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D30463-2

Permanente Metals began production at their newly equipped aluminun plant on Taylor Way in Tacoma on October 31, 1947. Permanente purchased the former Olin Corp. facility, built in 1942, from the federal government and spent two years modernizing the plant. The remodeled Tacoma plant was the first in the nation to have self cleaning reduction pots with scrubbing systems, minimizing pollution released into the environment (PMC Annual Report, 1947-1948).


Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Aluminum; Industrial facilities--Tacoma; Laborers--Tacoma; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees;

D30266-1

Charles P. Love, General Superintendent of Permanente Metals, along with plant technicians activated the first pot line in Tacoma, making October 31, 1947 the first official day of operations. Other pot lines will be activated, once the plant can make certain everything is operating without problems. The plant is expected to be producing at full capacity by the end of November. View of plant technician checking dials and control system (T. Times, 10/31/47, p. 1).


Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Industrial facilities--Tacoma; Control rooms--Tacoma; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees;

D32127-1

Purchasing Agents visiting Permanente, Washington Purchasing Agents & Manufacturers. The Purchasing Agents Association held monthly meetings in Tacoma. George H. Wilson, from Atlas Foundry and Machine Company, was chairman of the Tacoma group. The group enjoyed a no-host luncheon on March 11, 1948, at the Top of the Ocean followed by a tour throughout Permanente Metals Company aluminum plant. A dinner business meeting was held afterwards at the New Yorker Cafe. The group is seen here outside the Permanente plant. Tall alumina storage towers are seen behind them. (T.Times, 3/8/1948, p.3)


Purchasing Agents Association (Tacoma); Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma); Meetings--Tacoma--1940-1950; Group portraits; Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950;

D33003-14

Publicity shots at Permanente Metals, Bill Gorman. One of Permanente's employees sits at his desk checking lists of figures and order forms. A map of the United States hangs on the wall behind him. Clip boards of additional data also hang on the wall along with schedules. A telephone sits to his right on the desk. The man is wearing a sports jacket, a sweater vest and a tie. He also wears a large ring on his left hand. A pencil protrudes from his jacket pocket. TPL-4555


Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees; Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Employees--Tacoma--1940-1950; Paperwork; Maps; Telephones;

D33003-2

Publicity shots at Permanente Metals, Bill Gorman. A view of one of the switchboard operators at the Permanente plant in Tacoma and the switchboard panel. She is wearing a headset to enable her to use both hands when operating the cords on the switchboard. A telephone dial is seen beyond her right arm and other office machinery is in the background. The young woman is wearing a two piece suit, a white blouse and a plaid scarf. Permanente acknowledged the high value of each employee in their annual reports. TPL-4555


Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees; Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Telephone switchboards--Tacoma--1940-1950; Telephone operators--Tacoma--1940-1950; Women--Tacoma--1940-1950;

D34569-4

Permanente Metals of Tacoma was setting up a new metallurgical research lab, it was expected to be in full operation this fall. The Tacoma plant was one of the newest and most modern aluminum reduction plants in the country. The research facilities would serve the Tacoma and Spokane plants and would focus on aluminum reduction questions and research. Exterior view of Permanente Metals Corporation industrial plant (T. Times, 8/23/48, p. 5).


Industrial facilities--Tacoma; Research facilities--Tacoma; Railroad freight cars--Tacoma; Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma);

D38272-2

Publicity for Permanente News and Times Industrial Page, Permanente Metals, Bill Gorman. Travis Crowe, one of the storeroom attendants at Permanente Metals Corporation, readies a set of nuts and bolts for use on the aluminum furnaces at the Kaiser aluminum plant on the tideflats. A wall of bins holds all sized nuts and bolts in the storeroom. (T.Times, 2/25/1949, p.49)


Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees; Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Crowe, Travis; Laborers--Tacoma--1940-1950; Bolts & nuts; Workshops--Tacoma--1940-1950;

D42561-2

Crust breaking machine at Permanente, Bill Gorman. A specialized machine has been manufactured to perform the work that had previously been done manually. A crust would form at the openings to the reduction pots where alumina was melted into raw pig aluminum. The plant had two potlines containing 240 reduction pots producing 41 million pounds of alumium per year. (Permanente Metals Corp. 1947-1948 Annual Report)


Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma); Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Machinery;

D31250-1

In 1947 Kaiser Aluminum under the name Permanente Metals leased the aluminum plant that was built in Tacoma by the Defense Plant Corporation. The plant had been built to provide aluminum for the war effort. With the end of the war, there was a surplus of aluminum and the plant had been closed. In October of 1947, Tacoma once again began to produce aluminum, but with the war over new products were created and entered the market including - safety wear. These safety shoes were manufactured with Kaiser Aluminum. TPL-9364


Footwear; Safety shoes; Aluminum; Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Merchandise displays--Tacoma; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Products; Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. (Tacoma);

D31164-4

The Steel Workers Organizing Committee later became known as the United Steel Workers of America, including a chapter located in Tacoma, Washington. The United Steel Workers of America Local Number 2626 had members throughout the iron, steel and metallurgical industries in Tacoma. View of Permanente Metals employees in plant, photo ordered by United Steel Workers of America.


Laborers--Tacoma; United Steel Workers of America Union Local No. 2626 (Tacoma); Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Industrial facilities--Tacoma; Labor unions--Tacoma; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees;

D97977-4

Kaiser Aluminum; exterior of new pot room building. This reduction plant will become the newest facility to receive power when the the switches are thrown to 18 new "super size pots" or electrolytic reduction cells. Power will be supplied by the Bonneville Power Administration on an interruptible basis. The 18 extra "pots" will boost the plant's production by 10 million pounds annually. (TNT 4/16/1956, pg. 21)


Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. (Tacoma); Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1950-1960;

D97978-1

Kaiser Aluminum; new pot room building. Checking cathode bus, arc building. The new building contained 18 new "super size" reduction pots or electrolytic cells. These cells would boost the plant's annual production by more than 10 million pounds and increase payroll by more than $100,000. This addition will bring the corporate primary aluminum capacity in the Northwest to 429 million pounds annually. As the 5th largest employer in the state, Kaiser paid more than 31 1/2 million dollars in wages in 1955 at their Spokane and Tacoma plants. (TNT 4/16/1956, pg. 21)


Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. (Tacoma); Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1950-1960;

D97978-4

Kaiser Aluminum; new pot room building. Dumping anode paste, arc building. Kaiser's newest facility contained 18 large "pots" or electrolytic cells, which would add 10 million pounds annually to plant production. Power would be supplied to the cells by the Bonneville Power Administration on a interruptible basis. (TNT 4/16/1956, pg. 21)


Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. (Tacoma); Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1950-1960;

D99659-30R

ca. 1956. In 1956, an employee at Tacoma's Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. plant used an overhead crane to hold a crucible of molten aluminum and pour the liquid metal into a casting mold. The Tacoma plant was originally built in 1942 for the Olin Corporation. Kaiser took over the plant in 1946 and spent over $3 million to expand and modernize the facility in 1952. It was an aluminum reduction facility. It produced pig aluminum from treated ore. The pigs weighed either 50 or 1,000 pounds. Most were sent by rail to Kaiser's Rolling mill at Trentwood, near Spokane, where they were converted into sheets and products. Some went directly to the more than 500 independent aluminum fabricators in the Pacific Northwest, who consumed the pigs directly in the operation of their own remelt and rolling mills. Kaiser closed their Tacoma plant on the tideflats in 2000. (Kaiser Aluminum News, August 1956)


Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. (Tacoma); Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1950-1960;

D154937-2

Interior of new aluminum rod mill at Kaiser Aluminum, 3400 Taylor Way, on November 1, 1968. This view is of one-half of Potline #4 and a cart loaded with "channels" which were lowered by crane into a slot just inside the ore hoppers visible on top of each "pot" or reduction cell. The new rod mill was nearly completed and ready for operation.The first rod would be formed in a test run on December 12, 1968. Molten aluminum would be processed into 3/8-inch rods at Tacoma's local mill and then shipped to San Leandro, California, for drawing into electrical wiring. Kaiser had reopened its Tacoma facilities in 1964 after a six-year closure and had steadily expanded since then. It was to permanently close in 2002. Photograph ordered by Kaiser Engineers. (TNT 12-13-68, C-18) (Additional information provided by a reader)


Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. (Tacoma); Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1960-1970; Industrial facilities--Tacoma--1960-1970;

D162638-10C

This is the Kaiser Aluminum plant in the tideflats as seen by air during the fall of 1972. The 500-foot smokestack was built in 1968 during plant expansion. Photograph taken on speculation.


Aerial views; Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. (Tacoma); Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1970-1980; Smokestacks--Tacoma;

3400 TAYLOR WAY, TACOMA

  • 2 images. Olin Corp. Aluminum Plant Woodworth & Co. / Roy T. Early Co., contr. Graham Steel, construction manager -construction started 1/25/1942 -first metal cast 9/10/1942 TNT 7/12/1941 Great things seen in big new plant here TNT 7/16/1941 p.1 Aluminum plant is certain TNT 8/27/1941 p.1 Holds up Tacoma plant TNT 8/29/1941 p.1 OPM site amazes, dazes (il) TNT 8/31/1941 p.1 Aluminum plant assured TNT 10/8/1941 p.19 Aluminum plant nears TNT 10/20/1941 p.1 Rush new Tacoma plant TNT 10/21/1941 p.1 Tideflat site picked for aluminum plant TNT 10/22/1941 p.1 Cut tape to rush plant TNT 11/26/1941 p.1 Olin plant plans are enlarged TNT 1/24/1942 p.1 Start plant on Monday TNT 1/29/1942 p.1 Tacoma firms to build big aluminum plant TNT 2/20/1942 p.13 Dirt is flying to new plant foundation TNT 4/21/1942 p.B4 Aluminum plant taking shape fast TNT 7/14/1942 p.1 Tacoma aluminum plant ready soon TNT 9/4/1942 p.34 Aluminum plant open TNT 9/11/1944 Celebrate 2d birthday T.Times 9/15/1944 Aluminum plant in Tacoma enters its third year TNT 11/12/1945 p.1 Olin plant will close TNT 4/15/1946 p.1 Kaiser may bid on Tacoma Olin plant TNT 11/29/1946 p.1 Kaiser buys Tacoma's Olin plant TNT 11/30/1946 p.1 Tacoma aluminum plant to hum again (il) TNT 12/6/1946 Plant sold to Kaiser (Kaiser Aluminum, Permanente Metals Corp.) ----- Kaiser Aluminum -purchased by Permanente Metals Corp. in Feb. 1947 -production started 10/27/1947 -name changed from Permanente to Kaiser Aluminum & Chemicals Corp. in 1949 -closed June 1958 -reopened in 1964 -permanently closed in 2002 TNT 12/17/1946 p.1 Kaiser will spend million here TNT 10/23/1947 p.1 Aluminum mill open Oct. 31 TNT 10/31/1947 p.1 Aluminum plant here starts up TNT 11/1/1947 p.1 Metal flows again ... TNT 2/17/1948 p.A5 (ad,interior il) TNT 10/28/1948 p.1 Aluminum pig used as stove at big party (1st anniversary) TNT 1/23/1949 p.C8 Factories here using metal produced in local plant TNT 11/9/1949 p.A12 Permanente to change name (to Kaiser Aluminum & Chemicals Corp.) TNT 6/25/1950 p.B3 "Robin on my window sill" (il) TNT 12/14/1950 p.A2 Kaiser Aluminum now boasts seven plants TNT 12/16/1950 p.6 Aluminum processing exacting and delicate TNT 2/13/1951 Metalurgical industries ... (il) TNT 2/26/1952 p.1 Kaiser to expand here TNT 3/30/1952 p.C15 OK Kaiser expansion TNT 11/2/1952 Kaiser Aluminum boosts Tacoma output (il) TNT 9/9/1955 p.A1 Kaiser firm will expand Tacoma plant TNT 10/5/1955 p.A1 Kaiser plant slates huge expansion TNT 10/11/1955 p.1 Big Kaiser expansion contracts let TNT 12/20/1955 p.15 Our town '56 (sketch of new shed) TNT 2/12/1956 p.A2 Kaiser expands (il of addition under construction) TNT 3/18/1956 p.A1 City industries grow apace (il) TNT 4/16/1956 p.21 Kaiser adds new facilities (il) TNT 9/3/1956 p.C8 Tacoma aluminum plant gets big capacity boast (interior il) TNT 9/5/1956 p.D12 Kaiser plant flexing new set of "muscles" TNT 1/29/1957 p.10 Idle pot line (interior il) TNT 3/24/1957 p.A1 New clue to dead herring TNT 11/17/1957 p.B5 Aluminum plant reaches 10-year mark (interior il) TNT 4/1/1958 p.1 Kaiser plant to shut down here May 1 TNT 5/13/1958 p.D1 Kaiser plant wins reprieve - won't close TNT 5/27/1958 p.A11 Kaiser plant will close down June 1 TNT 10/28/1960 p.4 Tideflat Tillie finally gives up solitary life TNT 9/24/1961 p.B4 Kaiser Tacoma plant to get improvements TNT 7/22/1964 p.A1 Kaiser plant to reopen Tacoma plant (aerial il) TNT 9/20/1964 p.C17 300 getting "pots" ready at Kaiser site (interior il) TNT 11/2/1964 p.B2-B5 Kaiser plant here to begin operations (il) TNT 11/15/1964 p.A9 First aluminum shipment from plant going to concern in England (interior il) TNT 1/13/1965 p.D3 Kaiser plant manager gets Ford award TNT 1/17/1965 p.B5 (permit taken for addition and alterations) TNT 2/17/1965 p.A1 Three men hurt in collapse of structure (il) TNT 10/7/1965 p.A1 Kaiser, Port sign big cargo pact TNT 11/13/1966 p.D19 Tacoma's changing skyline (il of alumina dome) TNT 1/15/1967 p.B13 (permit taken for mechanized rammer installation) TNT 1/15/1967 p.B14 Kaiser plans addition to local plant TNT 4/2/1967 p.A17 (permit for $25,000 slab for furnace) TNT 6/23/1967 p.7 Shipload of alumina due at port (aerial il) TNT 6/28/1967 p.A1 Bucket, belt unload first alumina here TNT 6/30/1967 p.A1 New Tacoma plant key in Kaiser plans (aluminum rod plant addition) (aerial il) TNT 8/6/1967 p.B15 (permit taken for piling foundation) TNT 10/1/1967 p.B14 (permit for expansion taken) TNT 1/7/1968 p.B10 The mood of Tacoma (il) TNT 3/31/1968 p.C16 (permit taken for air control stack) TNT 4/11/1968 p.A12 Port dome $90,500 job awarded (alumina dome by Marshall, Barr & Pacquer of Seattle, arch.) (sketch) TNT 4/28/1968 p.B14 Kaiser expands (il of new 500 ft. stack under construction) TNT 7/14/1968 p.D19 Waterfront volcano (aerial il of new alumina dome under construction) TNT 7/28/1968 p.A20 Kaiser mill rises (il) TNT 10/2/1968 p.A2 Kaiser opens 4th potline (interior il) TNT 10/24/1968 p.A20 S.S. Mullen to build 2nd (alumina) dome for port TNT 11/10/1968 p.C22 Kaiser asks variance on pollution TNT 11/14/1968 p.A3 Pollution unit grants variance to Kaiser Aluminum Co. TNT 12/8/1968 p.A7 Kaiser's new aluminum mill ready (aluminum rod mill to start) TNT 12/13/1968 p.C18 Kaiser starts rod mill (interior il) TNT 3/30/1969 p.C27 Birth of a dome(S.S. Mullen, Inc. contr.) (il under construction) TNT 4/20/1969 p.B19 2nd alumina dome, 100,000 ton capacity, nears completion on Pier 7 (aerial il) TNT 7/27/1969 p.D11 Hugh alumina dome rising on Tideflats (il) TNT 10/5/1969 p.B12 Northwest gains from down under (interior il of new alumina dome) TNT 11/1/1969 p.2 Kaiser worker's accident fatal TNT 11/23/1969 p.D8 Pier 7 alumina project finished (il) TNT 3/1/1981 p.F10 Kaiser moves ahead with big modernization TNT 9/17/1982 Kaiser shelves $200 million plan TNT 9/18/2000 p.B1 Kaiser picket lines coming down (Steelworkers on strike since 9/30/1998) TNT 11/3/2000 p.D1 Kaiser to stay dark for now TNT 4/26/2001 p.D1 Kaiser might be selling TNT 12/20/2002 p.D1 Port will buy Kaiser plant (il) TNT 10/31/2003 p.D1 Kaiser makes way for containers; Port ends lease on land ... TNT 5/26/2005 p.D1 Old smelter is worth its weight in gold ... scrap metal is worth millions (il) TNT 6/8/2006 p.D1 Port smokestack ready for a big fall (to be demolished) (il) TNT 6/18/2006 p.B6 Watch us blow our stack (stack to be demolished) (il) TNT 6/21/2006 p.D1 Enter contest to push button for demolition (il) T.Weekly 6/29/2006 p.A1 Port gets ready to blow its stack T.Daily Index 7/3/2006 p.1 Hundreds gather to witness smokestack fall ... (il) TNT 7/3/2006 p.A1 Kaiser stack goes "kaboom" (il of stack demolition) TNT 10/28/2006 p.D1 What's that? (il of demolition) TNT 3/29/2007 p.D1 Kaiser plant back to dirt T.Daily Index 3/30/2007 p.1 A year later, renovation and recycling ... (il of site) Business Examiner 4/16/2007 p.20 Tideflat king lost power to global market T.Daily Index 4/24/2013 p.1 Port moves closer to final stage of Kaiser Aluminum cleanup (il) ----- Northwest Innovation Works TNT 4/24/2014 p.A1 Multinational group proses $1.8 billion gas-conversion plant TNT 5/2/20145 p.A1 Port OKs lease for Tideflats methanol plant Business Examiner 5/26/2014 p.3 New port lease to help meet diversification goals (map) TNT 12/1/2015 p.A3 Voices start weighing in on proposed methanol plant TNT 2/28/2016 p.A1 A methanol plant primer (feature article) TNT 4/20/2016 p.A1 Tacoma methanol project canceled (il) ----- TNT 4/24/2016 p.A1 Tacoma methanol project: What's next? (il)
  • Year Built: 1942
  • Decade Built: 1940s
  • Demolished: 2006

D164908-4C

Kaiser Aluminum plant. This aerial view of the Kaiser Aluminum plant was taken on June 10, 1974. The plant was located in Tacoma's tideflats at 3400 Taylor Way. The wisps of smoke emerging from the plant's 500-foot stack appear to blend into the heavy cloud formation. Color photograph ordered by Kaiser Aluminum.


Aerial photographs; Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. (Tacoma); Industrial facilities--Tacoma--1970-1980; Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1970-1980;

D165187-A

ca. 1974. Aerial photograph of Kaiser Aluminum plant in industrial tideflats area of Tacoma, probably taken during the summer of 1974. The plant's 500-foot stack dominates the landscape. A ship is docked nearby taking on shipments of logs. Photograph ordered by Kaiser Aluminum.


Aerial views; Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. (Tacoma); Industrial facilities--Tacoma--1970-1980; Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1970-1980; Smokestacks--Tacoma; Logs; Shipping--Tacoma--1970-1980;

D25537-1

Permanente Metals was opening an Aluminum reduction plant in Tacoma in early spring. They were currently employing men to overhaul 240 furnace pots, install new design collector bars and other electrical equipment that would handle the flow of 32,400,000 kilowatt hours per month. Tacoma's inexpensive power rates has brought this industry that will employ over 300 men. View of men preparing the plant for its future official opening (T. Times, 2/12/47, p. 5).


Hoisting machinery; Machinery; Equipment; Laborers--Tacoma; Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Aluminum; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma);

D17820-3

Leo Olsen lost the use of his legs to infantile paralysis when he was 9 years old, but he was determined to be part of WWII. Although a tailor by trade, and a pianist, he found work at the Olin Coporation aluminum plant, on the tide flats, running one of the giant cranes that towered over the electric furnaces. This photograph of Mr. Olsen at the controls of his crane was taken in June of 1944 for the Tacoma Chamber of Commerce. (T. Times, 6/27/44, p. 2). Tacoma Chamber of Commerce Manpower publicity at Olin Corp.


Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Handicapped persons--Tacoma; Olin Industries, Inc. (Tacoma); Olsen, Leo;

D46292-1

Interior at plant, Permanente Metals, Ted Schmidt. Interior view of the pot room, laborers are pouring the molten aluminum into a mold to form pigs. Pigs will weigh between fifty and one thousand pounds. The pigs are cooled, stacked on pallets and transported to the rolling mill at Trentwood, located near Spokane, Washington. The pigs from the Mead and Tacoma plant are later re-melted in furnaces where other metallic elements are added to form standard alloys (PMC Annual Report, 1947-1948).


Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Aluminum; Industrial facilities--Tacoma; Laborers--Tacoma; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees;

D38272-7

There's nothing wrong with this chest, it's been x-rayed says Dave Schrader to Bill Courtney, employees at Permanente Metals Corp. As part of a U.S. Public Health Service campaign, all the employees at the Kaiser Aluminum plant in Tacoma received chest x-rays in 1949. In February of 1949, Permanente employed over 3,600 men in their three Washington plants with a combined payroll exceeding $12 million. (Publicity for Permanente News, and Times Industrial Page, Permanente Metals, Bill Gorman) (T.Times, 2/25/1949, p.37) TPL-3686


Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees; Schrader, David A.; Courtney, William E.; Radiography; Health care--Tacoma--1940-1950;

D30306-4

Permanente Metals, producers of Kaiser Aluminum, bought the Olin plant and after rehabilitating and improving the facilities, they have started production. They began operating one pot line, but within a month they should be producing aluminum at full capacity. The Tacoma plant is one of the most modern aluminum producing facilities in the country. Aerial view of Permanente, which is located on the Tacoma Tideflats, covering more than 129 acres of land (PMC Annual Report, 1947-48).


Aerial views; Industrial facilities--Tacoma; Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma);

D30463-4

The Pacific Northwest offered Permanente Metals, the producers of Kaiser aluminum, inexpensive hydro-electric power. In order to produce one pound of aluminum approximately 10 kilowatts of electricity is needed, therefore the Northwest is the ideal location for the Tacoma and Mead, near Spokane, plants. Interior view of the pot room, the white powdery substance is alumina, which is discharged into the reduction pots, the molten aluminum is siphoned from the pots into one and a half ton ladles (PMC Annual Report, 1947-1948).


Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Aluminum; Industrial facilities--Tacoma; Laborers--Tacoma; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees;

D30266-5

Permanente Metals took over the Olin Aluminum facilities, that had shut down in November 1945, these facilities had not been in use until now. Kaiser bought the plant from the United States War Assets Administration, they then invested over one million dollars to modernize the plant. The Tacoma plant featured many self cleaning machines and a knowledgeable staff (T. Times, 10/31/47, p. 1).


Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Industrial facilities--Tacoma; Control rooms--Tacoma; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees;

D30266-13

View of new pot line at the Tacoma reduction plant of the Permanente Metals Corp. It is the first reduction plant in the world to be thoroughly equipped with a scrubber system. This equipment is able to automatically wash away the fumes that are given off in the reduction process. The system consists of individual collectors connected to each pot and several washing stations. Permanente staff can be seen in the center area of the reduction plant.


Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Industrial facilities--Tacoma; Equipment; Machinery; Control rooms--Tacoma; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma);

D31164-10

Permanente Metals was an aluminum producing plant, the demand for aluminum and aluminum made products had dramatically increased since the end of World War II. Aluminum products could be found in kitchens, automobiles, airplanes, luggage, homes and many other areas; aluminum offered durability yet was extremely light weight and versatile. View of Permanente Metals employee oiling a machine, photo ordered by United Steel Workers of America.


Laborers--Tacoma; United Steel Workers of America Union Local No. 2626 (Tacoma); Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Industrial facilities--Tacoma; Labor unions--Tacoma; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees;

D31164-8

Permanente Metals had started operations in Tacoma in late October of this year. Permanente Metals employees in plant's pot room, the white powdery substance is alumina, which is discharged into the reduction pots, the molten aluminum is siphoned from the pots into large capacity ladles, photo ordered by United Steel Workers of America.


Laborers--Tacoma; United Steel Workers of America Union Local No. 2626 (Tacoma); Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Industrial facilities--Tacoma; Labor unions--Tacoma; Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees;

D31684-9

Permanente. The white, powdery alumina was discharged from bins into electrolytic cells known as reduction pots where it was periodically stirred. After heating in the reduction pots the molten aluminum was siphoned from the pots into 1 1/2 ton ladles. The ladles would be transferred by crane to the end of the potroom buildings where the molten metal was poured into molds forming pigs weighing 50 to 1,000 pounds. (Permanente Metals Corporation 1947-1948 Annual Report) TPL-4541


Permanente Metals Corp. (Tacoma)--Employees; Aluminum industry--Tacoma--1940-1950; Aluminum; Laborers--Tacoma--1940-1950; Founding--Tacoma--1940-1950; Foundries--Tacoma--1940-1950;

Results 1 to 30 of 92