Reese J. Llewellyn

Reese James Llewellyn (30 August 1862 – 15 December 1936) was a Welsh-American businessman. He was the co-founder and president of Llewellyn Iron Works, a company based in Los Angeles, which provided iron works and steel for the construction of buildings in Southern California, the Western United States, Mexico, and South America. The company also produced steel from iron ore and during the World War I shipbuilding boom it was one of the largest manufacturers of triple-expansion steam engines on the West Coast.

Reese J. Llewellyn
Born
Reese James Llewellyn

30 August 1862[1]
Llangiwg, Glamorganshire, Wales[2]
Died15 December 1936 (aged 64)
New York City, U.S.
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale)
OccupationBusinessman
Employer(s)Llewellyn Iron Works (co-founder and president)
Parent(s)David Llewellyn, Hannah D. James
RelativesLlewellyn James Llewellyn (brother), Thomas Llewellyn (brother), William Llewellyn (brother), John Llewellyn (brother), David Edgar Llewellyn (brother), Margaret Winifred Llewellyn (sister), Reese Llewellyn Milner (nephew)

Early life

Llewellyn was born in the parish of Llangiwg near Pontardawe in Glamorganshire, Wales, the third of six sons born to David and Hannah (née: James) Llewellyn. His father was an engineer and fitter at an iron works.[2][3][4] He emigrated to the United States, first settling in San Francisco, California.[5]

Career

Ironwork inside the Bradbury Building.

Llewellyn was the co-founder of Llewellyn Bros with his brothers in Los Angeles, California in 1889.[6] Llewellyn served as its president, while his brother William was vice-president and his other brother David was secretary.[6]

The firm provided the ironwork inside the Bradbury Building in Los Angeles in the early 1890s.[7] By 1905, it had provided ironwork and steel work in Southern California, but also in Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico as well as abroad in Mexico and South America.[6] Many skyscrapers in Los Angeles were built with steel from the firm.[6] In 1929, the company merged with the Consolidated Steel Corporation.[5]

Additionally, Llewellyn served as the president of the Helsby Red Sandstone Company in 1895.[8] He also served on the board of directors of the Home Savings Bank of Los Angeles in 1905.[9]

Civic life

Llewellyn was a member of the Business Men's Association of Los Angeles, alongside businessmen Walter Newhall, Frank Hicks, John H. Norton, Hancock Banning, Joseph Schoder, James Cuzner, H. E. Graves, and William Lacy.[10] Together, they opposed the closing of saloons in 1905.[10]

By the 1920s, Llewellyn served as the vice president of the Better America Federation for Los Angeles County.[11]

Death

Llewellyn suffered a stroke on board the Grace Line ocean liner Santa Barbara on her trip between Valparaíso and New York City, where he died in 1936.[12] His remains are interred, alongside his parents and siblings, in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale).

Llewellyn Iron Works

NOTE: all dates before the colon are newspaper publishing dates

17 May 1894: Llewellyn Iron Works is incorporated with $100,000 capital stock.[13]

24 July 1895: Llewellyn J. Llewellyn, president of LIW, dies at age 38.[14]

3 January 1897: overview of LIW as one of LA's biggest companies. Plant between San Fernando, Magdalena, Railroad and North Main streets.[15]

30 November 1902: full-page ad touts LIW.[16]

3 September 1905: Summary article, 6 acre plant at North Main and Redondo streets (34.06390°N 118.23336°W / 34.06390; -118.23336).[17]

7 June 1906: LIW contemplates moving plant to Long Beach or San Pedro.[18] Does not follow through.[19]

25 December 1910. The plant of LIW is bombed.

28 September 1912. LIW plans to build new plant at Torrance. Are now employing 700 men at a 5-acre plant on North Broadway [which is adjacent to N. Main street]. Old plant is to be moved to new location.[20]

Work on the Torrance plant (33.83901°N 118.31586°W / 33.83901; -118.31586[21]) to begin after completion of the new concrete bridge over El Prado in July 1914.[22]

(1 March 1938): Construction of the plant is delayed by an economic depression.[23] (Presumably the Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand on 28 June 1914 may also have had an influence).

5 February 1916: Concrete foundations of Torrance plant to be laid.[24]

13 September 1916. Torrance plant begins operations.[25]

  • 4-page walkthrough of the Torrance mill and Los Angeles shops in May 1919 issue of the Pacific Marine Review:[26] and another 3 pages in the January 1920 issue[27] give a detailed overview of the plant
  • 25 acres, $2,000,000 plant
  • first brick laid April 1916, first heat (furnace batch) in October, rolling mill in operation in February 1917
  • the structures and practically all machinery were built by Llewellyn's Los Angeles plant
  • overall monthly capacity: 4000 tons
  • open hearth shop: 110x180 feet directly adjacent to the raw material yard
    • two 40-ton open hearth furnaces with an electric charging machine
    • one heat can pour 48 standard ingots of 10x10 inches and 6 feet long at 1750 pounds
  • 150x240 feet foundry shop
  • 150x500 feet rolling mill shop
    • natural gas driven reheating furnace
    • TODO: the mill machines

12 July 1917. LIW plans to build a plant on the West Basin in San Pedro for fitting out ships.[28] Hulls to be towed from San Francisco and Puget Sound yards to San Pedro to receive boilers and engines.[29]

  • Advertisement: "LIW builds a 2,800hp marine engine every 6 days"[30]
  • 3-exp 24.5-41.5-72 cylinder diameters, 48 inch stroke (all engine data taken from Lloyd's register, this list is not comprehensive)
  • The San Pedro-based Los Angeles Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company is absent here, they built their own engines, as did Ames in Seattle. Furthermore, a portion of West Coast-built cargo ships were fitted with turbines and the Joshua Hendy Iron Works supplied the same market with triple-expansion engines, albeit on a smaller scale. The Hamilton, Ohio - based company of Hooven-Owens-Rentschler shipped another large portion of triple expansion engines to West Coast yards. The first ship launched appears to be the Westpool on 21 September 1918. Llewellyn Iron Works manufactured the engines for the following ships:
  • built by the Long Beach Shipbuilding Company in Long Beach
  • built by Southwestern Shipbuilding in San Pedro
  • built by the San Francisco Shipbuilding Company in Oakland
  • built by the Moore Shipbuilding Company in Oakland
    • Quabbin, Salina, Sapulpa, Stockton, City of Reno, Meton
  • built by the Union Construction Company in Oakland
    • R. J. Hanna
  • built by the J. F. Duthie & Company in Seattle
  • built by G. M. Standifer Construction in Vancouver
    • Antinous, Apus, Aquarius, Arcturus, Calgarolite
  • built by the Columbia River Shipbuilding Company in Portland
  • 3-exp 27-47-78, 48 inch stroke
  • Union Construction Company, Oakland: Liebre
  • a 24-34-51-74 by 54 inch stroke four-cylinder engine
  • Southwestern Shipbuilding in San Pedro: Montebello
  • 3-exp 19-32-56 diameter, 36-inch stroke, for wooden steamships
  • built by Meacham & Babcock in Seattle: Toka, Wayucan
  • built by Seaborn Shipbuilding in Tacoma: Cheron
  • built by Hammond Lumber Co. in Humboldt Bay: Keota
  • built by G.F. Rodgers in Astoria: Munra
  • 15.5-26-44 diameter, 26 inch stroke, for wooden steamers
  • built by Fulton Shipbuilding, Wilmington
    • 2 engines on twin screw Vinland

24 July 1920. LIW installed gas and electric iron ore-smelting furnace at Torrance. "Southern California will take a position in the first rank as an iron producing center, it is said".[31] The prophet was off by two decades.

On 1 April 1923, the Columbia Steel Company takes over the LIW Torrance plant and appraises it at $1,680,821.[32][33]

References

  1. U.S. Passport Applications, 1795–1925
  2. 1871 Wales Census
  3. 1880 United States Federal Census
  4. "Blythe's Nativity". The San Francisco Chronicle. 21 November 1889. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
  5. "Pioneer Business Man of L. A. Dies". The San Bernardino County Sun. 17 December 1936. p. 5. Retrieved 15 May 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  6. "Industrial. Llewellyn Iron Works". The Los Angeles Herald. 3 September 1905. p. 12. Retrieved 15 May 2016 via Newspapers.com.icon of an open green padlock
  7. "Llewellyn Bros". The Los Angeles Herald. 10 October 1893. p. 17. Retrieved 15 May 2016 via Newspapers.com.icon of an open green padlock
  8. "Annual Meeting". The San Francisco Chronicle. 7 January 1895. p. 8. Retrieved 15 May 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  9. "Home Savings Bank". The Los Angeles Herald. 1 January 1905. p. 25. Retrieved 15 May 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  10. "Business Men To Fight Ordinance. Will Oppose Closing of Saloons. Campaign Committee Named. Entire City Will Be Polled and Determined Opposition Made Against Adoption of "No-Saloon" Measure". The Los Angeles Herald. 16 May 1905. p. 12. Retrieved 15 May 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  11. Layton, Edwin (May 1961). "The Better America Federation: A Case Study of Superpatriotism". Pacific Historical Review. 30 (2): 137–147. doi:10.2307/3636698. JSTOR 3636698.
  12. "L. A. Industrialist Dies in New York". Oakland Tribune. 16 December 1936. p. 7. Retrieved 30 July 2021 via Newspapers.com.icon of an open green padlock
  13. "Articles of Incorporation". Sacramento Daily Union. 17 May 1894. p. 3.
  14. "The Late L.J. Llewellyn". Los Angeles Herald. 24 July 1895. p. 3.
  15. "The Leading Manufacturies". Los Angeles Herald. 3 January 1897. p. 18.
  16. "(full page ad)". Los Angeles Herald. 30 November 1902. p. 24.
  17. "Industrial". Los Angeles Herald. 3 September 1905. p. 12.
  18. "Llewellyns Seek Location". San Pedro Daily News. 7 June 1906. p. 2.
  19. "Llewellyn Company Stays". San Pedro Daily News. 22 September 1906. p. 1.
  20. "LLEWELLYN TO BUILD GREAT $400,000 PLANT IN CITY OF TORRANCE". Los Angeles Herald. 28 September 1912. p. 17.
  21. "Pacific Electric Railway Images". Archived from the original on 11 February 2009.
  22. "Finish Torrance Railroad Bridge". Los Angeles Herald. 18 July 1914. p. 13.
  23. "Torrance History Reviewed Despite Setbacks Industrial City Progresses". San Pedro News Pilot. 1 March 1938. p. 64.
  24. "RUSHING BUILDING AT TORRANCE PLANT". Los Angeles Herald. 5 February 1916. p. 21.
  25. "NEW $500,000 LLEWELLYN IRON PLANT IS OPENED". Los Angeles Herald. 13 September 1916. p. 3.
  26. "One Engine a Week". Pacific Marine Review. May 1919. p. 117.
  27. "Llewellyn Iron Works". Pacific Marine Review. January 1920. p. 102.
  28. "Llewellyn Iron Works to Come Here". San Pedro News Pilot. 12 July 1917. p. 1.
  29. "WILL PUT POWER PLANT IN NEW HULLS". San Pedro Daily News. 12 July 1917. p. 1.
  30. "(advertisement)". Pacific Marine Review. May 1919. p. 0.
  31. "Process May Make L. A. Iron Center". Los Angeles Herald. 24 July 1920. p. 15.
  32. "Merger of Big Iron Plants is Completed". San Pedro News Pilot. 11 April 1923. p. 1.
  33. "Columbia Steel Corp". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 116, no. 3023. 2 June 1923. p. 2519.
  • Berkeley Square Historic Los Angeles
  • Behind the Scenes in the Oviatt Building: Llewellyn Iron Works Elevator Mechanism YouTube
  • Brynamman's Llewellyn brothers building backbone of LA South Wales Guardian
  • Early Los Angeles Street Lights Water and Power Associates
  • How Iron & Steel Helped Los Angeles Forge a Modern Metropolis KCET
  • The Huntington Library Llewellyn Iron Works (photo)
  • Llewellyn Apartments Downtown Los Angeles News
  • Llewellyn Apartments Llewellyn Apartments
  • Llewellyn Iron Works Elevators Archives.org
  • Reese James Llewellyn FindaGrave
  • Smithsonian Trade catalogs from Llewellyn Iron Works
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