Manufacturing
Company Celebrates 35 years, Opens Newest Addition to Operation
Beaver Manufacturing Company, the leading converter
of hose yarn reinforcement in North America, celebrated 35 years
of growth and success in Newton County this month.The anniversary
celebration was also timed with the official opening of the company’s
new Plant 3 on Nov. 2.
“It’s been great; we’ve had constant
growth,” said William Loeble, Chief Operating Officer for
the company.
The company — which got its start in 1971 in
an old cotton warehouse in Mansfield — has since grown to
become a world-wide supplier of hose yarn reinforcement, an industrial
fiber that is used in rubber and plastic hoses.
The company has
grown to employ 185 workers, most living in Newton County and Jasper
County. “Beaver has grown
because of its quality service and dedicated employees. The company
has never lost focus as a family-oriented business,” Loeble
said.
As a family-oriented business, Beaver Manufacturing
Co. has invested in the education of the children of its employees
by becoming a “partner in education” with Mansfield
Elementary School. Through the years, the company has donated books
to the school’s media center, provided savings bonds to students
with straight “A’s” and purchased playground
equipment for the school, among other things. During the company’s
anniversary festivities, Teijin Twaron and Diolen Industrial Fibers,
two major fiber suppliers, presented gifts to the school in honor
of Beaver Manufacturing Co.
For the first 20 years of the company’s
history, its operations grew within the walls of Plant 1, located
in Mansfield. For a time, the company even did yarn treating in
an old movie theater building down the street from the plant. The
company celebrated its 30th anniversary by opening up Plant 2,
also located in Mansfield. The plant holds the company’s
treating room and raw material warehouse. It was at that
point the company decided to make a major change in its business
strategy in order to better compete in the global market. Instead
of continuing to re-engineer previously used equipment to its own
purposes, the company began to install state-of-the-art equipment,
built to its own precise specifications. The new Plant 3, located
between Mansfield and Newborn, will use all new equipment, according
to Loeble. Loeble added that much of the company’s future
expansion will take place in Plant 3, where the fiber twisting
part of the production process takes place. “We are well positioned
to compete globally for many years to come,” said Loeble of
the company’s
new milestone.