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American Cast Iron Pipe Company

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pipe. A new melting system in 1972, including the largest cupola of its kind in the world, would supply the new iron for this pipe, and American would move from a Sand Spun casting process to a generation of deLavaud metal molds, still used today. Throughout the 1960s, American would continue to
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had little effect on the company at first, but soon, business started to decline resulting in a loss of jobs. By the mid-1930s, government spending on municipal water supplies, fire protection, and sanitation brought a resurgence in business.
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Its Steel Pipe Division would also see major developments. In 2015, American Steel Pipe completed a $ 70-million expansion, including a new 150,000-square-foot processing facility and upgrades to its two mills.
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In the early 1980s American expanded its steel pipe business and acquired Waterous Company of St. Paul, Minnesota, to add fire pumps to its product line and increase market share in valves and hydrants.
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method and increased pipe diameters to 24 inches (610 mm). The company also introduced cement-lined pipe, which became the industry standard. The
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ACIPCO has divisions for Steel Pipe, Ductlie Iron Pipe (both based in Birmingham), Flow Control (valve- and hydrant-producing facilities in
58: 257:, and valves for the waterworks industry, and electric-resistance-welded steel pipe for the oil and natural gas industry. Headquartered in 65: 389: 72: 54: 105: 281: 43: 273:, who was the company's first president and later sole proprietor. In 1924, Eagan died of complications from 270: 79: 367: 199:
ductile iron pipe, spiral-welded steel pipe, fire hydrants, valves, fire pumps, steel pipe, static castings
185: 343:), Spiral-Weld Pipe (in Columbia, South Carolina; Flint, Michigan; and Paris, Texas), and Castings (in 340: 285: 261:, American's diversified product line also includes static castings and high performance fire pumps. 312: 269:
American was founded by Charlotte and James Blair. They recruited the initial investors, including
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American Cast Iron Pipe Company, 1501 Thirty-first Avenue North, Birmingham, Jefferson County, AL
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In 1939, business was further boosted by federal defense spending to support
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diversify, adding its valves and hydrants product line and gaskets.
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at the Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library
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In 2000, American opened American SpiralWeld Pipe Company in
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In the 1920s, American developed a proprietary Mono-Cast
213: 390:"AMERICAN SpiralWeld Expands Operations to Paris, Texas" 299:In 1955, American shipped its first large order of 46:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 424: 438:Historic American Engineering Record in Alabama 368:"The McWane Story – Two Companies, Two Visions" 443:Privately held companies based in Alabama 106:Learn how and when to remove this message 433:Companies based in Birmingham, Alabama 425: 413:Historic American Engineering Record 44:adding citations to reliable sources 15: 13: 14: 454: 400: 55:"American Cast Iron Pipe Company" 208: 207: 124: 20: 407:American Cast Iron Pipe Company 243:American Cast Iron Pipe Company 119:American Cast Iron Pipe Company 31:needs additional citations for 382: 319:. A third facility opened in 1: 350: 330: 7: 10: 459: 264: 341:South St. Paul, Minnesota 286:Wall Street Crash of 1929 230: 220: 203: 195: 178: 160: 152: 142: 132: 123: 415:(HAER) No. AL-35, " 313:Columbia, South Carolina 245:is a manufacturer of 40:improve this article 282:centrifugal casting 259:Birmingham, Alabama 222:Number of employees 120: 118: 370:. Frontline. 2003 240: 239: 116: 115: 108: 90: 450: 394: 393: 386: 380: 379: 377: 375: 364: 235:american-usa.com 211: 210: 128: 121: 117: 111: 104: 100: 97: 91: 89: 48: 24: 16: 458: 457: 453: 452: 451: 449: 448: 447: 423: 422: 403: 398: 397: 388: 387: 383: 373: 371: 366: 365: 358: 353: 345:Pryor, Oklahoma 337:Beaumont, Texas 333: 317:Flint, Michigan 267: 223: 184:Van L. Richey, 181: 137:Private company 112: 101: 95: 92: 49: 47: 37: 25: 12: 11: 5: 456: 446: 445: 440: 435: 421: 420: 410: 402: 401:External links 399: 396: 395: 392:. 21 May 2020. 381: 355: 354: 352: 349: 332: 329: 266: 263: 238: 237: 232: 228: 227: 224: 221: 218: 217: 212:$ 1.2 billion 205: 201: 200: 197: 193: 192: 182: 179: 176: 175: 162: 158: 157: 154: 150: 149: 144: 140: 139: 134: 130: 129: 114: 113: 28: 26: 19: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 455: 444: 441: 439: 436: 434: 431: 430: 428: 418: 414: 411: 408: 405: 404: 391: 385: 369: 363: 361: 356: 348: 346: 342: 338: 328: 324: 323:, in 2021. 322: 318: 314: 309: 305: 302: 297: 295: 290: 287: 283: 278: 276: 272: 271:John J. Eagan 262: 260: 256: 255:fire hydrants 252: 251:spiral-welded 248: 244: 236: 233: 229: 225: 219: 215: 206: 202: 198: 194: 191: 187: 183: 177: 174: 170: 166: 163: 159: 155: 151: 148: 147:Manufacturing 145: 141: 138: 135: 131: 127: 122: 110: 107: 99: 88: 85: 81: 78: 74: 71: 67: 64: 60: 57: –  56: 52: 51:Find sources: 45: 41: 35: 34: 29:This article 27: 23: 18: 17: 384: 372:. Retrieved 334: 325: 321:Paris, Texas 310: 306: 301:ductile iron 298: 294:World War II 291: 279: 275:tuberculosis 268: 253:steel pipe, 247:ductile iron 242: 241: 226:3,000 (2010) 161:Headquarters 133:Company type 102: 96:January 2023 93: 83: 76: 69: 62: 50: 38:Please help 33:verification 30: 427:Categories 351:References 180:Key people 165:Birmingham 66:newspapers 331:Divisions 186:President 196:Products 143:Industry 374:May 10, 265:History 231:Website 204:Revenue 169:Alabama 153:Founded 80:scholar 339:, and 249:pipe, 216:(2015) 188:& 82:  75:  68:  61:  53:  87:JSTOR 73:books 376:2012 156:1905 59:news 347:). 214:USD 190:CEO 173:USA 42:by 429:: 359:^ 171:, 167:, 378:. 109:) 103:( 98:) 94:( 84:· 77:· 70:· 63:· 36:.

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"American Cast Iron Pipe Company"
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Private company
Manufacturing
Birmingham
Alabama
USA
President
CEO
USD
american-usa.com
ductile iron
spiral-welded
fire hydrants
Birmingham, Alabama
John J. Eagan
tuberculosis
centrifugal casting
Wall Street Crash of 1929
World War II

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