How Two Engineers Built the Lathes That Armed America & the Telescopes That Mapped the Stars
Worcester Reed Warner and Ambrose Swasey met as teenage apprentices in a New Hampshire machine shop in 1866 — both born the same year, both obsessed with one thing: perfect accuracy in metal. Together they built a company whose name sat on the great observatory domes of the world and on the factory floors that armed a nation through two wars. They built the machine that mapped the stars and the machine that built America — and never saw a difference between the two. This is the story of how Warner & Swasey rose to dominate the world, why its insistence on doing things its own way became the thing that killed it, and how a century-old giant was passed hand to hand by conglomerates until the name simply ceased to exist in January 1992. From the Lick and Yerkes telescopes to the arsenal of democracy, from proprietary controls to the Fanuc revolution, this is the rise and fall of one of the most important — and most forgotten — companies in American industrial history. Chapters — The telescope and the lathe — Two apprentices, 1866 — Cleveland and the turret lathe — The stars: Lick and Yerkes — The cathedral on Carnegie Avenue — World War I and the war optics — Armed America: the WWII peak — The founders' end — Diversification and the fatal choice — Then came the Japanese — The dismemberment — What survives We cover the companies, the machines, and the people who built the industrial world. Subscribe for more. #WarnerAndSwasey #MachineTool #IndustrialHistory #Manufacturing #Cleveland #Telescope #Astronomy #MadeInAmerica #EngineeringHistory #YerkesObservatory #TradeArchive

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