Photograph, Electro Motive Plant, Willimantic

Name/Title

Photograph, Electro Motive Plant, Willimantic

Entry/Object ID

2025.18.02

Description

Aerial photograph of Electro Motive plant on Bridge Street in Willimantic, CT. (Electro Motive had two Willimantic plants, one on South Park Street and the other on Bridge Street. It built neither of them, but rather purchased former textile mills. The Bridge Street mill was first constructed in the 1820s as the Windham Cotton Manufacturing Company. It later became the Quidnick Company, still a cotton mill. Electro Motive acquired the plant after Quidnick closed.) Black and white. White cardboard matte. Printed on matte: "Air Photos Associates, Hartford, Connecticut." Stamped on back: "Air Photos Associates, Tel. _________ Neg. No. 653-A6, Credit Line Requested." Photo includes surrounding neighborhood, looking south. Photo c. 1940-50. Photo 13.5" wide by 10.75" high, without matte. The donor's father, Joseph Cichon, worked for Electro Motive, although at the South Park Street plant.

Photograph Details

Type of Photograph

Black and white print

Aspect Ratio

1.3:1

Subject

Josephine Rosenstein was born in New York City in 1891. She may have first seen Willimantic in 1916, when her father served briefly as the city’s rabbi. In 1920, she entered show business in New York as Josephine Harmon, a brassy voiced comedienne, singer, and vaudeville performer. In her first job, she sang in a supper club alongside Hartford’s Sophie Tucker, whom she resembled. Sometime after that, Josephine met and married Philip Lauter, a Jewish immigrant from Romania who in 1926 had founded the Electro Motive Manufacturing Company in New York to produce miniaturized parts for that popular new product, radio. She retired from the stage in 1937 to help her husband run the company. In 1939, the Lauters, along with their vice president, general manager, and inventor, Joseph Flanzer, moved Electro Motive to Willimantic. They explained that Willimantic provided both more extensive and less expensive space than New York or New Jersey, better working conditions for their employees, a “higher class of workers,” and lower operating costs. But there was another, additional reason: city leaders had offered the company a $5,000 incentive to relocate, an action challenged in court by local resident George Rood. In Willimantic, the Lauters acquired space in a 35,000-square-foot brick factory complex at the intersection of South and South Park streets (above, shortly after World War II; image courtesy of William Strand). William Brand and Company, which manufactured electric cables, also operated at the site, as did a button factory. By one account, Electro Motive’s initial workforce here in 1939 was 100. By another, it was 250. Most of the workforce was female; the Lauters believed that women were more dexterous than men and better able to assemble the company’s tiny products. Power came from neither water nor coal, as it did with the other mills in the city, but from electricity and “city gas.” Electro Motive grew rapidly. It was a good time to be making condensers, capacitors, trimmers, and other miniature electrical devices. The United States was getting ready to enter World War II, and the military was poised to be a big consumer, not just for radios but also for radar. By 1944, Electro Motive had 600 employees. It had outgrown its South Park Street plant, and expanded into the old, 100,000-square-foot Windham Cotton Manufacturing Company mill on Bridge Street, which had been closed in 1926, but used as a distribution center by the U. S. Quartermaster Corps earlier in the war. Historians have long noted that World War II was a catalyst for technological progress and business growth. Willimantic’s remaining textile mills, especially the giant American Thread Company, also prospered during those years. (Image above shows Josephine Lauter Greer, center, participating in a local fundraiser c. late 1940s. Photo courtesy of Shirley Mustard. Mustard’s mother is the other woman in the photo.) Philip Lauter died in 1945 and Josephine took over the company. Unlike the textile mills, which again declined after the war, Electro Motive continued to grow, feeding off an expanding market for electrical technology during the early Cold War years. In 1946, Electro Motive had 800 workers. Josephine modernized the cafeteria and, true to her show-business roots, added piped music throughout the plant. A new fused plug the company had developed during the war was adapted for postwar uses in vacuum cleaners, toasters, and other household appliances. Josephine remarried in 1949, to Jesse Greer, a songwriter with more than 200 tunes to his credit. Josephine coaxed him into writing a new one, “Willimantic, USA.” By 1960, the company had four plants (the two in Willimantic, plus one in South Carolina and another in Jamaica) and 2,000 employees. It was Willimantic’s second-largest employer, after American Thread. With the success of Electro Motive, and of William Brand and Company, it was easy shrug off the fact that the old textile mills were failing. But trouble loomed. After 1965, Electro Motive, too, began to decline. The Bridge Street plant closed in 1969. Josephine died later that year, Jesse followed in 1970, and Joseph Flanzer retired in 1972. In 1973, their heirs sold the company. The new owners promptly defaulted on a promise to pay $3.5 million to the Philip Lauter Foundation, which Josephine had founded. Then, in 1975, with the company’s Willimantic workforce down to only 100 employees, they closed the South Park Street plant and moved operations to South Carolina. They cited “lack of orders,” but local people knew that the South’s low wages, anti-union culture, and lack of environmental and safety laws were the real reasons.

Subject Person or Organization

Greer, Josephine Lauter, Lauter, Philip

Subject Place

Neighborhood

Willimantic, CT

City

Windham, CT

Continent

North America

Region

Northeast

Context

Electro Motive was part of Willimantic's World War II and post-World War II economic boom, which lasted from c. 1940 to c. 1965.

Collection

Cichon Collection

Made/Created

Studio

Air Photos Associates

Date made

circa 1945 - circa 1955

Time Period

20th Century

Inscription/Signature/Marks

Type

Inscription

Location

Front lower right; back center.

Transcription

Air Photos Associates, Hartford, Connecticut; Air Photos Associates, Tel _______, Neg. No. 653A8, Credit Line Requested

Language

English

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Secondary Object Term

Print, Photographic

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Photograph

Nomenclature Sub-Class

Graphic Documents

Nomenclature Class

Documentary Objects

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects

Dimensions

Dimension Description

Not including matte

Height

10-1/2 in

Width

13-1/4 in

Location

Location

Cabinet

Oversized photo drawer

Room

Dunham Hall Library Reading Room

* Untyped Location

Main Museum Building

Category

Permanent

Date

March 23, 2025

Condition

Overall Condition

Poor

Condition Detail

Photo itself in good condition. Matte stained and torn.

Date Examined

Mar 23, 2025

Examined By

Eves, J.

Provenance

Provenance Detail

In donor's possession for many years. He does not recall how he obtained them.

Copyright

Copyright Holder

Air Photos Associates

Copyright Date

circa 1950

Created By

historian@millmuseum.org

Create Date

March 23, 2025

Updated By

historian@millmuseum.org

Update Date

March 23, 2025