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Nashua Corporation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nashua Corporation
Nasdaq: NHSA
IndustryManufacturing
PredecessorNashua Card and Glazed Paper Company and Carter, Rice & Company
Founded1849 (1849) in Nashua, New Hampshire, United States
HeadquartersNashua, New Hampshire,
Nashua
,
USA

The Nashua Corporation (NASDAQ: NSHA) was an American company headquartered in Nashua, New Hampshire that made labels, specialty papers, and imaging products and services. On September 15, 2009, it was bought by Cenveo, Inc.[1] As of early 2010, it had four factories in several states.[2] In April 2019 the long-run label and receipt paper businesses were sold by Cenveo to Iconex.[3]

History

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Nashua began as a gummed paper manufacturer in Rockport, Massachusetts. In 1898 the company went defunct. The owner, Charles H. Crowell, was an inventor and entrepreneur. He sold his failing company to Carter, Rice & Company of Boston, who retained Crowell as manager of their new division, renamed Winthrop Manufacturing Company. A fire destroyed the factory in February, 1904, which had moved to south Boston. The search for a new location led the owners to Nashua, New Hampshire, where they found the heavily indebted Nashua Card and Glazed Paper Company,[4] which had been founded in 1849 as a manufacturer of cardboard and glazed paper. During the California Gold Rush Nashua made playing cards for miners[5] and became known as a result as the Card Shop.[6] This name remained with the company for nearly 100 years. The owners of Nashua sold their factory to Carter and Rice for $74,000, plus mortgage. Thus, in 1904, the Nashua Corporation was founded. In April, 1904 the wholly-owned subsidiary was incorporated. It became known as the Nashua Card, Gummed and Coated Paper Company. The new company combined the capabilities of both companies, continuing to manufacture the products of Carter, Rice & Company: gummed flats, gummed paper and sock linings. They added the products of the previous company, glazed paper, cardboard and "surface coated" paper.[4]

In 1910 the company had its first telephone installed along with new office machinery and boilers. That year the company also retained its first chemist, adding research and development to the business model.[6]

In 1926 it bought the Knowles Youngblood Co.

The entire city of Nashua worked at the mill in the 1930s through the 1960s.[7]

Dolers card company moved into the plant (date unknown) bringing in women workers which had not previously worked at a paper-producing plant. Napkins began being processed at the Nashua plant in the 1960s or 1970s. A women designer came in as a consultant, and brought many more designs to the plant. This reflected an evolution of the company from paper milling to design and print work. New machines came in that could print on cloth and other materials. (PNL/rd) There were five designers on staff in the 1950s and 1960s. Mainly focused on bubble gum wrappers (3 of the 5 staff designers), the Hershey’s 5 cent candy bars kept the company in business.[7]

In 2000 it merged with Rittenhouse, another printing specialty firm.[8]

Nashua Corporation sold its line of tape products to Tyco International in 1997. The tape products line was then divested as part of Covalence Specialty Materials which later merged with Berry Plastics.[9] Nashua Brand Tape Products are now manufactured in Franklin, Kentucky.

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Nashua Tape Products' 357 brand duct tape[10] is used by MythBusters duo Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman for their projects.[11] Nashua Tape's 357 was featured in four MythBusters episodes including Duct Tape Hour (Season 7, Episode 13), Duct Tape Hour 2 (Season 8, Episode 7), Duct Tape Plane (Season 9, Episode 16), and most recently Duct Tape Island (Season 10, Episode 1).

Nashua Corporation was featured in the 1980 NBC White Paper episode If Japan Can... Why Can't We?[12]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Burton, Robert (2009-09-15). "Cenveo Completes Acquisition of Nashua Corporation" (PDF). Cenveo Corporate Release. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-12-29. Retrieved 2010-04-02.
  2. ^ Jan. 7, 2010 Nashua Telegraph story: Nashua Corp. closes plant
  3. ^ "Iconex Acquires Long-run Label Assets of Cenveo".
  4. ^ a b "Nashua Corporation History". Funding Universe. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
  5. ^ "NASHUA CORPORATION Company Profile". Hoovers. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
  6. ^ a b "Feeling a bit nostalgic about Nashua Corp". New Hampshire Business Review. 25 September 2009. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
  7. ^ a b Levesque, Paul N. 2022; March 26. Interviewed by Rebecca Devereaux. Mr. Levesque was employed as a designer at the Nashua Corporation from approximately 1955 to its closing.
  8. ^ News, Bloomberg (2000-03-23). "COMPANY NEWS; NASHUA AGREES TO BUY RITTENHOUSE, A RIVAL PAPER MAKER". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-12-16. {{cite news}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  9. ^ Berry Plastics
  10. ^ 357
  11. ^ Nashua 357 Duct Tape at Thinkgeek.com
  12. ^ "If Japan Can, Why Cant We? – 1980 NBC Special Report". The Deming Institute.
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