Who owns anderson windows




















For more than a century, Andersen has given back to the communities where we live and work through volunteerism and sponsorship. Learn More.

Many people in all parts of the organization find their career home here. Discover how you may create a rewarding career with Andersen. Bill volunteers for Foinse Research Station , a biological field station staddling the border of Ireland and Northern Ireland, one of more than members of the Organization of Biological Field Stations. Woodworking Industry News. Andersen Windows new manufacturing campus in Arizona to employ By Bill Esler.

April 3, pm CDT. Jay R. Lund Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Alan E. Philip E. Chris Galvin President, Andersen Division. Where to Buy. See All Locations. Dealer Website. The lumber yard was ideally situated to take advantage of the large stretches of white pine in the St.

Croix river valley; another yard, in Afton, Minnesota, also began operations in Within a year of incorporation, the Andersen Lumber Company became more than just a lumber business when Hans and his sons hit upon the idea of manufacturing standardized wood window frames out of the raw pine to which they had ready access. Suppliers and builders, the Andersens believed, would realize the wisdom of accepting standard window measurements.

The venture revolutionized the window industry, for as yet there was no dependable, mass-produced window frame on the market.

In , the company signed its first distributor and adopted a 'two-bundle' method of packaging its horizontal and vertical frame pieces. Three years later, the Andersens sold their two lumber yards in order to concentrate on the window frame business; the family would reenter the lumber business in and considerably expanding its holdings before again selling off its yards beginning in the s. By , the company required more space, and a site was found on the other side of the St. Croix; a new plant was completed within a year and began operations with 59 employees.

Sales more than doubled during the company's first decade. With Hans Andersen's death in , Fred was elected president, and Herbert became vice-president, secretary-treasurer, and factory manager.

That year, the company provided employees with a generous profit-sharing plan--the third oldest in the nation. In , Herbert died at the age of But, as Kenneth D. Ruble noted in The Magic Circle, Fred Andersen 'proved to be a 'Jack of all trades' and master of every one--business manager, inventor, salesman, purchasing agent, civic leader, accountant, mechanic, manpower recruiter, teacher and above all one who loves and believes in his fellow man.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000