
E. N. Brandt
served for many years as Public Relations Officer for Dow Chemical. He has been the company historian since 1983.
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Growth Company, Dow Chemical's First Century
E. N. Brandt
As the focus of protest against a hated war in Vietnam it became one
of the best-known company names in America almost overnight during
the 1960s. "Dow makes napalm, napalm kills babies," chanted student
protesters on hundreds of campuses during that war. "Dow shalt not
kill." This feisty company did not back off from making napalm (it
was the only U.S. company that did not), and it was soon embroiled
in
other front-page controversies—Agent Orange, dioxin, and mercury
contamination of the Great Lakes among them. Typically, when EPA
planes flew over its plants taking photos, Dow sued.
Growth Company is the story of a century of industrial drama
told by
an insider who has been associated with the firm and its top
managers
since 1953. Written in celebration of the firm's 100th anniversary,
it traces the rise of an archetypical growth company from its
unlikely beginnings in a dying lumber town in the backwoods of
central Michigan. Later a Wall Street favorite, it made many of its
early investors wealthy; it has not missed or decreased a dividend
since 1911.
Based on research in the Dow corporate archives, supplemented by
oral
history interviews with more than 150 company pioneers, this
colorful
panorama of growth is told in terms of the people who built this
unique and spectacularly successful world-class company, beginning
with Herbert H. Dow, the young genius who founded the firm, down to
the son of Greek immigrants who heads the company today.
Michigan and the Great Lakes
World rightsNotes, photographs,
bibliography, index
649 pp., 6.00" x 9.00", January 2002
Cloth, $49.95,
0-87013-426-4 978-0-87013-426-5
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