Zidell Companies

Zidell Companies
Private
Industry Manufacturing and shipbuilding
Founded Portland, Oregon, 1916
Founder Sam Zidell
Headquarters Portland, Oregon, United States
Area served
World
Products Barges, steel tube fittings
Owner Zidell family
Number of employees
200
Subsidiaries Zidell Marine, Tube Forgings of America
Zidell Marine, in the South Waterfront district of Portland, Oregon

The Zidell Companies are a group of family-owned companies based in Portland, Oregon. They include Zidell Marine, a ship construction company which specializes in the building of barges, and Tube Forgings of America Inc.

In the post-World War II era, Zidell became the largest shipbreaking operation in the United States. In September 2016, the company announced that it is preparing to shut down its barge-building business permanently and close its South Waterfront factory in 2017, with the last barge projected to be launched in spring 2017.[1]

History

Zidell shipbreaking yard in September, 1972. The ship being broken up is the heavy cruiser USS Baltimore (CA-68)

Zidell traces its origins back to 1912, when Sam Zidell (real name - Yeschie Zajdell) migrated to the United States from the small village Smidyn (Russia) and began selling secondhand machinery in Roseburg, Oregon.[2] The following year he moved to Portland, and set up the Zidell Machinery and Supply Company, selling equipment and supplies to the region's expanding industrial base.

Shortly after the end of World War II, in 1946, Sam Zidell's son Emery, who now headed the business, purchased the shipyard of Commercial Iron Works in Portland and turned it into a shipbreaking yard, called the Zidell Ship Dismantling Company. With scrap steel in high demand for rebuilding America's industrial base in the postwar period, business boomed and by the 1960s the company, now known as Zidell Explorations, Inc., had become America's largest shipbreaker. In the course of its thirty years of shipbreaking operations, Zidell dismantled a total of 336 ships, including many World War II-era Liberty ships and naval auxiliaries, and some warships.

USS Kermit Roosevelt, a WWII-era naval auxiliary scrapped by Zidell

From 1948, Zidell also began to recover industrial valves from its shipbreaking operations and resell them, a business that was eventually spun off into the Zidell Valve Corporation. Zidell Valves was sold in 1997 to Pon Holdings of the Netherlands. In 1955, Emery Zidell also founded Tube Forgings of America, Inc. (TFA), which supplies welding fittings for a wide variety of applications. TFA was the first US manufacturer of carbon steel welding fittings to earn an ISO-90002 certification and is one of the world's largest manufacturers of such fittings today.[3]

In 1960, Emery Zidell established the Zidell Marine Corporation, which used steel recovered from Zidell's shipbreaking business to build new barges. Demand soon outstripped the supply of recycled steel however, so Zidell began building barges from new steel. Since 1961, the company has built over 300 barges, most of which are still in use.

Since 1996, the company headed by Jay Zidell , the grandson of Sam Zidell.

In 2010, the grandson of Emery Zidell, Matt French, joined to the company to explore and develop for Zidell Company.[4]

In July 2011 the Zidell Company took part in a project to clean up the shoreline of the Willamette River. The project budget was $ 20 million and was directed for capping and removing dangerous contaminants, restored wildlife habitat, re-sloping and replanting the banks. [5]

Today, Zidell Marine and Tube Forgings of America remain family-run businesses, headed by Emery's son Jay. The companies currently employ some 200 people in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States.

In September 2016, the company announced that it is preparing to shut down its barge-building business permanently and discontinue use of its 33-acre (13 ha) South Waterfront property in 2017, with the last barge projected to be launched in spring 2017.[1] Subsequent removal of equipment from the site is expected to take several months. A separate barge-leasing business is to continue operating.[1]

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 3 Rogoway, Mike (September 23, 2016) [published online September 21]. "Zidell is building its last barge". The Oregonian. p. B11. Retrieved 2016-10-01.
  2. "zidell". Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  3. Zidell Companies press release Archived August 23, 2007, at the Wayback Machine., 30 October 2003.
  4. "ZIDELL". Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  5. Mihir Zaveri. "Zidell Marine to begin Willamette River cleanup along South Waterfront". The Oregonian. Retrieved July 11, 2016.

References

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