to see - Wisconsin 101
Transcription
to see - Wisconsin 101
Wisconsin 101 New Object Proposal: The Vulcan Bowling Pin Author: Joe Hermolin Phone: 555.123.9876 Email: joe@email.com Object Description This bowling pin complies with American Bowling Congress (ABC) standards, with the logo of the Vulcan Bowling manufacturer (Antigo) clearly visible. It is owned by the Langlade County Historical Society and likely made in the late 1950s after they introduced their “Nyl-Tuf Supreme” plastic coating. The Vulcan Corporation initially manufactured wooden shoe lasts and chose Antigo because of the plentiful supply of large maple trees in the region. When demand for shoe lasts waned Vulcan branched out into various other wood products. Beginning in 1953 they became a major producer of bowling pins, although shoe last production continued up to 1965 in Antigo and longer in other plants. About 20% of all bowling lanes in the U.S. used pins manufactured by Vulcan. Bowling pins have always been made exclusively of sugar maple, as specified by the ABC. Vulcan used trees from within a 60 mile radius of Antigo. In 1970 they were the second largest bowling pin manufacturer in the U.S., with 36 plants nation-wide producing 21,000 pins weekly with plans to increase production by an additional 4,800 per week. They employed about 100 men in Antigo. Sources: • Bowling Strikes with Wisconsin Maple by Larry van Goethem in The Timber Producer May 1985 pg 38-41. • Antigo Daily Journal Sept. 10, 1970. Story 1: Lumbering in the Northwoods It was the forests that first brought a large influx of settlers to northern Wisconsin in the decades after the Civil War. Initially the pine forests were cut and river drives transported the logs, which would float, to market. Towns based on the logging industry developed throughout the state along navigable rivers. Later, with the coming of the railroad, the lumber industry expanded to include harvesting hardwood trees, and towns like Antigo developed at sites away from large rivers. Beginning in the late 1800s several companies manufacturing wood products developed in Antigo. Today Wisconsin employs more people in the forest products industry than any other state in the US, and ships more dollars-worth of product than any other state in the US. Sources: • Robert Desseareau History of Langlade County 1922 pg30. • Travis Allen, Wood Technology instructor at Northern Technical College, Antigo WI, citing WI DNR Forest Economy fact sheet. Story 2: Milwaukee, The Bowling Capital of America Bowling has international appeal, as a sport and a social activity. Milwaukee, calling itself “the bowling capital of the world” has had a central role in organized bowling. The American Bowling Congress (ABC) was formed in New York in 1895. When it brought a major tournament to Milwaukee in 1905 it was so successful that the city became the home of the ABC. The ABC later became the United States Bowling Congress and was headquartered in Milwaukee until 2008. The ABC set standards for bowling balls, lanes, score keeping and bowling pins. It had to approve the coating process used by Vulcan before the company could become a major producer of pins. Sources • Milwaukee’s Historic Bowling Alleys: Images of America Series Manya Kaczkowski, 2010 pg 7-8. • Bowling Strikes with Wisconsin Maple by Larry van Goethem in The Timber Producer May 1985 pg 38-41. Story 3: Bowling in Japan In the 1970s bowling became an obsession in Japan. From1968 to 1972 bowling alleys increased from 14,000 to 124,000. Japan had the world’s second largest bowling population (next to the U.S.) with the world’s largest bowling alley- the 252-lane World Lanes in Tokyo. In 1973, an average day saw 10,000 bowlers at the site. Vulcan filled many of the orders for bowling pins for the Japanese market. The company chartered planes to fly pins to Japan. In their best year they manufactured 500 to 600 sets of pins per day in Antigo and an additional 200 to 250 sets at the Richland Center branch and shipped a total of 102,000 sets of pins to Japan. Sources: • Bowled Over- A Roll Down Memory Lane, Gideon Bosker and Bianca LencekBosker 2002, pg 22-27) • Donald Degenhardt plant manager of Vulcan: Notes for a presentation of the history of Vulcan to the Langlade County Historical Society. In the Langlade County Historical Society archives.