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Berlin Iron Bridge Co. recordsA Guide to the collection at the Connecticut Historical Society
Historical SketchThe history of the Berlin Iron Bridge Company dates back to August 1870 when the company was founded as the Metallic Corrugated Shingle Company. It began issuing stock in July of 1871 and in January of 1873 the name of the company was changed to the Corrugated Metal Company. In March of 1877 Samuel Curtis Wilcox became president and treasurer. In January of 1883 the company changed its name for the final time to the Berlin Iron Bridge Company. In addition to bridges, the company built jail cells, roofs and machine shops. Samuel Wilcox died in 1886 and vice-president and engineer Charles M. Jarvis became president. Burr K. Field took over as vice-president and treasurer until April of 1890 when Frank Langdon Wilcox (son of Samuel) became treasurer. On October 7th, 1899, the company’s stockholders voted to dissolve the company and the Berlin Iron Bridge Company was sold to the American Bridge Company on May 12th, 1900. Following a lawsuit between the Berlin Iron Bridge Company and the American Iron Bridge Company in a dispute over contract payments, the Berlin Iron Bridge Company was formally dissolved on June 29th, 1905. Return to the Table of Contents Scope and ContentThis collection was initially divided into four categories: correspondence, financial papers, stock papers and documents pertaining to the sale of the company to the American Bridge Company. Those four categories have, for the most part, been retained. The bulk of the collection covers the period roughly between 1892 and 1902. The handful of earlier documents, having to do with the Corrugated Metal Company, date back to 1878 and there are also some documents from the period 1903-1905. Some entries in the stock ledger are from 1871. The collection includes lengthy documentation of the Berlin Iron Company’s tax dealings with the state of New York, its incorporation in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, bills of letting and estimate sheets, bridge contracts, stock increases, lawsuits, and the takeover of the company by the American Bridge Company, as well as the lawsuit between the two companies. Return to the Table of Contents RestrictionsAccess RestrictionsThere are no restrictions on access to the collection. Use RestrictionsUse of the material requires compliance with the Connecticut Historical Society's Research Center regulations. Return to the Table of Contents Subject HeadingsCorporate NamesAmerican Bridge Co.
Corrugated Metal Co.
SubjectsArticles of incorporation.
Construction contracts.
Iron and steel bridges.
Return to the Table of Contents Administrative InformationPreferred CitationItem, Collection Title, Collection number (Box #, Folder #). Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford, Connecticut. Processing DetailsCollection was processed by Robert Johnston in 2008. EAD Finding Aid created June 2012. Return to the Table of Contents Contents:
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