|
|
Fisher Controls International
LLC
A Chronological History
INTRODUCTION:
Fisher Controls International LLC is now a member of the Emerson
Process Management family of companies which is a division of Emerson.
Becoming part of this new corporation is the latest in the long history
of growth and change for the control valve manufacturing company founded
as the Fisher Governor Company in 1880.
The chronological history that follows summarizes how one of the giants
of the process control industry got its start and established a
leadership position in the competitive, global marketplace of today.
CHRONOLOGY:
1880
- William Fisher invents the Type 1 constant pressure pump governor in
Marshalltown, Iowa.

1888 - The Fisher Governor Company incorporates on
December 26 with a total of $30,000. Early employees ran belt-powered
machines to the light of tallow candles for $13-a-week. The first
product catalog was hand-written.

1906
- Founder, William Fisher, dies. His wife, Martha, becomes
president. A vertical actuator, steam traps, and back pressure valves
are added to the product line.
1912 - Jasper Fisher (son of William and Martha)
assumes presidency of the company, establishes first sales offices.
Annual sales are $60,000.

1918
- Draftsmen complete Fisher's first detailed product drawings. By 1919,
the Engineering Department accumulates a total of 548 drawings.
1928 - The company builds its first test laboratory
and, with the development of the first authoritative capacity and sizing
data charts, Fisher establishes its reputation as the company with the
most complete and accurate specification charts available.
1935 - Fisher hosts its first sales meeting in
Marshalltown. Fisher supports sales Representatives in 44 cities in the
United States and Canada and in 15 countries.
1937 - Serial number 500,000 assigned to a Type 1 pump
governor on November 5.
1938 - Jasper Fisher dies.
1940 - Fisher installs its first Western Union teletype
machine to speed communication with sales offices. Fisher purchases its
first two company (delivery) trucks. J.W. (Bill) Fisher (son of Jasper
and Edna) joins the Fisher Governor Company in the finance department.
1943 - One millionth serial number assigned to pump
governor on June 9.
1944 - Fisher employees are awarded the Army-Navy
"E" flag for outstanding production during World War II. Edna
(Mrs. J. H.) Fisher becomes president. Vice President, Bill Fisher,
establishes a strong board of directors, changing the management style
of the company.

1946
- Sales department holds its first school for field Representatives,
Fundamental Principles of Pressure Regulators. More than twenty sales
engineers attend the eight-day school conducted in Marshalltown. Fisher
forms its 25-Year Club for employees and retirees with 25 years service.
Fisher introduces Teflon™ packing to lower valve stem friction and
improve performance of smaller actuators.
Teflon is a trademark of E.I. DuPont.
1949 - Fisher's engineering staff grows to eleven
design engineers and nine draftsmen. Six employees aid their efforts in
the printing and photostat department.
1950 - Two-millionth controller made. Fisher enters
licensee agreement with Elliott Automation to manufacture products for
England and Europe. Bill Fisher and the Board of Directors establish the
Fisher Governor Foundation, a charitable, non-profit organization that
improves the cultural, civic, educational, and charitable well-being of
Marshalltown. The “Gramma Fisher” Foundation supports the arts.
1951 - Fisher's first mobile display unit hits the
road.
1952 - Original Fisher factory building torn down.
1954 - Edna (Mrs. J.H.) Fisher retires; Her son, J. W.
(Bill) Fisher, is elected president of the Fisher Governor Company with
annual sales of $3.5 million and 1200 employees. The large turret lathe
department initiates an incentive pay plan.

1955
- First ex-U.S. plant opens in Woodstock, Ontario, Canada. New office
building opens in Marshalltown.
1957 - Continental Equipment Company (butterfly valves)
of Coraopolis, Pennsylvania, joins the Fisher family, adding rotary
valves to the product range. Fisher Governor common stock was offered to
the public at $12.50 per share. Six employees began production in the
Woodstock, Ontario, plant.
1958 - Supermarket stock evolves, giving customers
36-hour delivery service from standard-product stock. The Fisher
Community Center in Marshalltown is dedicated. Fisher introduces an
electronic liquid level transmitter.
1959 - Fisher uses a zyglo treatment for detecting
cracks in metal components. Today, we use advanced tools and techniques
such as laser optics, electron microscopes, and electro magnetics.
1960 - Fisher adds ball valves to its product line.
Fisher finalizes a licensing agreement to manufacture valves in Japan.
The Representatives' committee forms as the official voice of the field
sales organization to the company. Fisher began using computers to solve
engineering problems, computer-aided drafting, and
numerically-controlled machines.
1961 - Factory opens in Monterrey, Mexico; Operations
there move to Toluca in 1965.
1962 - Numerically controlled machine tools help
achieve breakthrough in machining efficiency and quality.
1963 - Fisher introduces throttling V-Ball valves.
1965 - LPG and natural gas regulator department product
lines (manufacturing operation) move from Marshalltown to McKinney,
Texas.
1967 - The Governor Road manufacturing facility, the
most advanced machine shop of its kind in the world, begins operation in
Marshalltown. The Fisher Governor Company is listed on the American
Stock Exchange.
1969 - Monsanto buys Fisher, changes name to Fisher
Controls Company and begins to manufacture electronic instrumentation
(ac2). Annual sales totalled $65 million with 3,000 employees worldwide.
Tom Shive is named President. Bill Fisher remains as Chairman of the
Board until 1974. Annual sales were $72 million. A joint venture,
Nippon-Fisher, was formed in Japan to manufacture and sell Fisher valves
and regulators in the far east.
1970 - Fisher opens its first European facility in
Cornwall, England, to manufacture electronic instrumentation (ac2).
Fisher-Marshalltown develops valve noise prediction and abatement
technology, including Whisper and Cavitrol trim options. Fisher
introduces Easy E cage-guided and Fishtail Disc butterfly valves. On
February 10, Fisher-Marshalltown broke ground for the R. A. Engel
Technical Center. Named for Ray Engel, the motivating force behind
Fisher research and development during his 39 years with the company.
Every product developed since 1930 reflected his quality standards.
1971 - Fisher receives the industry's first N-stamp
certification to manufacture nuclear valves. Fisher adds digital control
systems (dc2) to its product line. Bill Fisher is named to Monsanto
Board and served until January 1983.
1972 - The R. A. Engel Technical Center is completed
and houses the world's most advanced flow test laboratory. The Fisher
Service Company establishes it first center in Gonzales, Louisiana, and
announces plans to open four more repair and service facilities in the
U.S. by 1979.
1974 - Nippon-Fisher opens a new manufacturing plant in
Japan.
1975 - A new electronics manufacturing facility opens
in Marshalltown and the R.A.Engel Tech Center doubles in size. Milwaukee
Die Casting joins Fisher.
1976 - The Sherman, Texas facility begins producing a
new line of rotary valves, featuring tight shutoff capabilities. Fisher
opens a manufacturing plant in Brazil.
1979 - Fisher Controls and portions of the General
Electric Company of the United Kingdom unite. The new corporation,
Fisher Controls Corporation of Delaware, forms a stronger manufacturing,
sales and service system for our products worldwide. Combined sales were
$497 million. Ed Bauer was named Chairman, President, and CEO.
Nippon-Fisher factory in Japan doubles in size.
1980 - Fisher introduces the PROVOX, micro-processor
based distributed control system. The company celebrates a Century of
Control. By 1980, the company had more than 200,000 engineering drawings
detailing our products for manufacture all over the world.
1981 - Company name changes to Fisher Controls
International reflecting a commitment to worldwide process control.
Annual sales were $650 million. A manufacturing rationalization and
consolidation program began in Europe. Fisher enters into an agreement
to form a joint-venture manufacturing and service center in Saudi
Arabia. Plants in McKinney, Texas, and Toluca, Mexico, double in size.
Marshalltown's Governor Road machine shop adds a plating and painting
area.
Three new service centers were approved in the United Kingdom. Plans
implemented for PROVOX staging facilities in Austin, Texas; Cambridge,
Ontario, Canada; and Leicester, England.
1982 - Robert Flynn was named President and Chief
Executive Officer, and Arthur L. French was named Executive Vice
President and Chief Operating officer.
1984 - Fisher signs an agreement to acquire Posi-Seal
International, a manufacturer of high-performance butterfly valves.
Fisher opens a new Electronics Technology center in Austin, Texas.
Fisher establishes a Representative (Lumax) in Taiwan.
1985 - Fisher opens a new facility at Strood,
Rochester, Kent, England. Robert Flynn succeeds Earle Harbison as
Chairman of the Board of Directors. Following an extensive internal
study of organization effectiveness, Fisher adopts a new global
structure for the company involving Strategic Business Units. The
Education Center in Marshalltown trains more than 2000 students.
Monsanto announces plans to invest $100 million in process control
business.
Fisher establishes Representative offices in Helsinki, Finland, and
Caracas, Venezuela.
1986 - Fisher Controls opens its facility in Leicester,
England for PROVOX instrumentation manufacturing, engineering,
sales/marketing, research/development, services and training. More than
650 people attend Austin Operation Center's open house.
1987 - In September, Fisher and Monsanto Boards approve
the acquisition of EXAC Corporation, a manufacturer of Coriolis-based
mass flowmeters in California. Factories in Strood, England;
Marshalltown, Iowa; and Woodstock, Ontario, Canada implement continuous
or cellular manufacturing concepts. Austin celebrates Zero-Defects Day
on June 5, 1987. Fisher establishes Representative offices in Australia.
North American field offices (Representatives) begin Quality Improvement
Process (QIP) training.
1988 - Fisher introduces the UNIVOX control center.
Marshalltown PWB (printed wiring board) assemblies/manufacturing moves
to Leicester, England, and Austin, Texas. Marshalltown adds a Customer
Demonstration area to its main office building. Canadian Representative,
Spartan Controls, celebrates its 25th year in business.
A computer link between Woodstock and Marshalltown sites enables
Representatives to enter orders over the Order Processing System (OPS).
Control Associates opens Computer Integrated Manufacturing (CIM) center
in New York.
First parts ship from Fisher FAST service warehouse in Memphis,
Tennessee.
1989 - Fisher introduces Type S400 house service
regulator. John H. Carter opens regional training center. R. G. Read
opens CIM center in Minneapolis. Ten-Step quality process begins at
Fisher-Austin site. Asia Pacific hosts regional sales conference; 100
participants from 21 countries. Nippon-Fisher employees in the Tokyo
office and Sakura factory got the day off to celebrate the company's
20th year in business. Fisher-Marshalltown launches valve sizing
program. Fisher initiates "quality partnering" relationships
with engineering contractors and suppliers. Fisher-Marshalltown
celebrates Quality Commitment Day.
1990 - J.W. (Bill) Fisher dies. Fisher conducts
ground-breaking ceremony for new electronic systems, staging and CIM
technology facility in Cambridge, Ontario, Canada.Education Center
releases video training packages. Fisher establishes new Representative
(KOFAC) in Korea. Medway site hosts Quality Commitment day in March.
Fisher hosts Conference of Excellence and Conference of Champions to
honor and recognize quality improvements. Fisher Service Company opens
centers in Beaumont, Texas, and Maracaibo, Venezuela. Fisher launches
FlowScanner Control Valve Diagnostics and preventive maintenance
technology.
1991 - Fisher Service Company centers open in Montreal,
Canada; Worcester Massachusetts; and Benicia, California. North American
manufacturing sites observe Earth Day and their commitment to
environmental stewardship. Fisher opens new staging facility in
Monrovia, California, to support large system orders from Saudi
Aramco.Medway plant receives ISO 9000 accreditation to the international
standards. Fisher launches re-manufactured valves program (ENCORE).
Fisher-Singapore opens Pandan Crescent facility in March as its Asia
Pacific headquarters. Fisher introduces new products including three new
Vee-Ball valves, AccuPressure gas tank blanketing regulators, and ROC364
remote operations controller.
1992 - Emerson buys Fisher Controls for $1.4 Billion in
October; forms the Emerson Process Management family of companies. At
that point, Fisher had three divisions, 180 sales offices in 75
countries, 23 plants in 13 countries, 60 service centers in 22
countries, and about 7500 employees worldwide. Larry Solley was Chairman
of Fisher Controls and Bob Bateman was Chairman of Rosemount.
Marshalltown, Woodstock, and Cambridge as well as Kambria and Spartan
earn ISO registration for international quality standards. Fisher
introduces digital valve controllers and tranducers.
1993 - The Emerson Process Management family of
companies consists of eight distinct and separate divisions:
Fisher-Rosemount Systems, Fisher-Gulde valves, Fisher Regulators, Xomox
(valves), Rosemount Measurement (inc. Kay-Ray Sensall), Rosemount
Analytical, Micro Motion, and Brooks Instruments. Fisher and Rosemount
share a booth at ISA '93. Emerson Process Management launches new,
unified corporate image. Combined sales of Emerson Process Management
was $2.3 billion.
Sherman and Austin plants in Texas receive ISO certification.
1994 - North American sales management conference
includes Rosemount direct sales and Fisher Representative personnel.
Valve business conducted by three groups: Fisher Controls, Gulde
(Europe), and Xomox. Fisher acquires Con-Tek, Inc., a leading
manufacturer of steam conditioning equipment. Fisher introduces Y693 gas
tank regulator and a cryogenic valve, Design SC. Fisher develops and
introduces Fisher Integrated Responsive Sales Tools (FIRST) to simplify
and speed-up order processing. FRSI hosts NASA (North America/South
America) sales conference in Austin, Texas. ISP Foundation completes
phase one of the world's first, fully digital fieldbus field trial at
Monsanto's Chocolate Bayou plant. The Fisher Regulator division acquires
Francel, a leading manufacturer of natural gas pressue reducing
regulators in France.
1995 - Fisher Controls’ North American Valve Division
acquires H. D. Baumann Associates of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, known
for their control valve innovations. Bill Davis replaces Joe Adorjan as
head of Emerson Process Management process control businesses. Fisher
introduces FloBoss 407 flow computer. Fisher Controls' employees use
Internet capabilities and go on-line via internal Web page. Emerson
Process Management family of companies named “best in service” by
readers of CONTROL magazine. Emerson acquires INTELLUTION, a leading automation software
company. Fisher- Rosemount adopts a “total solutions” sales approach
and encourages multi-site, multi-division teamwork worldwide.
1996 - Fisher Controls introduces the Emerson Process
Management introduces PlantWeb field-based architecture as a way to
unite and integrate group-wide products and capabilities. Advanced
technologies - including intelligent field devices, digital
communications, and open systems - differentiate Emerson Process
Management in the marketplace. Emerson Process Management Educational
Services introduces Distance Learning technology for update or refresher
training. Fisher Controls' Maintenance, Repair, and Operations (MRO)
business grows, promoting preventive diagnostics and asset management
capabilities. Valve manufacturing plant in Cernay, France, celebrates 30
years in business.
1997
- David Farr replaces Bill Davis as head of Emerson Process Management
Process business. Woodstock plant was closed after 42 years of
operation. Marshalltown Center St. plant closed after 80+ years of
operation. New plant operations announced for Hungary and Brazil.
1999
- Closed Medway plant in U.K. and moved operations to Cernay. Opened new
plant in Malaysia. |