Berkshire Cotton Manufacturing Company, ca.1898
Berkshire Mill No. 1, Adams, now converted to apartments.

Berkshire Fine Spinning Associates (/ˈbɜːrkʃər/) was an American textile company, founded in 1889 as Berkshire Cotton Manufacturing Company in Adams, Massachusetts in Berkshire County, Massachusetts.

History

The first mill built by the company was Berkshire Mill No. 1 in Adams. In June 1899, President William McKinley laid a cornerstone for the "new mills" of Berkshire Cotton Manufacturing, but was forced to cut his visit short by his wife's illness.[1] By 1917, the company was capitalized at $2,500,000 (~$37.8 million in 2022) and contained over 260,000 ring and mule spindles and 6,500 looms for the production of cotton textiles,[2] making it one of the largest cotton textile companies in the world. In 1929, Berkshire merged with the Valley Falls Company of Rhode Island, and became known as Berkshire Fine Spinning Associates. Its head was Malcolm Greene Chace of the influential Chace family of New England. Malcolm's descendants (his son Malcolm Jr, and grandson Malcolm III) would be involved with the company until 2007.[3]

In 1930, the company acquired the King Philip Mills in Fall River, Massachusetts. In 1931, the company acquired the Parker Mills of Fall River and Warren, Rhode Island.

Unlike many New England textile companies that failed during the 1920s and 1930s, Berkshire Fine Spinning Associates would survive the Great Depression intact. At its peak in 1948, Berkshire earned $29.5 million and employed 11,000 workers at 11 mills, under the leadership of Malcolm Greene Chace Jr.

In 1955, Malcolm Jr. put together the merger of Berkshire with Hathaway Manufacturing Co., founded in New Bedford, Massachusetts in 1888 by Horatio Hathaway, to form Berkshire Hathaway Inc.

By 1958, the complex was closed by Berkshire Hathaway, with Mill #4 having been the last cotton mill in the state's westernmost county.[4] By the early 1960s, the mills had been sold separately. Declining demand for industrial spaces led to the demolition of Mills #2 and 3, leaving Mill #1 as it originally stood.[5]

Also in the 1960s, outside Adams the Berkshire mill empire had declined to seven plants and 6,000 people, but still annually produced one quarter of a billion yards of material that sold for more than $60 million. The assets, and a sizable amount of cash on the balance sheet, caught the eye of Warren Buffett, an up-and-coming but then little-known investor from Omaha, Nebraska.

Buffett, who had founded Buffett Partnership Limited to make investments, started buying stock in Berkshire at $7.60 a share. He eventually paid an average of $14.86 a share, or a total of $14 million, and took control of the company on May 10, 1965.

By then, the company had declined to two mills and 2,300 employees. Buffett used Berkshire Hathaway as his investment vehicle, took the chairman's job in 1970 and acquired dozens of companies.[6]

Berkshire Mill No. 1 was converted into 65 apartments in 1987 and is currently managed by Harvest Properties LLC.

In 2014 a $40 million (~$48.9 million in 2022) development to turn Berkshire Mill No. 4 into 150 affordable apartments was proposed.[7] The development has not started, awaiting permit applications and funding and the building remains vacant (as of 2023). [8]

References

  1. Akron Daily Democrat (June 27, 1899). "Mrs. McKinley ill". US Library of Congress. Retrieved November 22, 2018.
  2. Official American Textile Directory, 1917, Bragdon, Lord & Nagle Co., New York, publishers
  3. "CHACE, MALCOLM G." New York Times. 30 June 2011. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  4. "Berkshire-Hathaway Announces Mill Closing". www.massmoments.org.
  5. "Massachusetts SP Berkshire Mill No. 1". National Archives and Records Administration.
  6. "Providence Journal Article, July 10, 2006".(subscription required)
  7. "Developer Details Plans for Former Adams Mill". www.iberkshires.com.
  8. Eagle, Sten Spinella, The Berkshire. "Waverly Mill development in Adams could bring much-needeed affordable housing to the town. But the project faces many hurdles". The Berkshire Eagle. Retrieved 2023-05-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.