Updates on the construction of the Weston-Mott factory from 1906.
Inside the Industrial and Hamilton plant.
This map should help you with the locations of the seven buildings which made up the Weston-Mott factories located at the Buick site.
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| By the time of this photo Weston-Mott was part of Buick. |
Hamilton & Industrial Avenue 1915.
| 1910. |
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| Weston-Mott office with red & white awning. |
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| Weston-Mott office at left. |
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| Weston-Mott office at left. Buick factory #01 & office beyond. |
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| Weston-Mott #4 when new. |
A north facing view of Weston-Mott #5 (Buick #35). This is the axle plant that Harry Bassett (Weston-Mott General Manager)
requested to be built next to factory #4 in his letter dated July 31, 1909 to William "Bill" Little (Buick Manager). It just ended up a bit farther north. These factories back then could be up and running in as little as 3 months from the time you contacted the builder. "Not as much red tape as today". At the time of this photo I believe it was still an axle plant but when this was published in "The Factory Behind The Car" Buick labeled it as to it's then current use. ![]() |
| This is the west end of Weston-Mott #5. |
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| Weston-Mott #6 facing south with Weston -Mott #4 on right. |
This is the Weston-Mott axle heat treat plant #7 (Buick #37) This factory was built in 1909 and demolished in 1936. This view is facing north-east. This factory was for front axles only as far as I know at this time. 


Links: Factory #35 And #94 Industrial Avenue Revisited. Hamilton & Industrial Avenue 1915. Industrial & Hamilton Avenue 1915. Weston-Mott At Industrial & Hamilton Industrial and Hamilton Avenue Early views of Buick & Weston-Mott. Weston-Mott Powerhouse #6 Weston-Mott Officers Industrial & Hamilton Avenue 1913 Weston-Mott Employees Factory #10 and #07 during construction. Plus Industrial and Hamilton Factory #34 Weston-Mott #4 Industrial and Hamilton Avenue Weston-Mott Demolition 1946 Weston-Mott 1923 Inside Weston-Mott Weston-Mott Company Hamilton Avenue #4-#08 And Weston-MottEngineering & Experimental 1923








Great pictures, Gerry!
ReplyDeleteYou probably have already seen this video of a 1936 Buick production line, but just in case not, here's a link:
http://www.dump.com/2011/07/15/fascinating-1936-footage-of-car-assembly-line-video/
Thanks! I have seen that. But it is a Chevrolet plant. Buick that year had their "Buick Script" offset on the passenger side of the grill. I have a video though of the Buick at Flint being assembled, And if I ever get the program for removing the copy protection I will post it. You can find quite a few of the Chevrolet ones on youtube and yes they are fascinating. Easy mistake because they all looked very simular. You had me doing a double check.
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