum
cleaners, hairdryers,

washing machines,
milkshake making machines,

 

and that sorta thing.

- [Narrator] One of the first
consumer oriented products

produced at the Fort
Wayne Electric Works,

that utilized an
electric motor was a fan.

- The engineers in Schenectady
had trouble developing

a small motor and Wood
said, "I can do that."

And so he developed what was
called the croquet ball motor,

very small motors, they were
specially adapted for fans.

And before that,
you could think,

well, this is a kinda fan
you had before a motor.

 

- [Narrator] James J.
Wood designed desk fans,

ceiling fans and even a fan
held up by an ornate metal

fire breathing dragon
mounted to the wall.

The electric motor
would be a major factor

in shaping the
identity of the company

in the century to come.

The market for motors used
in home appliances was rising

because of the development
of useful household items.

One of the biggest game
changing appliances of the time

was the washing machine.

The market was huge and Fort
Wayne had several manufacturers

making their own version
of the washing machine.

The one common denominator
was that these appliances

needed an electric motor.

And the Fort Wayne Electric
Works was stepping up

to meet demand.

- The motors in the fans
were so popular that,

I remember reading
a story in 1913

where they could not keep up.

- [Narrator] Things were
going so well in fact,

that by 1920, the company
responded to the demand

by building a separate
factory in Decatur, Indiana,

just to manufacture motors
for washing machines.

Because electricity was so new

and was still a luxury for some,

not every home or business
was willing to commit

to paying a monthly bill.

So James J. Wood provided them
with a pay as you go method,

by inventing a coin
operated meter box.

In 1911, General Electric was
hit with an anti-trust action

by the federal government.

General Electric would
no longer be able to own

and operate companies that
competed for the same business.

This brought about yet
another name change,

the company would now be

the Fort Wayne Electric
Works of General Electric.

Business continued to grow

under the official
General Electric banner,

James J. Wood was
able to convince the
GE Board in New York

to authorize a $1
million expansion of
the Broadway factory.

- You're seeing how they were
constructed in the early 1900s

when it was with a
steam powered equipment

and horse and wagon deliveries.

The design of the buildings,

the thought that went
into making them.

- The floors are 14 to 16
inch thick poured concrete.

 

I mean, it's just, it's
like a bomb shelter.

You know, they are so solid.

- Massively thick walls and
you just don't think about

 

like in the
multistory buildings,

the columns between floors,

you go to the basement

and these columns are
huge round columns

and each floor they
get a little smaller

because they're
supporting less weight.

It's all concrete, steel,
brick construction,

it's just so massive, so
much steel in the floors.

- It is US steel and
that is Carnegie steel.

We've got the same
steel in our structures

 

that was used to build the
skyscrapers in New York City.

- This was almost like
four factories in one,

we had the transformers
being built

on the other side of the street.

Multiple different
lines of motors

where in most of the other
facilities had one line of motor

 

they built, or a product,

here at Fort Wayne, we were
making general purpose motors

 

and appliances motors,
hermetic motors.

- [Narrator] The addition
of the new buildings

meant a greater
responsibility was placed

on the Fort Wayne Electric
Works Volunteer Fire Department.

In 1895 it was
determined that the Works

should have its own
firefighting force.

 

William Billy Wurtle,
a German-born machinist

would be named would be named
Chief of the Firemen in 1904

and in 1913 he was given
the full time duties

of fire prevention and
firefighter training.

The Fort Wayne GE
Volunteer Fire Department

would continue to
be a well-equipped

and well trained group
for many decades.

Training was conducted
on a regular basis

with the Fort Wayne
City Fire Department

including evacuation drills
with the ladder truck.

- I was a volunteer fireman
back in the 70s, early 70s.

 

Out here all the
way up until I left.

- Rudy and I were both on
the Volunteer Fire Committee

for Fort Wayne for GE.

 

And we would do special training
with the fire department

on Taylor Street.

- They would send
us to fire school,

we learned to put out
different types of fires.

- At least 100, 150 volunteer
GE firefighters here

 

and so General Electric
was big enough,

they could afford
their own fire crew.

- [Narrator] The campus of
the Fort Wayne Electric Works

was able to avoid any major
fires during the first decade

of the 20th century

but there was one
significant fire

at a prominent Fort Wayne hotel

that had a historical
connection with the Works.

In the early morning
hours of May 3rd 1908,

a fire started in the Aveline
Hotel and spread quickly.

 

Many guests in the upper floors

had to jump from the windows
to escape the flames.

12 people died before the
fire could be contained.

This hotel was the location
of the first dinner meeting

between James Jenney
and John Kiess

that led to the deal
with R T McDonald

and the beginning of the Fort
Wayne Electric Light Company.

McDonald himself later purchased
the hotel before his death.

John Kiess, the
shipping clerk who made

that historic connection
at the Aveline Hotel

decades earlier, went
on to have a long career

with the Fort Wayne
Electric Light Company.

In fact, in 1914 he was
one of the charter members

of the Fort Wayne
Quarter Century Club.

The Quarter Century
Club was set up

to recognize those employees

who had at least 25 years of
service with General Electric.

Also among the Fort
Wayne charter members

were Plant Superintendent,

Edward A. Barnes,
and James J. Wood.

The Fort Wayne GE
Quarter Century Club

would continue to gain
members as the years went on.

- In fact the quarter
century was so big,

they used to have it at
the Memorial Colosseum

and it would be full.

- It offers people the chance
to meet their fellow workers

 

again after all these years.

 

You'll see a lot of hugs.

- Seeing people we haven't
seen in years, you know?

And how they've changed.

 

- [Narrator] The group
started having annual meetings

in 1916 and continued to
do so over 100 years later.

 

One member attended a
meeting at the age of 101,

having been born only one year

after the club started
having its meetings.

Robert Guingrich started
working for General Electric

in Fort Wayne in 1941
and served for 38 years.

- I went out to work and
there was a big old flats

in my trailer just
loaded with motors,

boxed up in boxes.

I said, "Where's all
these motors coming from?"

Well he said, "GE's got a
plant here in Port Wayne,

"we manufacture motors,"
and he had to deliver 'em.

He said, "There's ever a
job, you can get there."

Well he said, he didn't
know but he said,

"Fill out an affidavit,
put it in the mail box."

That was on the Thursday
and I got it Friday,

a call to take my
examination on Friday

and I went to work on
Saturday at time and a half.

And boy, you talk about
an upset happy person,

it was me.

- [Narrator] When he
attended this meeting,

he had been retired for more
years than he had worked.

 

Bob Guingrich's eyes had seen
over 100 years of history,

 

the same history that The
Fort Wayne Electric Works

would have to
navigate throughout

the 20th century and beyond.

When Bob Guingrich
was born in 1917,

the United States was fighting
in the First World War.

The 360 young women of the
Fort Wayne Electric Works

were an integral
part of the workforce

and had formed strong
bonds with each other.

The men of the company had
enjoyed competing together

in sports for decades

and the women celebrated
their strengthened comradery

by forming their
own sports teams.

In 1915 several young ladies
formed the Elex basketball team

named after the
Greek word elektron.

Soon after that a core group
asked E. A. Daddy Barnes

for help with forming
a GE Girls Club

and in December of 1916,
the Elex Club was formed.

- And they did all kinds
of work for the community

and travel for the ladies,

in those days, they didn't
want to travel on their own,

so they took plane rides
to New York and overseas,

they took bus rides
to different locations

and it really expanded
the horizons of the ladies

in those ages.

And they worked with the YWCA

when they were founding
the organization

and they had supper programs
and educational classes

and different kind of programs

to really educate the ladies.

- [Narrator] The Elex
Club continued and grew

to 450 members by 1920.

In 1919 a committee was formed
to explore the possibility

of creating a recreational
building for the workers.

Over the next few years
that plan became a reality

when the GE Club building
was completed in 1927,

with a gymnasium,
stage, lockers,

and even a 12-lane
bowling alley.

Total employment for all of
the departments of the Works

peaked at 10,000 in 1929.

Having thousands of employees

meant the Fort
Wayne Electric Works

had a very large payroll.

Since the beginning
of the company,

and through most of the 1920s,

the payroll had been paid
out in cash every week.

Company officials were worried
that such a huge sum of cash

being transported and
distributed each week

might become a
target for robbers.

A system was developed
to safeguard the cash

as it was delivered
from the bank

to the company payroll office.

- Brink's guys
carrying money bags in

and guys sitting
there with shotguns.

- [Narrator] The company
stopped paying with cash

in September of 1927.

Employees were issued a paycheck

that they could safely deposit

in the bank of their choosing.

Then, on October 29, 1929,

Wall Street Stock
Prices collapsed

signaling the beginning
of the Great Depression.

- People were laid off.

 

They tried to mitigate the
impact upon their employees

 

by reducing the number of hours
that each employee worked,

 

so everybody at
least had some money.

- [Narrator] In this
time of uncertainty,

labor unions became more
attractive to workers

looking for security.

In September of 1933 Fort
Wayne GE workers charted

a union Local of the
American Federation of Labor.

This would eventually
become known as Local 901.

The Fort Wayne
Electric Works lost two

of its longest serving leaders

during the years of
the Great Depression.

Plant Superintendent
Edward A. Barnes

retired in June of 1931.

James J. Wood, the
prolific inventor

and leader who fought to
keep the works in Fort Wayne,

died on April 19, 1928.

He received 240 patents
for his inventions,

placing him fourth all-time

among all General Electric
Company inventors.

The loss of Barnes and
Wood marked a passing

of the original
Jenney Electric era

into the 20th Century Fort
Wayne Works of General Electric.

Small motor sales had grown to
$16 million annually by 1930

and the Fort Wayne Works

had 24% of the
national market share.

The equivalent of
eight and a half acres

of manufacturing floor space

was dedicated to the
production of small motors

and this department alone
employed over 3,000 workers

cranking out 58,000
units per week by 1937.

 

Before WWI broke out in Europe,

James J. Wood had
the opportunity

to take a business
trip to Grasse, France,

to research a new
technology being developed.

 

He hoped to learn
from French monk,

Marcell Antoine Audiffren,

the inventor of the Audiffren
Hermetic Refrigeration system.

In October 1911, GE
decided to manufacture

the system in Fort Wayne.

Wood chose Clark Orr
to help him develop

this modern home refrigerator

at the Fort Wayne
Electric Works.

The Fort Wayne team
collaborated with engineers

from GE in
Schenectady, New York,

to produce the Monitor
Top Refrigerator,

that design would be one of GE's

most successful home
appliances for years to come.

By 1935 the demand for
refrigerator motors

would exceed the demand
for washing machine motors.

While the Monitor Top was
still in the prototype stages,

a separate production
facility was set up

for the refrigeration
department.

This would be known as
the Winter Street location

and it would produce much
more than just refrigerators.

The next product
to be the subject

of office conversation
was the water cooler.

Albert Ralston developed
the General Electric

drinking fountain water cooler
at the Winter Street plant

in the 1930s and received a
patent for his design in 1944.

 

Winter Street engineer
James H. Powers

was issued the task of bringing
a new product to market

and in 1935 the GE Electric
kitchen garbage Disposall

made its debut.

The developers in the
shop gave it a nickname,

The Electric Pig.

Powers was also responsible
for convincing manufacturers

of kitchen sinks to
standardize a larger drain hole

to accommodate the installation
of garbage disposals.

 

As the decade of the 1930s
was coming to a close,

the Fort Wayne Works of the
General Electric Company

was about to turn its attention
away from refrigerators

and kitchen sinks to the
not so friendly skies.

 

(dramatic music)

- [Narrator] On
September 1, 1939,

Hitler's Nazi Army
invades Poland.

Two days later, Britain and
France declared war on Germany.

In 1939, General
Electric was approached

by British manufacturer
Rolls Royce

about manufacturing
starter motors

for its British
military aircraft.

The management at Rolls
Royce were concerned

that German aircraft
would bomb their factory

in Coventry, England.

The Fort Wayne Works was
chosen to be the location.

The Fort Wayne Works
had been developing

fractional horsepower motors
for U.S. military aircraft

as early as 1938.

These motors were used
in fighter planes,

like the Lockheed
P-38 Lightning.

 

War rages in Europe and Asia.

As Germany and Japan expand
their military campaigns,

it becomes increasingly
clear that modern warfare

will hinge upon air superiority.

 

As Germany launches
the Battle of Britain,

the island nation
only has 620 aircraft

to mount a defense
against thousands of
Luftwaffe warplanes.

The U.S. ally is in
desperate need of aircraft.

 

Not only did the
British need planes,

but if the United States was
going to remain a world power

it would also have to step up
production of U.S. warplanes.

There was one important
piece of technology

being developed at this
time that the Allies hoped

would give them an advantage
in achieving air superiority,

the turbosurpercharger.

This device helped
aircraft travel higher

and faster by
gathering up thin air

and condensing it
into dense air,

increasing the amount of
oxygen the engine takes in

for combustion, giving
the aircraft the ability

to perform more efficiently
at higher altitudes.

By late 1940, the demand was
rising for military aircraft

equipped with GE
turbosuperchargers.

 

This included military aircraft

such as the Lockheed
P38 Lightning,

the Republic P-47 Thunderbolt,

the Northrop P-61 Black Widow,

and the Consolidated
B-24 Liberator.

 

One of the most imposing
bombers of the era,

the B-29 Superfortress, with
four massive prop engines

required eight
turbosuperchargers.

 

With the looming possibility
that the United States would be

drawn into the war against
Hitler's advancing forces

in Europe, it was clear
the military would need

a lot of planes, and that meant
a lot of turbosuperchargers.

 

The need was so urgent that
the United States government

decided to finance the building
of several new factories

dedicated to the production
of turbosuperchargers.

In June of 1941, the federal
government announced plans

to build a massive new factory
in Fort Wayne, Indiana.

 

Over 47 acres of land was
purchased from General Electric

on Taylor Street just west
of the St. Mary's River.

The building plans
called for a structure

with over 700,000 square
feet of manufacturing space

at a cost of $25 million.

The factory would have
on-site testing facilities

to simulate flight
at 25,000 feet.

- The turbochargers
took a great amount,

and it was super
heated steam as well,

'cause it had to be dry
for the turbochargers

to replicate exhaust.

- [Narrator] Three huge
boilers would be installed

to supply steam for
turbosupercharger testing,

and all other plant operations.

The factory would require
over 9,000,000 gallons

of water per month.

Once the factory was built,
it would be leased back

to General Electric to begin
producing turbosuperchargers.

 

The plans were made
public on December 5th,

and ground was broken
for the new factory

on December 6, 1941.

And then.

(winds gusting)
(explosions boom)

 

(aircraft hums)

 

(dramatic music)

- [Franklin] Yesterday,
December 7th, 1941,

 

a date which will
live in infamy.

 

- [Narrator] The surprise
attack on Pearl Harbor

had suddenly pulled
the U.S. into the great

worldwide conflict
sooner than anticipated.

The American war machine
went into overdrive,

and U.S. factories
joined the war effort

with a heightened
sense of urgency.

Production was ramping
up in every sector

as the nation rushed to supply

the United States Armed
Forces with the weapons of war

needed to defeat the Axis
powers in Europe and Asia.

 

At the same time, skilled
workers were leaving

their factory jobs to
fight for their country

leading to a
shortage of workers.

American women were asked
to step up to the challenge

to help their country
achieve victory.

 

A new breed of
worker, exemplified
by Rosie the Riveter,

was hitting the factory
floor ready to prove

that women could do
the same work as men.

In the early months of
1942, the last product

meant for civilian use
rolled off the assembly line.

From this point forward,
the Fort Wayne Works

would be dedicating its
full production capacity

to help the war effort.

The urgent need for
turbosuperchargers
made the completion

of the Fort Wayne
factory a top priority.

- It was a 24 hour a day,

seven day a week
construction project.

So, it was up in like 11 months.

 

- [Narrator] While
the construction
work was being done,

a pilot assembly line was
set up in another facility

to train the workers.

- They had to not
just build the plant,

they had to acquire and
move, move the machinery in,

set it up, train employees,
set up the production lines,

 

an amazing feat.

- [Narrator] In
less than a year,

the Taylor Street
turbosupercharger factory

was up and running.

The first unit was produced
by September 25, 1942.

 

Thousands more would be needed,

and it would take thousands
of workers to do it.

2,260 workers were hired
and trained in 1942.

 

By the end of 1943,
the Taylor Street plant

had 4,825 workers building
turbosuperchargers.

 

Most of the workers were women,

but the management had
three categories listed,

men, women on men's
jobs, and other women.

- At the beginning of the war,
1940, 20% of their employees

 

over the whole
corporation were women.

By 1944, 40% of the workers

 

in the General Electric
Corporation were women.

- [Narrator] The United States
government had commissioned

only five factories
across the country

to produce the
turbosuperchargers.

In 1943, production was
up close to 18,000 units,

which was second overall.

In 1944, workers at the Fort
Wayne Taylor Street plant

had the highest production
levels in the nation,

with almost 50,000
turbosuperchargers manufactured.

By the end of the war the
Fort Wayne factory had built

a total of nearly 90,000
turbosuperchargers,

and over 175,000
supercharger impellers.

 

Although the work at Taylor
Street was very important,

this was only a fraction
of the Fort Wayne Works

contribution to the war effort.

The Broadway Campus was
hard at work as well,

producing a wide variety
of much needed instruments,

for war being fought in the
air, on the ground, and at sea.

 

Military aircraft had
sophisticated systems

that required several
small electrical motors

for a variety of tasks.

A typical warplane
needed 170 motors.

The fractional horsepower
motor department

of the Fort Wayne Electric
Works had to expand

its product line to build
motors for such applications

as computers, compressors,
ammunition boosters,

antenna reels, fuel pumps,

defrosters, cameras, tail
skids, sighting seats,

and searchlights,
just to name a few.

The Fort Wayne Works
also manufactured larger

electric motors for the
B-17 and B-29 bombers

to be used in landing gear,
wing flaps, bomb doors,

and tail wheel actuators.

Those bombers were also equipped
with rotating turret guns

for fending off enemy fighters.

 

GE developed a new amplidyne
and motor control system

that gave gunners quicker,
more accurate targeting.

Fort Wayne produced 7,500
of these units per month.

The Navy also made use
of GE amplidyne systems

to control the rotation
and positioning

of its 40 millimeter
anti-aircraft guns.

 

The Winter Street plant
was charged with building

the entire power drive
system for the 40 millimeter

Twin Mount Mark 1 Bofors
Anti-Aircraft Gun.

Compressors were built
here that were used

in anti-aircraft gun control
systems and recoil mechanisms.

Other production at the Winter
Street facility included

refrigeration units for
food and medical supplies

onboard various Navy vessels,
including battleships,

aircraft carriers,
and smaller ships.

There was one special
transformer component that was

manufactured for use in
military communication radios.

The dynamotor converted
the 20 volt DC power

supplied by aircraft to
the several hundred volts

needed to power the electron
tubes in radio units.

The Fort Wayne Works
manufactured over 1,000,000

of these dynamotors during
the course of the war.

A wide variety of large
generators were built here,

including the 300 kilowatt
auxiliary generators

used in submarines.

Thousands of huge diesel
and gas powered generators,

some of which
weighed several tons,

were made for the U.S. Army.

The U.S. Navy also ordered
a variety of generators,

totalling 10,000,
for use on several

different types of ships.

The transformer department
of the Fort Wayne Works

went above and beyond the call
of duty to fulfill an order

straight from the front
lines in North Africa.

25 people gave up their weekend,

as all three shifts came in
for production on Sunday.

All of the extra effort paid
off as the order was fulfilled

and shipped out in just
four days, instead of five.

This exemplified the
work ethic espoused

by the entire Fort Wayne
Works during World War II.

 

The Navy Board for Production
Awards selected the Works

to receive the Navy
E for Excellence

in industrial productions
three consecutive years.

During 1942, 1943, and
1944, The Navy E flag

 

was flown over the plant
and workers could wear

a Navy E lapel insignia.

Employees didn't just give
their time and effort,

they also gave their money.

The Fort Wayne Works
received the Minuteman flag

from the U.S. Treasury
in recognition that 90%

of the employees had
given 10% of their pay

to buy war bonds.

That added up to
a lot of dollars,

since the annual wartime
payroll of the Fort Wayne Works

averaged over $23 million.

 

The combined employment
at all of the factories

of the Fort Wayne Works
exceeded 20,000 employees

during peak production in 1944.

Women had become a significant
percentage of the workforce

and the Fort Wayne General
Electric women's group,

Elex Club, had grown to
include 2,200 members.

These women contributed to
troop morale in a personal way.

Throughout the war, Elex
members prepared and shipped,

10,000 boxes to service
personnel to give them

a little reminder of home.

 

America's military might
and industrial strength

combined to help turn
the tide in Europe.

Less than a year after Allied
Forces invaded Normandy,

Nazi Germany finally
surrendered on May 8th, 1945.

 

Celebrations broke out
all over the world.

World War II wasn't
completely over,

but Americans could
breathe a sigh of relief.

It was over a month after VE
day, before the production rush

eased up enough at the
Fort Wayne Works to do

a symbolic gesture to
acknowledge the victory.

Management gave the order
to relight the grand

General Electric logo
sign, which shone out

over Fort Wayne from
its perch on top of one

of the tallest
buildings on the campus.

The sign had been turned
off right after news reached

Fort Wayne about the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor.

This sign had been a symbol
of pride for the company

and Fort Wayne
residents since 1928.

It stood 50 feet high
above the rooftop,

giving off a blue and
white glow from 925

incandescent 25 watt bulbs.

This sign would be a constant
landmark on the Fort Wayne

skyline through the
rest of the 20th century

and into the 21st century.

 

The nation's attention now
shifted to the Pacific theater

and within a few uneasy months

that conflict too
came to an end.

Japan surrendered
on August 14, 1945.

Two atomic bombs had crippled

the heart of Japan's
war industry,

wiping out factories
and workers.

When the news was announced
at the Fort Wayne Works

of General Electric, the
factory whistles blew

heralding the victory.

Workers joined the
jubilant celebration.

Works Manager M. E. Lord
announced that Fort Wayne

GE employees were allowed
to take two days off

to be with their families.

Soon, millions of U.S.
military men and women

were returning home.

The women of the Fort Wayne
Elex Club had to cancel

a January 1946 trip to Chicago,

because the railroad coaches
were filled to capacity

with war veterans making
their way back home.

The end of the war
meant that the majority

of the military production
was coming to an end as well.

The workers of the Taylor
Street factory had fulfilled

their duties to
supply the military

with the desperately
needed turbosuperchargers.

The U.S. Government closed
the production facility

in April of 1946.

A few days later, General
Electric purchased the plant

outright from the government,
at a cost of $5,000,000.

It would no longer produce
turbosuperchargers,

but instead it was converted
to a fractional horsepower

motor factory, and magnet wire
mill, employing 725 workers.

 

The Fort Wayne Works of
General Electric welcomed back

2,400 veterans after the war.

Many women returned to
their pre-war positions,

or left to devote time
to their families.

 

After the military
contracts ran out,

the workforce had to be
reduced to peacetime levels.

By the beginning of 1946,
employment levels had gone down

from the high of 20,000 at the
peak of the war production,

to 11,800.

 

As life returned to
normal after the war,

young veterans who
were glad to be home

wanted to settle down and
start families of their own.

This led to the post-war
housing boom and the baby boom.

 

(upbeat music)

 

- [Narrator] With all
of these new families

building new houses, demand for
home appliances skyrocketed.

For the Fort Wayne Works
of General Electric,

this meant record orders
for small electric motors.

By 1948, production was up to
nearly eight million units.

And in 1950, over 10
million motors were made.

In 1952, the local company
newspaper changed its name

to "General Electric News,
Fort Wayne, Indiana",

dropping the time-honored use
of the "Fort Wayne Works" name

which had been used since 1899.

This in-house publication
had been a great resource

for employees since the
early days of the company.

- For a long time there
was the "GE News",

a weekly paper that
come out that covered

what was going on
in the businesses

and usually had a few
employee interest articles.

- [Narrator] Since this
Fort Wayne factory complex

had enough employees
to rival a small city,

there was much to talk about.

Along with corporate
news about promotions,

retirements, and special awards,

there were also a variety
of specialty columns.

No paper would be complete
without a sports section

and there were plenty
of employee sports
teams to go around.

Bowling, softball, golf,
basketball, volleyball,

water polo, soccer,
boxing, and, of course,

the national pastime, baseball.

Employees had played baseball
since the earliest days

of the Fort Wayne
Jenney Electric Company.

The Fort Wayne Works
of General Electric

even had its own
professional baseball team

known as the GE Voltmen.

But perhaps the biggest Fort
Wayne GE baseball connection

involves someone who was
in a league of her own.

Isabel Alvarez came
from Cuba to play

in the All-American Girls

Professional Baseball
League in 1949.

She played for the
Fort Wayne Daisies

during the 1951 season
and ended up playing

for five different teams

before finishing her
professional career
back in Fort Wayne.

She started her American
dream with a job

at General Electric Fort Wayne

and had a long career
before retiring in 1999.

Another baseball story begins
a little closer to home.

Bob Guingrich started working
(upbeat music)

for GE Fort Wayne in 1941.

He was quite the
bowler in his day,

playing for the
GE Fort Wayne team

in the American Bowling
Congress competition of 1955.

But what he remembers most
fondly, over 60 years later,

is the time he spent coaching

the Fort Wayne General
Electric Little League Team.

- That was the thing
that really give me

the great happiness to
see all those kids play.

- [Narrator] Gerry Love was one

of the young players he coached.

- He was a teacher.

He had a lotta
knowledge and he wanted

to share that knowledge with us.

He was competitive,
he wanted to win.

But most of all he
wanted us to improve

and to have fun.

- [Narrator] Gerry took the
time to write Bob a letter

thanking him for the
impact he made on his life

even 50 years later.

- "Dear Mr. Guingrich, I was
a short, skinny second baseman

"who could field a little
but couldn't hit a lick.

"I remember that Saturday
waiting by the phone

"to find out if I'd made a team

"and being thrilled
to find it was GE

"because they were the best.

"You worked and then
gave up your off time

"to teach us the game.

"For that I thank you.

"With warmest
regards, Gerry Love."

 

- [Narrator] During
the Baby Boom era,

family activities became
increasingly important.

One of the events
most fondly remembered

is the annual Christmas party.

- I went to my first
GE Christmas party

at the GE Club when
I was probably five.

- They'd have Santa
Claus up on the stage

and all the GE kids got
to sit on Santa's lap.

- It was crowded, it
was full, it was fun.

Everybody was dressed up.

- And I brought
my little children

and we would watch some
type of a stage show.

And it was maybe a
comedian or some dog act

or something like that.

And it was like a really
nice program they put on.

And then when we
walked, out my children

would get the stocking
filled with the fruits

and the gifts for them.

- And maybe a nice Tonka truck.

- It was nice to get a
toy and to see Santa Claus

because a lot of these
people came from Ohio,

Michigan, Whitley County to
work at GE in Fort Wayne.

- They also had these
Saturday morning programs

for a while.

You could come watch a movie
and they would have cereals,

you would come back.

- Bowling leagues and
the softball leagues,

 

basketball over at the club.

- I was on Taylor
Street basketball

and volleyball team.

- Played golf in
the golf league.

- The social activities
through Elex,

that was a big way for
us to expand and grow

our friendship base.

- At our company
picnic every year,

you know, Transformer,
we had a tug o' war

and that was big
bragging rights.

You had trophy.

- Picnics where
you'd get to meet

the plant manager.

And the plant manager,
he could sit down

at your table and you
could eat chicken with him

or whatever, you know.

- The Local 901 Union always
had parties and picnics.

 

They still have 'em today.

- [Narrator] The
clubs, the sports,

the parties, the picnics,

all combined to make
coworkers feel like a family.

- It had a big
family feeling to it.

- When you work next to
somebody every day for years,

you learn about them, you
learn about their family,

you know it.

Even though they live
in the next town over,

they're still your neighbor.

- You saw those
folks just as much

as you saw your spouse.

- We'd have carry-ins
if people retired,

carry-in if maybe
somebody passed away

and they were just
coming back to work.

We just had carry-ins
for everything.

- Sometimes if you had a person

that was sick or you
were down-and-out,

they'd always take up
a collection for you.

- When you're in a union,
(lively music)

you're brothers and sister.

That's how you relate.

So you become very close and
you're there for each other.

And when you're working
out on the factory floor,

if somebody's running behind,
you go up and you help.

- It was just like neighbors,
friends, and over the years

it was just awesome to
develop the friendships.

- We were just a large family.

 

And we got along so well.

- [Narrator] And
in a lot of cases

they actually were family.

- I'm fourth generation GE.

My great grandpa and
my grandpa Archbold,

they lived in Ossian
and they would take

the interurban train
and they would ride

into Fort Wayne to work
at General Electric.

And then my father started.

And my father was
named Glen E. Archbold,

no middle name.

And one time I asked
grandpa, I said,

"How come you didn't give
my dad a middle name?"

He said, "Because I
knew he'd work at GE

"and I wanted his
initials to be G.E."

- It was a family
tradition to work at GE.

- GE was big.

I mean, a lot of my friends
whose fathers worked at GE.

My aunt worked at GE.

- My mother had worked
there during World War II.

- One of my uncles
worked at Decatur GE

and some of his family members

and one of my aunts worked
at Fort Wayne GE at Motors

and my brother worked
there for a while.

- A couple cousins.

- My mother worked at GE,
all my aunts and uncles

worked at GE.

- I was in my late teens, early
20s and sort of floundering,

trying to figure out
exactly what I wanted to do.

And my grandfather and, in fact,

a lot of my relatives had
worked at General Electric.

My grandfather came
home so proud one day

that he'd gotten me into the
Tool and Die Maker Program

at GE like he had gone through.

And I had to sadly
tell my grandfather,

who I loved very much,
that tool and die machinery

was not really what
I wanted to do.

- I met Dan Lovinger who
was the General Manager

of Specialty
Transformer Operation

and after several years we
developed a relationship

and we ended up getting married.

- The people are my favorite
thing about working at GE.

I mean, I even married
one (laughing).

- [Narrator] Because
General Electric

was such a major employer in
Fort Wayne for over a century,

a lot of people in the
town have some kind

of personal connection to GE.

- Just about anybody in
the city of Fort Wayne

 

has had a relative or a neighbor

or an acquaintance,
somebody, somehow,

 

sometime has worked here at GE.

- I got orders to go to Vietnam.

As soon as I got there,
would you believe

there was a guy that
picked me up there

 

from Fort Wayne, Indiana.

And you know where he worked at?

 

Right here at GE.

- The number of
employees that GE had had

over the years compared
to the population

of Allen County,

and if I remember correctly,

I think we come up with on
average one out of nine people

had worked at GE
sometime or another.

- Came to Fort Wayne in 1959.

I think the employment was
around 10,000 to 12,000.

- Started our first
job at GE in 1964.

I made $1.80 an hour.

- I started in
September of 1973.

I think I started off

at about 3.50, 4.17 an hour.

It was piece work.

- And one of the
first impressions

was just how sprawling it was.

- This place was huge.

- Big and scary (chuckles).

 

- Busy, everybody busy
working like a busy bee.

- I couldn't believe
that many buildings

had that many people
working in 'em.

- Smells of the varnish,
different varnishes,

different places
where they treat

the motors and transformers.

- Any time you were in
GE, you would come out

smelling like GE.

And nobody could ever lie
and say they went to work

because when you came home,

you definitely had that smell.
(Rudy laughing)

- Sound of the punch
presses hammering away.

- Boom, boom, boom.

- And everybody talked loud.

They hollered.

(both laughing)

- Yeah.

- Because the noise
level was so high

and then you'd get outta GE

you're still like that.
- You're still hollering

at each other.

(both laughing)

Said, just calm down,
you're not at work no more.

(both laughing)

- The shift whistles, I
remember hearing those

so I had an idea when
the first shift ended

and when the second shift ended

and when the third shift ended.

- After work, there was a bar
across from the 901 Union Hall

and we called that
901 1/2 because that's
where you would go

after work to talk about work.
(upbeat music)

- A number of the neighborhoods
that still survive

started to spring up around GE.

A lotta folks wanted
to live near the plant.

- General Electric
Company was very important

to the community.

They had a lot of
employees and that was

your bread and butter
to come and work at GE.

- Good wages, terrific benefits,

 

good retirement, and it
enabled a lot of families

 

reach their dreams.

- I made enough money to
send my kids to college.

They went to college,
had everything paid for.

And I had good health
insurance for the family.

- [Narrator]
Employees could enjoy

some of the fruits
of their labor

by shopping at the
Employee Store.

- We bought all GE appliances.

They used to have a
GE appliance store

over on Sweeney Avenue,
across from the credit union.

Well, we'd get better
deals on coffee pots,

toasters, just
anything they had.

So that was a big
thing at Christmas

was to go to the GE
Store on Swinney Avenue

and pick out your hairdryers,
whatever you might want.

(blender whirring)

♪ Hear the newest most
exciting sound in town ♪

♪ It's a General
Electric blender ♪

♪ That's going around

♪ Completely new
from base to lid ♪

♪ Take it apart,
see what they did ♪

♪ The nonskid base is the
lowest you'll ever see ♪

- [Man] The decanter has a
36-ounce blending capacity.

 

- [Narrator] In 1968, GE Fort
Wayne had 8,000 employees

producing a variety of
motors, transformers,

and other products.

The 1970s saw the
advent of globalization.

- The system was such that
it just was not compatible

with keeping up with where
the market was going.

- [Narrator] By 1977,
the Fort Wayne workforce

had been pared down
to 5,500 employees

as production continued
to be divvied out

to other locations.

- Through the '60s and the '70s

and up till about
the early '80s,

very early '80s,

we were able to get
frequent price increases

in the market

 

to cover our escalating costs

of labor contracts, cost of
materials, and those things.

By the time we'd
reached the '80s,

it was nearly impossible
to get a price increase.

It was a thing of the past.

- [Narrator] Soon
General Electric

was announcing plans to build
two new plants in Mexico.

- The company built a
plant in Juarez, Mexico,

 

and that plant started
to pick up product

out of Taylor Street.

The 40 frame and 30 frame
motors went down there.

 

That move probably was driven

 

by the need to get
lower cost products.

- [Narrator] Weldon
Shaefer was asked to travel

from Fort Wayne to
help set up the factory

and train workers
in Juarez, Mexico.

- Most of the workers were paid

a rather low wage, which
was pretty much standard

with all the other work

that went across the
(speaking in foreign language)

they called it.

It was a transition of
American industry into Mexico.

 

Quite a number of people
that were probably not happy

that I was helping
with that transition

but I did feel it was
part of my responsibility

no matter what and I understood

it was a thing that
was gonna happen.

There was nothing that
we're gonna do to stop it.

Might as well make
the best of it.

 

- [Narrator] The board
at General Electric

corporate headquarters
were looking for someone

who could steer the ship
through the uncharted waters

of the emerging global economy.

They settled upon a bold
new leader that in some ways

was reminiscent of the business
genius of Charles Coffin

and the charisma
of R.T. McDonald.

Jack Welch became president
and CEO of General Electric

in April of 1981.

He took a more accessible,
hands-on approach

to leadership and that
earned him a lot of respect.

- Think he was really
on the lookout for ways

to maximize GE's prominence.

 

And under him, I mean, it became

one of the largest
corporations on the planet.

- He used to say,

 

"If you're doing things today

"the way you did
them a year ago,

"someone has either
caught up with you

"or they've passed you."

He was a big change agent.

- [Narrator] But his
culture of change was met

with apprehension by
some of the GE workers

that had counted on the
factory for generations.

- Unions were always
trying to get job security

all across the country.

That's what the labor
movement wanted from GE

was job security.

- [Narrator] By the time
the 100-year anniversary

of the founding of Fort Wayne
Jenney Electric Light Company

rolled around in 1981,
there were 4,700 employees

 

on the payroll.

In 1982, major flooding
hit the city of Fort Wayne.

A national disaster was declared

and President Ronald Reagan
came to survey the damage.

 

As the flood waters
were still rising,

the President took time to
help Fort Wayne volunteers

place sandbags to hold
back the floodwaters.

This wasn't the first
time that Ronald Reagan

had visited Fort Wayne.

Years earlier actor Ronald
Reagan came to visit,

and his destination

was the Fort Wayne Works
of General Electric.

Reagan was the host
of the television show

"General Electric Theater"
from 1954 through 1962.

 

The Elex Club held a
banquet in his honor

when he came to visit and
mingle with employees in 1954.

During the 1980s,

there were a lot of changes
(somber music)

made under the
leadership of Jack Welch.

Employment levels at
GE Fort Wayne shrank

to just 2,900 workers,
the lowest levels

since before World War I.

 

Guy Rhoades would often give
reports to the management

at GE corporate headquarters,
including Jack Welch.

- He was a terrific manager,
remembered everything,

 

got to know these motor
businesses quite well,

 

was a tough reviewer.

 

Seemed to ask all
the right questions.

And you had to have
your wits about you.

You couldn't wander off.

Your answers had to be
direct, to the point.

- [Narrator] The
pruning of operations

that Jack Welch had
implemented system-wide

began to pay off.

GE stock was up by 500%
at the end of the decade.

In Fort Wayne, the
Motor Business Group
remained profitable.

- It was a powerhouse.

I mean, it dominated
its markets,

had high market share.

It was very profitable and
it was a terrific business,

probably one of
the best businesses

in the General Electric Company.

- The motors we
built here were used

in so many different things.

Wherever you were, you
would see GE motors.

- That was one great thing
about the motor business.

It touched almost every
market you could think of.

- [Narrator] In 1989,
the Decatur Plant,

which had been connected
with Fort Wayne Works

for over 80 years,
was closed down.

- I think the idea that
may close the plant

or move production
somewhere else

had been going on
for a long time,

but our plant in Decatur

had one of the highest
levels of productivity

within the whole
system of motors.

So many of us kind
of thought it was

a wolf cry that's not
gonna ever come about.

But it did, it did.

 

- [Narrator] Many of the
workers were able to transfer

to the Fort Wayne campus.

 

- I started in 1969 in Decatur

and I worked there till 1988

when they announced they
were closing Decatur.

And we had a chance to
come up here to Fort Wayne

so I put in my bid

and I got into Fort Wayne

and I stayed working
here till 2006.

- [Narrator] This was
truly a time of uncertainty

for many GE workers.

- As a GE employee, you kinda
focused on the local area

and GE's what we're
doing here is, you know,

why isn't it better recognized,

or we've been here a long time,

we're making money
for the company?

A lotta times we felt
that maybe he didn't have

employees' best interest in mind

and he was too focused
on the profits and all.

- [Narrator] But from a
shareholder's perspective

this made the company's
value grow to record levels.

(somber music)

General Electric's
stock increased by 1000%

during the 1990s.

 

Many GE employees owned
stock in the company,

giving them a
unique perspective.

- My personal feeling
is his leadership

was good for the company.

We did very well
when Jack was here.

- [Narrator] In 1993, the
annual GE shareholders' meeting

was held in Fort Wayne.

Denver Sarver was
able to ask Jack Welch

about his business
strategy during his visit.

- It was making seven,
eight percent at that time

and he had other businesses

that were making over 30%.

And so if he sold
the motor business

and invested the money from that

into those other businesses,

which would I rather
make 7% or 30%?

As a shareholder, he
had to do what was best

for the company and
the shareholders.

- If he could've back
in the '70s and '80s

he woulda put every
General Electric plant

on a barge and moved that barge

wherever he could find
the cheapest labor.

- [Narrator] GE Fort Wayne
had about 1,450 employees

at the end of the
Jack Welch era.

Slowly, piece by piece,
over the next few years,

the Fort Wayne Works
would lose production jobs

to other factories.

Most went to Mexico.

- Eventually, the cost of
producing product in Fort Wayne

did catch up with the
Fort Wayne operations.

- But it was always the
feeling that you're seeing

the business move away

and jobs move away with it.

- If it's decaying,
eventually it will decay

to a point where the
end result is the same.

The business will
close or it'll be sold.

- Over the years they
lost a lotta people.

They'd have small layoffs,
never call people back,

and I don't think the
public knew how small

the employment was getting
at General Electric.

- [Narrator] By 2014, there
were only 90 employees left

on the Fort Wayne roster.

On January 28th,
2014, General Electric

made the official announcement
(tense music)

that it would be closing

the entire Fort Wayne facility.

- It was heartbreaking.

I was so sad.

- It hurts me, you know.

 

It hurts me and I think
it hurt a lot of people.

- Just almost a sick feeling,

 

you know, that it was all over.

 

- All the memories,
all the people,

just gone, you know.
(somber music)

Never be a fifth generation.

 

- Just kinda empty, you know,

from what it used to be

with all the equipment
and the noise

and the sounds and
stuff, the people.

Almost like a ghost town.

 

- It's empty, it's empty.

 

It's just like a
hole, it's empty.

 

- It was bing, bang, boom.

I mean, they unbolted
it, it was on a truck,

and it was outta here.

- I couldn't believe
it, you know.

It was the last transformer.

We're gonna run out
of the factory and...

- Had an auction,
auctioned things off.

- At GE, everybody
always wrote their names

on their tools.

They wrote their
names on their carts

so nobody would take their cart

so that they'd always
have their work equipment

to do their job.

And that's what was
the saddest to me

 

was seeing everyone's names.

 

- [Narrator] Kevin was
there for the final day

when he had to close and lock
the door for the last time.

- [Interviewer] Walking out
of here for the last time,

what did you do?

 

- Went home and drank some beer.

 

(Kevin laughing)

(lively music)

- [Narrator] Kevin had
enough years of service

to retire from General Electric.

But it wasn't very long until
he received a phone call.

- About six months later
is when they started having

the break-ins here with
kids, mostly kids, you know.

And that's when GE
asked me to come back.

- [Narrator] With the
buildings now empty,

community members were concerned

about the future of the campus.

- You're the councilman
for this area,

what are you gonna do about it?

And I thought that's
a good question.

What can we do as a community?

- [Narrator] Fort Wayne City
Councilman Geoffrey Paddock

helped organize a group
of former GE employees,

Fort Wayne residents,
and community leaders,

to work on a future
plan for the GE Campus.

- I started contacting
other retirees.

 

Is it a possibility
that the campus

could become something other
than what it was prior?

 

- [Narrator] In March of 2016,

workers removed the GE logo sign

that had towered over
the GE Campus building

for almost 90 years.

Its loss was a shock to
many in the community.

- It was a landmark certainly.

You saw it from all over town.

- When I came to
Fort Wayne in '59,

that sign was bright
and shining every night

and you could see
it from everywhere.

- This is where I work, this
is the GE sign, you know.

- The actual meatball,
the GE meatball

has been shipped
down to Evendale,

down in Cincinnati.

- [Narrator] For the members

of the General Electric
Campus Coalition,

the removal of the
GE sign underscored

how urgent the need was
to secure the property

and preserve the legacy.

- It was a wake up call

because that really
ignited our group.

- I think there
was a real concern

that all the buildings
would be knocked down.

- [Narrator] Finally,
all of the hard work

and searching would pay off.

 

On February 13th, 2017,
(upbeat music)

an important
announcement was made.

 

Baltimore development
firm Cross Street Partners

had agreed to
purchase the property

from General
Electric and save it

from the wrecking ball.

Electric Works was born,
(lively music)

a vision to transform
the 18 historic buildings

on the 39-acre campus
into a mixed use facility

where people can
live, work, and play.

The hope is to utilize some

of the 1.2 million square
feet of indoor space

to house business startups,
education partners,

medical facilities, offices,

and retail businesses that
would be an economic engine

for the surrounding area.

The plan also calls
for converting

some of the floor space
into loft-style apartments

with views of
downtown Fort Wayne.

- I was super excited to hear

about Electric Works
because it was like a part

of our history was gonna stay.

These buildings are beautiful.

- All of us never
dreamed that we'd be

at this point at this time.

- They wanna see this thing
come to life once again

and be able to bring their
kids and grandkids through

and show 'em, well, I
worked right over there.

- It is important that
we recognize our past,

try to preserve as
much of it as we can,

and take those relics
to build the future.

- That was a great place for me

and it was the greatest
places I ever had.

- GE's been good to me

and I really appreciate
the time I had here.

- I still appreciate
what GE did for me

 

to this day.

- I'm very thankful
that I've worked here

because there were
blessings that came

from me working here

 

and are still
coming to this day.

- A piece of me
will always be here

 

with GE in Fort Wayne.

- We've thought about all
the good times we'd had.

We enjoyed our jobs, we
enjoyed working there,

we enjoyed the friendships,

we just enjoyed being there.

- If you've got a job that
you like to go into work,

 

you got it made
(gentle music)

if you love your job and I did.

 

Some of my cohorts
said at the time,

"Kevin will be the
last one here."

 

And they were right.

(Kevin laughing)

 

- [Narrator] The hope is

that these dead,
lifeless buildings

will once again teem with life.

And that the legacy of R.T.
McDonald, James Jenney,

James J. Wood, and
thousands of others

who have worked and lived here

will be felt by future
generations for years to come.

 

(upbeat music)

 

(lively music)

 

(gentle music)