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War emergency helped build
Reynolds Metals
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
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Dr.
Paul Levengood is managing editor
of the Virginia Magazine of History and
Biography at the Virginia Historical
Society in Richmond.
He also serves as the program coordinator
of the Reynolds Business History Center,
which opened in July as part of the VHS
175th anniversary celebrations.
To learn more, please visit www.vahistorical.org.
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by Paul
Levengood
for Virginia Business
May 2006
One of the most important Virginia companies of the
20th century had its roots outside the Old Dominion.
What would later become Reynolds Metals Co. was the brainchild
of Richard S. Reynolds Sr., who worked for the family
tobacco business, R. J. Reynolds, in Winston-Salem, N.C.
Inspired by the need for better cigarette
packaging, he established the United States Foil Co.
in Louisville,
Ky., in 1919. After realizing the limitations of the
tin and lead used in his company’s products,
Reynolds in 1926 added aluminum to the line. Aluminum
was lighter,
could be rolled into thinner gauges, and its shininess
gave it appeal as a packaging product.
Reynolds believed so strongly in the promise of aluminum
that in 1928 he formed a new company, Reynolds Metals,
which that year opened its first aluminum foil plant
and rolling mill in Louisville. The headquarters of the
company moved to New York City in 1930 and finally to
Richmond in 1938. Reynolds Metals grew throughout the
1930s, producing a wide array of aluminum packaging products,
from beer labels to the wrappers that covered the ice
cream bars of its subsidiary, Eskimo Pie. Despite the company’s successes,
its founder grew concerned when he toured Europe in 1937.
He noted German
aluminum capacity dwarfed that of the United States
and Great Britain. With war clouds gathering on the horizon,
he saw this situation as exceedingly ominous because
of the importance of aluminum to aircraft production.
In 1940 Reynolds Metals sought and received a $15 million
loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corp., a federal
agency charged with promoting industrial development
and the strategic acquisition of resources vital to
national
security. This government assistance was provided to
spur domestic production of aluminum, which had been
dominated by Alcoa Inc. until that point.
With a new infusion of cash, Reynolds Metals became a
primary producer of aluminum, integrating every step
of the process, from the mining of bauxite to the production
of finished goods. This proved an important development
when the nation went to war in 1941. Reynolds became
a key provider of aluminum and aluminum products to a
wide variety of war industries.
As great as demand was for aluminum
during the war, after 1945 it only went up, and Reynolds
Metals rode the crest
of a booming economy. To help maximize its production,
Reynolds Metals purchased six plants that had been
built during the war from the federal government. Soon
the
company was turning out aluminum siding to supply the
national housing boom. In 1947, it introduced Reynolds
Wrap to consumers, revolutionizing the way Americans
cooked and stored food. In the 1950s Reynolds Metals
also became heavily involved in supplying the automobile
industry, which found the lightweight, high-strength
properties of aluminum ideal for everything from trim
to engine blocks. More prosaic, but just as important,
the company introduced the 12-ounce aluminum beverage
can in 1963 — and initiated the first national
can-recycling program in 1968.
The postwar fortunes of Reynolds Metals
turned it into one of Virginia’s largest and most
important companies. In 1958 it built a stunning headquarters
complex on Broad
Street in Henrico County, becoming one of the first
large corporations to relocate to the suburbs. Reynolds
Metals
competed with Alcoa for many years, but in 2000 the
larger rival purchased Reynolds Metals, and its name
ceased
to exist. The company, however, left a legacy of
innovation
and marketing strategy that made it widely admired
and imitated.
Luckily for those interested in the
study of Virginia’s
business history, the corporate records of Reynolds
Metals were transferred to the Virginia Historical Society.
It has established the Reynolds Center for Business
History
to ensure that the stories of Reynolds Metals, and
other Virginia businesses are preserved. To learn more,
please
visit www.vahistorical.org.
Paul Levengood is managing editor of the Virginia Magazine
of History and Biography at the Virginia Historical Society
in Richmond. He also serves as the program coordinator
of the Reynolds Business History Center, opening this
summer as part of the VHS 175th anniversary celebrations.
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