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| About Us |
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Written By:
Thomas L. Langlois
President
Allen Clay Tile Products Co., Inc.
Indianapolis, IN
Allen Clay Tile was founded
by Ethen Allen, not the patriot or any connection to the furniture manufacturer,
in 1955. The company was located in Indianapolis, IN at the north-east
corner of Hamilton Avenue and East Washington Street (2100 Block) on the
ground floor of a three or four story red brick Odd Fellows Lodge.
Sometime in the 1920's the roof of this building had been taken off by
a tornado. Allen's occupied half of the ground floor. The other half
of the building was occupied by the AL-MOE tavern.
Allen's wife also worked
in the business, as well as Larry Weimer. Larry had worked in the
tile trade for a number of years and had been on the tile crew when the
Murat Hotel on North Meridian Street was being built sometime in the 1920's.
I know little else about
Ethen Allen except that he and his wife are now deceased and that at first
Allen Clay Tile was a side venture of his. Allen was also in some
kind of refrigeration business at the time. In 1955, ceramic tile
was only available through tile contractors. The few tile factories
in the USA would hook up with a tile contractor and the consumer was at
their mercy if they wanted ceramic tile in their home or business.
They sold installed only.
Also by 1955, ceramic tile
mastic had been introduced as well as dry set grout. All this meant
that ceramic tile was not only a lot easier but a lot less costly to install.
Ceramic tile no longer needed to be installed in cement, known as "mud",
and tile no longer needed to be soaked in water prior to setting with the
introduction of dry set grout. Allen saw an opportunity to sell ceramic
tile to the general public. However the ceramic tile manufacturers
would have none of this independent distributor marketing scheme.
They would die hard on the through the "contractor only" marketing program.
However, Allen had a sister who served in the WAC's during WW II.
She was stationed in England and got to know people affiliated with the
H & R Johnson Company, a world leading ceramic tile manufacturer.
Allen now started importing English wall and floor tile. In the evening,
Larry would demonstrate how to install ceramic tile to the general public
at the East Washington Street location.
Ceramic tile was far superior
than plastic and was now a lot easier to install and would soon be cheaper.
I remember this English tile. It came in wooden boxes, available
in two thicknesses - thick and thin, no trim but one edge was glazed, and
no lugs. White butcher twine was used for spacing the grout lines
-- known as stringing the grout lines. English tile had endless colors,
including all kinds of shades of pink and green. The brighter colors
had a tendency to craze. However, at this time Joe Mast formed a
corporation he named Stylon head quartered in Boston and started manufacturing
ceramic tile in Massachusetts with the independent distributor sales mind
set. Stylon, with the help of Tennessee Valley Authority funds, soon
opened a state of the art tile plant in Florence, Alabama.
Other tile factories soon
opened - Royal, Mortile, Universal Potteries, Florida now came on stream.
Also, ceramic tile now no longer needed to be fired twice. This process
was called "single fire" Because of this new technology, tile prices
went down. The old ways were gone. Some of the old manufacturers
refused to accept "single fire" and eventually had to close their doors.
Many tile setters, now able
to purchase tile from independent distributors, left the "old line" tile
contracting companies and started up on their own. Allen also hooked
up with Royal Tile in Fort Worth, Texas. Allen's days of importing
tile from England were over.
Ceramic tile was now more
available and more affordable.
Allen, in not too good of
health, sold Allen Clay Tile in 1957 to J.J. Langlois, a former sales manager
for Remington Rand in both Bridgeport, CT and Cleveland, OH, and since
1956 a sales manager for P.R. Mallory in Indianapolis.
J.J. Langlois proceeded to
build the company. The Morton Ceramic Tile Co located in Morton,
Illinois line was taken on. Other lines were also taken on -- Shower
Doors - Mirrors - Feature Strips - Tools - Marble Sills -- Medicine Cabinets
-- Cultured Marble Vanity Tops -- Vermont Slate -- Mosaic Floor Tile from
the Far East -- Chrome Fixtures -- Clip on China Accessories.
In October of 1959, after
graduation from college and after two years of service in the US Army Transportation
Corps yours truly went into the business with his father.
By 1964, Allen Clay Tile
was renting space to store inventory both in a garage in the alley behind
Hamilton Avenue, in a shop previously occupied by a plumbing company on
South Keystone Avenue, and in a small separate room in the Odd Fellows
building facing Hamilton Avenue. There we stored shower doors and
marble sills - White Italian, Tennessee Pink, Indiana Limestone, and Estramos.
These were the days of aluminum windows. For a while the sills were
cut outdoors on the adjacent tree lawn with a Felker tub saw head set on
top of a wooden stand. This operation often took two to three people.
One to push the marble into the saw and one to hold the ends of the sill.
This saw head we still have and use for tile cutting.
In May of 1964, Allen clay
Tile moved next door to 2112 East Washington Street, a 5000 S/F one story
block building built in 1953 formerly occupied by Cooper Tire and for a
short while by a Porsche automobile dealer. We moved in while the
Porsche dealer, who had been evicted, was moving out. It was quite
a mess! Now everything was under one roof.
There we stayed until October
of 1990 moving to our present location in the Northwest section of Indianapolis
next to the Park 100 area.
J.J. Langlois stayed active
in the business until the middle 80's when he semi- retired. He passed
away in 1992.
At the time we moved in 1990,
our neighborhood had gone from an old relatively safe inner-city neighborhood
to a bad part of town. The tavern next door had gone from a quite
neighborhood tavern to a "dive" frequented by questionable characters.
Our show room and offices were not air conditioned. We froze in the
winter and burnt up in the summer. The roof always leaked and wasn't
getting any better. We finally had to have the front windows boarded
up. They leaked and were frequently getting broken. One night
a pool cue, most likely from the tavern next door, wound up pointing through
the front door glass. We found it necessary to install a burglar
alarm. We again had to lease space for inventory. This time
in a grocery warehouse around the corner on Koewba Lane. It was time
to move. Among other things, we had simply outgrown the building
and the business needed to move to the suburbs.
At the time of our move,
we had just begun to import tile from Italy. Large unit wall and
floor tiles were in. Large unit glazed floor tiles could now be successfully
installed over wood sub floors with the advent of latex modified thin sets.
The 4 1/4 wall tile hey day was over. American manufacturers both
deficient in technology and harassed by the likes of OSHA had seen better
days.
In Italy there are approximately
600 tile factories, and in Spain there are approximately 400 tile factories
not to mention numerous factories in Germany, England and France.
I doubt if there are more than 10 tile plants in the USA. Italy leads
the world in manufacturing technology.
In 1991, a third generation
Langlois, Thomas K., came to work at Allen Clay tile after graduation from
Huntington College in Huntington, IN.
Allen Clay Tile has seen
two employees retire after many years of service. Four people on
its current payroll have a combined total of 86 years of employment.
At the start of the new century,
Allen Clay Tile hopes to continue on as it has for the last 45 years.
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