Division of Transportation Technologies Industries Inc.
Incorporated: 1854
Employees: 263
Sales: $100 million (2002 est.)
NAIC: 336340 Motor Vehicle Brake System Manufacturing; 336399 All Other Motor Vehicle Parts Manufacturing
Gunite Corporation manufactures wheel-end components for medium- and heavy-duty trucks. The company’s products—which include automatic slack adjusters, brake drums, disc brake rotors, disc wheel hubs, spoke wheels, and disc and spoke wheel assemblies for trailers—come as standard equipment on many North American-made trucks.
Origins in the 19th Century
Gunite is based in Rockford, Illinois, where it is believed to be the city’s oldest manufacturing operation. The company originated from the efforts of Duncan Forbes, who was born in Scotland. Duncan came to Troy, New York, with his son Alexander Duncan Forbes in 1842, and the two became involved in the foundry business. By 1854, the men had migrated to Rockford and established a partnership called Duncan Forbes & Son on Forbes Street. Their foundry was located in the city’s Water Power District, where a dam had been constructed across the Rock River to provide power for industry. According to an early historical profile of the company from the mid-1950s, “The operators had to be content with high water in the spring and shallow water in the summer. At times the foundry had to shut down and everyone went hunting and fishing. The diary of Alexander Forbes is filled with notations of going fishing or hunting at almost any time of the year.”
According to the same historical profile, father and son arrived in Rockford during the month of March. Within six months, “they had leased a building, constructed a cupola, connected water power for the blast fans and drawn up a partnership agreement and were advertising in local newspapers the products they were making.” The partnership produced a variety of products from gray iron, including small cast iron stoves, kettles, branding irons, water and steam pipes, fireplace grates, chain pump wheels, railing, wagon wheel axel hubs, plow castings, and sled runners. During the mid-1850s and 1860s, production shifted from gray iron to malleable iron, which the company sold in large quantities to farm implement manufacturers.
During these early years, the Forbes partnership operated under several different business names. According to different sources, the enterprise was called Forest City Foundry, D. Forbes & Son, Proprietors; Eagle Foundry; and Forbes Malleable Iron Works. Duncan Forbes died in April of 1871, but his descendants carried on in his footsteps. That year, Alexander Forbes established a new partnership called A.D. Forbes & Co., which existed until the company was finally incorporated as Rockford Malleable Iron Works in 1890.
Continued Growth in the 20th Century
By the dawn of the twentieth century, the foundry had grown to employ about 150 people. In 1906, it relocated to a 38-acre tract of land on Peoples Avenue. It was around this time when the company began to benefit from the burgeoning U.S. transportation sector. In only a few short years, the railroads became its top market for malleable iron, which was used in the manufacture of freight cars. A period of rapid growth followed, and the foundry’s workforce grew to about 550 by the spring of 1917. At that time, Rockford Malleable Iron established a bureau of employment and welfare to look after the interests of its growing employee base, in the event employees were hurt or became ill.
The railroads provided a steady stream of business until approximately 1920, by which time the foundry had been serving the emerging automobile market for five or six years. In addition to the passenger transportation industry, the company found a niche in the commercial sector and began marketing cast iron brake drums for trucks in 1924. By this time, five generations of the Forbes family had been involved with the company.
When Ford Motor Co. ceased production of the Model T in 1927, the decision had a grave impact on Rockford Malleable Iron, significantly reducing business. However, the Forbes family did not give up. It was amidst these disappointing and challenging conditions that Duncan Patterson Forbes, great-grandson of founder Duncan Forbes, defined the enterprise’s future. According to an early newspaper account, after experimenting with the properties of gun iron in a college metallurgy class, Duncan inspired the company’s engineers to conduct further research into the high-strength metal, which had been used mainly in the production of large field artillery. This ultimately led to the birth of a new product called Gunite—a variety of processed gray iron—and the establishment of a new subsidiary called Gunite Corp.
Following the development of Gunite, the parent company consolidated its operations with Northwestern Malleable of Milwaukee in 1928 and adopted the name Rockford Northwestern Malleable Corp. In 1931, John A. Forbes was promoted from vice-president and general manager to president, replacing Duncan P. Forbes, who became chairman. The following year, the Gunite subsidiary was assimilated into the parent company, which then changed its name to Gunite Foundries Corp. In addition to products made of malleable iron, the newly named company offered a variety of products made from Gunite and a metal known as Z-ron. These included heavy-duty truck wheels made from cast iron, along with bolts, clutch pressure plates, wrenches, connecting rods, and brake drums.
When the 1940s arrived, rising freight costs prompted Gunite to stop casting production for the automobile industry. World War II followed, and the company’s resources were devoted to wartime production. Specifically, Gunite began making steel castings, as well as gray iron castings, that were needed for the production of machine tools. After the war ended, Gunite’s capabilities with steel were used to make truck wheels that complemented the iron brake drums it began manufacturing in the mid-1920s.
By the mid-1950s, Gunite had achieved steady growth through 100 years of operation. It employed roughly 700 workers with an annual payroll of about $4 million. The company’s production workers were unionized. As an early historical profile of Gunite explains, the company weathered more than one rough period during its first 100 years, including a number of nationwide financial panics and periods of economic depression.
According to the August 17, 1955 Rockford Morning Star, at this time various types of commercial castings constituted approximately one-third of Gunite’s production. The remainder of the foundry’s output was devoted to truck brake drums, as well as truck wheels that included brake drums. Gunite shipped anywhere from 16,000 to 18,000 of the latter item every month. The article called Gunite “a classic example of private initiative, courage and freedom of enterprise” and said its strong, lightweight wheel had “an enviable reputation” because it allowed trucks to carry heavier loads on roads and highways with weight restrictions.
Changes and Challenges: Mid-1950s to Late 1980s
After 91 years, Gunite ceased to make malleable iron castings in August of 1955. High labor costs made this type of casting non-profitable. The company continued to make castings from its namesake Gunite, as well as from steel and gray iron. By spring of the following year, a $1 million expansion program had been announced. The program included planned facilities upgrades like a new electric furnace that would enable Gunite to double its production of steel. In November of 1956, President Duncan P. Forbes succeeded John A. Forbes as Gunite’s chairman, while E.C. Fales was named president and general manager. Together, all of these changes may have seen somewhat drastic. However, they paled in comparison to those that were around the corner.
Company Perspectives:
As Gunite approaches its 150th year of operation, it continues to have a rich history of innovation as it sets milestones in the art of manufacturing products for the heavy-duty trucking, off-highway, and bus markets.
Conditions started to improve in 1983, when federal weight restrictions on trucks were reduced. By 1984, Gunite was benefiting from the development of new products at Kelsey-Hayes, including a new disc brake system. However, by this time a mere 500 workers remained in Rockford. In addition, Gunite announced plans to move some 200 machinists jobs from Rockford to Elkhart, Indiana, by 1986. In September 1987, a new Oak Brook, Illinois-based firm called Truck Components Inc. purchased Gunite, as well as Fabco Automotive Corp., from Kelsey-Hayes. At this time, Gunite was officially named Gunite Corp.
A major win for Gunite came in 1988, when Navistar International named the foundry as its only supplier of wheel-end components on medium- and heavy-duty trucks. Another important contract came from Ford Motor Co. As reported in the May 17, 1988 Rockford Register Star, Ford opted to include Gunite’s automatic slack adjusters, which helped breaks to wear in a more even fashion, as standard equipment on all of the automaker’s “medium- and heavy-duty chassis with air brakes starting with the 1989 model year.”
Labor Troubles and a New Parent Company: 1990s and Beyond
Gunite started the 1990s under new leadership. Thomas Cook was named the foundry’s president in April 1991. Cook had previously served as president and CEO of automotive part manufacturer Redlaw Industries, and came to Gunite with more than 30 years of experience in the metals industry. By 1993, the company’s employee base had returned to previous levels, totaling approximately 724 workers. Of these, 263 employees worked at the Rockford plant. That year, the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Health and Safety Administration proposed that Gunite be fined $216,000 after an investigation revealed it had violated 62 safety regulations. The proposed fines came in the wake of two employee deaths that happened between 1991 and 1993.
In 1998, union workers at Gunite’s Rockford plant went on strike in an effort to obtain better pay and more agreeable working conditions. In the April 29, 1998 Rockford Register Star, a representative for the United Auto Workers explained, “It’s not your normal strike, where it just amounts to pure economics. It’s hard to say how long the strike will last because the membership was upset with the morale in the plant. It’s pretty low. They have to work long hours,…and it’s a hot, dirty job.” After approximately two weeks, the workers reached an agreement with Gunite that required them to work fewer hours on weekends. In addition, Gunite agreed to bring in a third-party consultant to improve relations between the foundry and its workers.
- 1854:
- Duncan Forbes and Alexander Duncan Forbes establish a partnership called Duncan Forbes & Son in Rockford, Illinois.
- 1890:
- After changing names several times, the Forbes partnership is incorporated as Rockford Malleable Iron Works.
- 1906:
- The Forbes foundry moves to a 38-acre tract of land on Peoples Avenue.
- 1927:
- A new product called Gunite—a variety of processed gray iron—is developed, and a new subsidiary called Gunite Corp. is established.
- 1928:
- Operations are consolidated with Northwestern Malleable of Milwaukee, and the company name changes to Rockford Northwestern Malleable Corp.
- 1932:
- The Gunite subsidiary is assimilated into the parent company, which changes its name to Gunite Foundries Corp.
- 1954:
- Gunite celebrates 100 years of operation.
- 1960:
- Gunite Foundries Corp. becomes the Gunite Foundries Division of Kelsey-Hayes Co.
- 1973:
- Kelsey-Hayes becomes a subsidiary of truck trailer manufacturer Fruehauf Corp.
- 1987:
- A new Oak Brook, Illinois-based firm called Truck Components Inc. purchases Gunite from Kelsey-Hayes. Gunite is officially named Gunite Corp.
- 1994:
- Truck Components Inc. is purchased by New York-based Castle Harlan Inc.
- 1995:
- Company ownership changes once again when Truck Components is acquired by Chicago-based Johnstown America Industries Inc.
- 1999:
- Johnstown America Industries Inc. is re-named Transportation Technologies Industries Inc. (TTI).
- 2002:
- Gunite remains one of several key TTI companies.
By the late 1990s, Gunite continued to struggle with safety issues. From 1990 through 1998, the November 24, 1998 Rockford Register Star revealed the foundry had paid actual fines of $88,125 for various safety violations. However, these paled in comparison to proposed OSHA fines that totaled $407,000 in late 1998. Of this large sum, $140,000 was related to charges that Gunite exposed its workers to silica dust, which causes a condition called silicosis. The remainder was “for 35 other alleged violations, including the company’s failure to provide annual hearing tests, to inspect respirators, and to properly maintain a clean work environment.”
2013 The rise and fall and rise again of Gunite factory in Rockford
ROCKFORD — For decades the Gunite plant off Peoples Avenue has been a symbol first of Rockford’s manufacturing might, then of its manufacturing decline.
The management team of the plant’s parent gave an invite-only tour Sunday afternoon of the plant to showcase $55 million worth of improvements in the operation and perhaps make it a symbol of the city’s manufacturing renaissance.
“You’ve driven by the plant. Does it look any different?” Accuride CEO Rick Dauch said after the tour. “No. It doesn’t. We wanted to show people that the inside is a totally new operation.”
Founded in 1854 as the Eagle Foundry, the Gunite plant is the oldest continuously operating manufacturing business in Rockford and even perhaps the Midwest. Crews make brake drums, disc wheel hubs and rotors, spoke wheels and automatic slack adjusters for such customers as Ford Motor and Daimler Trucks North America.
Gunite, the name the company adopted in 1932, went through a series of owners in the past 40 years. One started machining parts in Elkhart, Ind.; by the 2000s, much of the work on the wheel-end components was done elsewhere.
Employment shrank and management didn’t reinvest in the operations, which had grown to more than 600,000 square feet. Accuride acquired the plant in 2005. When the Great Recession hit, large-truck sales plummeted, and it was forced to reorganize in bankruptcy in 2009.
“This was the worst plant I’d ever gone through, and I’m including places like India and China,” Dauch said. “You could tell this place had been neglected for years, and I went back to the board of directors and told them they needed to commit $50 to $100 million in this place.”
David Buchanan, who has worked at Gunite for 21 years, said it was frustrating watching the plant slowly fall apart.
“We knew we needed to get management in here with a vision,” the president of UAW Local 718 said. “I’m not going to say we were worried it would shut down, but we wanted the company to reinvest, and when Rick got here, you could see they were committed to turning this place around.”
Rockford got a little lucky as well. Dauch and his new management team wanted to centralize operations, and building a foundry in Brillion, Wis., or Elkhart would have cost $150 million.
So Accuride, which is based in Evansville, Ind., closed the Elkhart plant and moved the work to Rockford. It moved most of the machining work in Brillion to Rockford, too.
Instead of a 130-mile supply chain, the supply chain is about 130 feet. Almost everything Gunite needs to make its wheel-end components — some castings still come from Brillion — is in Rockford. Officials said 98 percent of the steel and aluminum it uses is recycled because of the foundry. The workforce, which was down to 150 UAW members in 2007, is up to 393 people, with 222 of them hired in the past three years.
The Gunite part of Accuride’s operations finally started turning a profit in March.
Dauch said Accuride plans to spend $20 million next year on redoing the foundry, which hasn’t been renovated in decades. It also eventually plans to move a warehouse from Batavia to Rockford.
These are all huge wins for the Rockford manufacturing industry, which in January 2010 had 25,000 employees in Boone and Winnebago counties. As of August, it has rebounded to 32,400.
Dauch said there’s another reason for showing off the company’s reinvestment.
“We’d like the city of Rockford to take a good look at improving the roads around the plant,” Dauch said. Peoples Avenue is in one of the oldest sections of Rockford, and the surrounding roads are filled with potholes. “It’d be nice to not have to worry about our trucks breaking an axle when they come in here.”
Sources: Rockford Register Star & Encyclopedia.com