This is the second floor of factory #04. This is probably near the center of the factory judging by the bins holding tires. The cars in the foreground (traveling to the right) have yet to be through body scheduling. The car in the left background (traveling to the left) is a Regal (already through scheduling) heading for factory #40. Body receiving was all done in factory #04 at this time. The materials group #88 was in charge of body receiving. The body's in the foreground are still on the carriers that carried them through the Fisher body factory on south Saginaw st. The tires and wheels in the bins were just extras that were occasionally needed. |
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Factory #04 Assembly 1983
Friday, January 28, 2011
Factory #20
This story on the new Buick foundry #20 is from the trade journal "The Foundry" June 1917. August 1917 story. |
This post card shows the (then new) Buick foundry located at the corner of Leith st. and Division st. This north facing view shows the foundry on the left with the die and pattern shop #15 on the right. This new foundry which took the place of the old Michigan Motor Castings factory on Industrial Ave was built in 1916. This factory was demolished between 1931-1932 being replaced by factory #70 built directly north of this spot. Building #85, which was built later (on this site) was the Engineering building where I hired in during 1972. |
Buick 1932
Factory #15 1997
Factory #15 Die And Pattern Shop
Factory #20 Foundry
Buick Factory Designations
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Factory #40 1983
This view facing north on the second floor slat line about 100 feet south of the body drop shows the same job I did in 1976 in factory #04. |
Factory #40/bldg 16 1978
Factory #40 1980.
Factory #04 Second Floor Pit
Monday, January 24, 2011
Buick Dealers
The factory #03 Drop Forge is in the background. |
You can see the rail loading dock that Buick used in 1916 in the right background. |
Instead of a banner on factory #06 the factory is now painted "BUICK MOTOR COMPANY PIONEER BUILDER VALVE-IN-HEAD MOTOR CARS". |
I tried buying, but was outbid by a dealer. Above is shown some other closeup photos. |
This photo which is reminiscent of the Walter Chrysler photo showing 5,000 Buick workers was taken 3 years later on June 21,1916. The photo above is the whole panorama. |
5,000 Buick Employees
Weston-Mott Employees
Walter Chrysler Photo 5,000 Buick Employees
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Buick Entertainment.
This photo taken before the creation of Buick City shows a workers companion "The Boom Box". I still have my machine and my special mix tapes. If you've ever seen the movie "Car Wash" you will understand the need for this device. The worker shown is Jay Britt. After the creation of Buick City, TV was the status symbol in the factory. The problem was reception, (being surrounded by the steel structure of the building). Many antennas would sprout up on the roof with cables running hundreds of feet down into the factory. Every so often management would send maintenance workers up on the roof for antenna removal. The maintenance workers always had the best equipment and of coarse they would never remove their own antennas. On factory #40's roof alone could be found well over 30 installations. As with the numbers runners, makeshift restaurants, bordellos (Mattress Mary's in old factory #40), liquor stores and gambling establishments being shut down every few years, the same held true for rooftop antennas. P.S. knowbody seemed to care about Mary's being shut down because that meant a new mattress. Life in the factory sure was interesting at times. 'We really were a city'. |
Buick City Assembly
This process of removing and re-installing the doors only lasted through the first year of production at the new Buick City assembly plant. The original purpose of removing and re-installing the doors was considered a step forward in a quality build, plus it would be more ergonomic for the worker. All the door components would be installed off the car on a separate assembly line and then sent by a super fast elevator to the second floor for re-installation. As with many things eliminated after the first year, this was considered almost a Rube Goldberg way of doing a simple job. It was a real pain getting the doors back into their original alignment. This photo shows the solution they came up with for helping with the alignment procedure. The worker shown is Gene Wolfram who helped develop this device. |
Friday, January 21, 2011
Buick 1920.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Chassis Receiving Before Buick City
We had two of these large gas powered fork lifts for unloading the flat-bed rail cars. This was quite a balancing act that sometimes led to disaster. We would occasionally go joy riding in these at night on second shift. You had to be careful because of the extra tall mast, so as not to knock into any overhead bridge. A smaller version of these trucks were used for loading onto the factory conveyors. The frames in my time came from A. O. Smith factory in Milwaukee,Wisconsin And early on from Midland Steel in Cleveland Ohio. I have an interesting story about this unloading procedure in my memoirs. links: News of a shutdown for a lack of frames in 1945. |
Factory #04-03 In 1976
Chassis Line 1966
Factory #62 Chassis Loading
Friday, January 14, 2011
Industrial & Hamilton Avenue 1915.
Close-up detail showing more bricks being laid at the intersection. I think the street car line (follow links) was extended from this intersection all the way to Saginaw street at this time. Also great office detail. |
Close-up detail of the south-west corner of the Weston-Mott factory. |
This Weston-Mott employee never mailed this card. It must have been his personal keepsake, as evidenced by his note on the back. |
Here is the Industrial Bank in 1915. |
Here is the main Industrial Bank in Downtown Flint. |