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We
feel that by
understanding our
history,
you will
have a better
understanding
of the Barton
Malow culture.
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Ben
Maibach III, President
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The
following Barton Malow History is written by
Ben Maibach Jr., Chairman Emeritus.
Many people
ask who were Barton and
Malow? I had the
privilege of working closely
with these founding principals
of our firm.
Carl
Osborn Barton was
born March 19, 1898, in Sault Sainte
Marie, Michigan. He graduated from the University
of Michigan Engineering
School, and started his employment
with the Detroit Water
Board. After a short period he began
working for the J.A. Utley
Company in the Detroit
area. Utley was one of the largest
general contractors in
Michigan at the time and was the vehicle
whereby many later Detroit
contractors originally began.
Employed
as an engineer on a stamping
plant for Fisher
Body in Pontiac, Michigan,
he met a young carpenter
foreman, Peter Darin, and
the two of them decided
to go into business for themselves.
With $500 borrowed capital,
Carl left the employment
of J.A. Utley with the
understanding that Pete Darin would follow
after he had taken a honeymoon
vacation. However, Pete’s
new bride was not at all
of a mind that her husband
enter into such a risky
business venture, so Carl
proceeded on his own.
Some years later,
Pete Darin left the Utley
Company and
joined with John Armstrong
as founders of Darin-Armstrong
Company, which was purchased
by Walbridge Aldinger some
years ago.
The C.O. Barton
Company’s
office was at 1609 Washington
Boulevard in Detroit, Michigan,
and Carl, with high ideals,
wanted to go first-class.
His company was founded on
August 4, 1924. Of the 1,000
shares of stock, C.O., as
we affectionately called
him, owned 998 shares. His
sister, Margaret Rose Barton,
a school teacher, and Kins
Collins, the auditor and
one of the founders of Collins,
Buri & McConkey accounting
firm, each had one share.
(We continue to do business
with Collins, Buri & McConkey
to this day.) The three of
them served as the directors.
Mr. Barton was President
and Treasurer; Rose Barton,
Vice President; and Kins
Collins, Secretary.
It soon
became apparent that they
had to reduce expenses
and the office was relocated
for a short time to the
Free Press Building. However,
four years later in 1928,
the company moved its office
again to a building at
1900 East Jefferson Avenue.
The
first contract was awarded
by Michigan Bell Telephone
for some interior renovations.
The next 25 work orders
were allocated to alterations
and repairs for the Hudson
Motor Car Company. The
volume for the first year was $521,000
with a net income of $1,247.
Early
clients that kept the firm
profitable were automotive
related, and approximately
50 percent of the C.O.
Barton Company’s business
was for the Packard and
Hudson Motor Car companies. Shortly
thereafter, the Ford Motor
Car Company awarded a contract
to C.O. Barton Company
for foundations at their River Rouge plant
in Michigan, and in December
1927, the first job for
the Chrysler Corporation was
recorded.
In 1927, the Company
fell on very difficult
times. The books showed a deficit
of $50,000 and C.O., who
was an extremely dedicated
individual, suffered a
nervous breakdown—the result
of consistently being underfinanced,
spread too thin and working long hours. It
was recommended that he
consider bankruptcy, but being a conscientious,
determined man of excellent
character, he did not take
that option. Through diligence
and commitment the Company
survived, and all of the
creditors received 100
percent on the dollar. Carl Barton
was a man of integrity.
It
was the Company’s
philosophy from inception
that fair play and honesty
were the firm’s guiding
principals. C.O. believed
in taking care of employees
and providing superior service
to his clients.
During the
struggle for survival,
Arnold Malow, a native of the area
whose father had been a
partner in a very prominent Detroit
carpenter construction
firm and
then a principal in the Malow Berry Company, joined forces with Carl Barton.
C.O. and Arnold had become acquainted through a mutual friend, Roy Rohrmoser,
a plastering contractor at that time. Roy had the intuition to recognize the
two would provide a good balance for each other.
Arnold Malow was a financial wizard
and loyal to the people he knew. His family roots
were local and he had a host of friends. He loved
to socialize and was an avid golfer. He and his
wife had a little girl named Mary.
C.O., had a quiet nature. He was
extremely conscientious, and all decisions were
thoroughly analyzed and slowly confirmed. These
virtues added balance to the Company. However,
C.O. struggled in our business where bid dates
cannot be missed and many decisions have to be
made quickly.
Arnold Malow brought $25,000
of new capital to the firm, which he borrowed from his brother-in-law, George
Fink, President of Michigan Steel Company. It later
became the National Steel Corporation, which for many years, was our largest
client. Carl continued as president, Arnold assumed the responsibility of Vice
President and Treasurer, and Kins Collins, CPA, served as Secretary. Arnold
brought to the table a tremendous gift for handling
funds. With this new infusion of
cash, approximately $7,000 worth of floating checks were made good and the
revived Company was off to a fresh start.
In 1929, prior to the beginning
of the Great Depression, the firm’s volume
doubled to just under $1,000,000 and the year-end showed a profit of $4,471.
The following year the volume was about the same and there was a profit in
excess of $20,000. In 1931, in the depth of the
Depression, there was an additional profit of
$14,803. The new team was successful and optimism
prevailed.
After the bank
crash of 1929, the Company survived because Carl and Arnold had wisely invested
a portion of the Company assets and stock in National Steel,
which they were able to sell, and through Arnold’s financial expertise,
were able to meet their obligations and have cash on hand.
In May 1932, the
name was changed to Barton Malow Company. The slate of officers remained the
same with the addition of Sylvestor Wolfe who
assumed the responsibilities of Chief Estimator and Secretary. Wolfe was a
part-time employee earning $1.00 per hour when work was available. The three
of them constituted the entire office force and necessarily so because gross
sales dropped to $119,000 and operation
showed a loss of $3,553, which included a $35 bad debt write off. All were
aware that times were difficult but wisely recognized the potential for growth
if they persevered.
The Lord provides, and when the
Great Lakes Steel Corporation was formed in Ecorse,
Michigan, Barton Malow Company was chosen as
the prime contractor.
My father,
Ben Maibach,
Sr., was selected to be
the Project Administrator of this huge challenge.
Ben,
Sr., with only an eighth grade education, had started out as a young man building
barns in the Bay County, Michigan area for 12-1/2 cents an hour as a
carpenter apprentice. He had joined the Company in 1925 as a carpenter, consequently
being one of the original employees.
This new facility rose up out of
the swamp next to the Detroit River at the Ecorse
location to become one of the most modern and
efficient steel-producing plants
in existence at that time. This site included open hearth and blast furnaces
and rolling mills to be able to produce high quality automotive steel from
ore. Approximately 2,000 people were employed on the construction site. The
project
was successfully completed, which led to future work at the steel company
and helped reinforce my father’s positive
relationship with Carl Barton and Arnold Malow.
It is hard to understand why the
Depression of the 1930’s
was called ‘great’ because
it was a very difficult period for everyone. Banks failed, even institutions
that had been around since the turn of the century. The only thing "great" was
the size of the unemployment figures, the loses incurred by individuals and
business, and the anxieties and frustrations that were prevalent. To most,
only your parents and grandparents can understand the harsh realities of the
time.
1935-1944
Barton Malow’s assets
in 1935 were $34,000, and revenues were $226,000.
It seems incredible that earnings were $1,000.
Being in the black provided
a
vote of confidence for the management. The client list included Rockne
Motor Corporation, Studebaker Corporation, McKesson Corporation, Statler Hotel,
Kroger Company, Linde Air Products, Sears and
Roebuck Company, Westinghouse, and Minnesota
Mining.
Diversification
was necessary to sustain growth so we pursued new clientele such as utility
and insurance companies, food processing plants
as well as many service
organizations.
By 1937 the Company had completed
over 2,200 contracts and amazingly, a volume
of $1,258,000 was achieved. Dividends of $15,000 were paid to the stockholders.
The Company not only survived the Depression, but actually grew.
In 1938, I was
fortunate enough to be employed by the C.F. Smith Grocery chain working afternoons,
evenings and Saturdays while attending high school. That
summer I was hired by Barton Malow Company as a laborer, engineer, timekeeper,
and general handyman on tank foundations for Firestone Rubber in Trenton, Michigan.
The Company's offices at the time were at 1900 East Jefferson in Detroit. My
wages of 60 cents an hour were a nice increase for the $14 a week I had been
receiving in the grocery store as the assistant manager. The Company was nonunion
so there were no jurisdictional boundaries, and if one were to excel, you did
whatever you could, as jobs were still quite scarce.
I went to night school to
receive my high school diploma and enrolled in an estimating course sponsored
by the Builders and Traders in the Penobscot Building. It was
a busy program, but one that I enjoyed.
The Company always had a reputation
of repeat business which expanded our client
list to include Gulf Refining Company,
General Electric Corporation, Kelsey Hayes
Manufacturers, National Bank and many others.
The Detroit Tigers played at Navin
Field. Charles Navin, the team owner, was so delighted with our handling of
the project at the ballpark that he engaged
the firm to repair an incinerator at his residence.
The Company employed an Italian
immigrant laborer by the name of Orazio Rea, who very conscientiously chided
me one day while I was wheeling brick on a plank
runway with a steel wheeled wheelbarrow. He advised me never to become proficient
in this task. He said if I got too good at it, I would be doing it for the
rest of my life.
Orazio continued to work for Barton
Malow for many years until his retirement. He
was one of the many reliable employees who
worked most or
all of their
career for the firm. Today we have many second and third generation employees,
and in some instances, personnel whose great-grandfathers were on the payroll.
Our
industry was different in this era. General contractors employed all of the
basic trades; laborers, carpenters, brick layers,
cement finishers, rod busters,
operating engineers, and in our instance, painters, iron workers, millwrights,
riggers, and other trades that composed the building industry. For the most
part, subcontractors that were employed by the
general contractor consisted of electrical,
mechanical, plastering, and other specialty trades. It was a rare exception
when the owner would award separate contracts
for the various phases of the project.
When
World War II broke out, everything changed dramatically. To avoid the draft
into the military, many young men went to the
defense plants to work on manufacturing
with the hope of deferred status.
Throughout the industry there was
a shortage of good mechanics. Mostly everyone
worked excessive overtime.
Around this time the Company unionized,
like many firms in the Detroit area. I joined
the carpenters union as an apprentice. I was
such
a poor mechanic, that
within a year I was made a foreman. I guess they figured I’d do less damage
directing work than actually doing it!
When I was 20, C.O. gave me an
opportunity to run my own job, an addition to
Garwood Industries in Wayne, Michigan. Fortunately,
men like Rea and others came
to my support and really carried me through.
At the end of the project, I went
to see the owner’s representative. He
asked me how old I was and I told him. He said he thought I was young but was
afraid to ask. The job was profitable, and the owner was happy. I shudder to
think of the responsibility I had at such an early age...continued

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