Re: The Original Packard Plant
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Home away from home
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Here is the link:
vindy.com/news/2014/jan/24/lights-out-at-ge-lamp-plant-in-warren/ Notice that the paper referred to it as the GE Lamp Plant. Guess closing is what happens when the government decides do forbid incandescent lamps. Attached is the only online photo from the article that I could find.
Posted on: 2014/1/25 11:28
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Re: The Original Packard Plant
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John
Sad day I have a picture around here somewhere taken by that building during the Centennial in 1999. There is a plaque Packard put on the wall celebrating the 50th anniversary of the first Packard. I used to own a 1950 Eight that was built very close to that event. Stuart Blond took a picture of me and the car by the plaque, 50 years after the car was built and the plaque installed , and 100 years after the first run. Maybe I can figure out how to scan and post it. Regards John Harley
Posted on: 2014/1/25 11:30
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Re: The Original Packard Plant 1899
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I will get a better photo of the outside of the Building. The building sure doesn't look that old and it was kept up very well. The main entrance door area has not been changed, and the garage door where they rolled the first Packards out can be seen in the photo. Now that would be the place of buy and fix up. I bet the city and GE would be willing to make a deal just to save it.
Posted on: 2014/1/25 15:23
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Re: The Original Packard Plant
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John Harley's 50 Eight at the plant, and the plaque.
Posted on: 2014/1/25 15:37
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Re: The Original Packard Plant
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I might be wrong, but I don't think they were making standard A19 screw base bulbs at the plant.
For the union to vote themselves into unemployment (especially in Ohio - an economic black hole) means the terms must have been pretty rotten. The big problem with bulbs is that today's cars barely use any. It's all LED that costs a fortune to replace and is blatant built in obsolescence. However, the quality of conventional merchandise being sold is total junk. For example, my modern car is 18 years old and has never needed a bulb. When I was in Pentagon City brand new fleet vehicles were burning bulbs out.
Posted on: 2014/1/25 19:59
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Re: The Original Packard Plant
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Owen
Thanks for posting the pictures. It saved me the bother of pulling the album apart to scan them. Looking at them caused considerable reflection about the changes that have happened since, particularly in places like Warren. The two business started by the Packard brothers supported many families in Warren for over a century but the current owners were unable or unwilling to change the operations to keep manufacturing viable for the 21st century. Makes one wonder about what innovation meant to different generations Regards John Harley
Posted on: 2014/1/25 23:19
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Re: The Original Packard Plant
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You're right that something is rotten in the way people think. In terms of places like Washington DC people who live and work in a place like Warren are just losers. American politics likes to pay lip service to so-called family values but actions don't support that babble.
In England the rich have bled the population base so heavily the birth rate has collapsed and now there aren't enough poor slobs to support the rich. I don't have any kids. After I graduated from a university I quickly found work in science. That became harder and harder to sustain and the conditions more and more harsh. Soon all management were people whose primary skill was devaluing people. When I came to work in automotive Detroit I found about a 50/50 mix of jerks versus real people. Those odds are better and lately work has been pretty good. At one place the notion of using analysis to deal with billion dollar problems was considered enemy thinking. That's no place for me. However, the age of scientific thought is dead. The rich can rely on immigration for people to soak.
Posted on: 2014/1/26 8:32
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