General Tools & Instruments is celebrating the 90th anniversary of product innovation from its headquarters in New York City. At the end of WWII, as the last American troops returned home from “over there,” the nation’s hardware industry was poised to fulfill the dreams of burgeoning young families eager to build their first homes. At that time, the “Hardware District” of lower Manhattan burst with small businesses producing hand tools and home furnishings. Today, only General remains.
The NYC
hardware industry of the mid-1940s, while comprised largely of family-run businesses
whose owners were friendly competitors, was, in reality, rather fragmented. Then,
one pioneering member of this circle brainstormed what would become a
monumental idea: Bring together hardware makers and sellers not only in the
City, but throughout the nation, to showcase their products and the entire
industry. That pioneer was Abe Rosenberg, founder of General Hardware
Manufacturing Co. (now General Tools & Instruments), and that showcase
event was the first National Hardware Show (NHS).
The first
NHS held at New York City’s Grand Central Palace in March 1946 attracted about
300 manufacturers, including General, Stanley Tools, Hyde Tools, Disston, Camillus,
Great Neck and Ace. Today, the show, held at the Las Vegas Convention
Center, has more than 2,000 exhibitors and 20,000 attendees. Little did Abe
know the legacy he would create with his vision to unite the hardware
industry in a national trade fair more than 65 years ago. Nor could he have
imagined the future growth and groundbreaking path his family’s business would embark
on in the succeeding decades.
General
Tools & Instruments began as General Hardware in 1922 as the brainchild of Abe and Lillian Rosenberg. In its inaugural
year, General introduced what was then a revolutionary specialty item: the egg
slicer. Who could have guessed that an egg slicer would hatch into an enduring,
relentlessly innovative company for the 21st Century? In its early
days, the company developed numerous other “hard goods,” offering a full-range
of domestic and professional items from clothesline pulleys and screen-door
hardware, to specialty hand tools. With Lillian running the store, Abe took to
the roads of New York and New England, searching for machine shops to
manufacture his tools. By 1930 he had outsourced a small line of specialty items, including circle
cutters, metal punches and pocket screwdrivers. By 1937, Abe and Lillian were
selling their products exclusively at General Hardware.
For the next 40 years, Abe continually
generated new product ideas for commercial and consumer use. His tireless
creativity kept General at the forefront of the industry, eventually leading
the company to be one of the first to create die-cast tools. Upon Abe’s death
in 1977, his daughter Dorothy (Weinstein) took the reins and continued to augment
the scope of General’s product offerings.
Today,
General Tools & Instruments remains a family business, owned and
operated by Dorothy’s two sons Gerald and Martin. Gerry maintains a more active
hands-on role as General’s chairman, and Martin is a contributing board member.
Under their leadership, General has expanded its product line to include more
than 1,500 specialty tools and instruments designed to meet the most demanding
needs of professionals, technicians, craftsmen and DIYers in a wide variety of trades.
Rooted strongly in a heritage of specialty, innovation, quality and customer
service, General, all the while holding true to the vision of its founders 90
years ago.
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