WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC (1886)

(Redirected from Westinghouse Electric Corporation)

The 'Westinghouse Electric Corporation' was an organization founded by George Westinghouse in 1886 as Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company. The company purchased CBS in 1995 and was renamed 'CBS Corporation' in 1997.
George Westinghouse had previously founded the Westinghouse Air Brake Company. Westinghouse Electric received the rights for the first patent for alternating-current transmission from Nikola Tesla and unveiled the technology for lighting in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. The company pioneered long-distance power transmission and high-voltage transmission. In addition to George Westinghouse, engineers working for the company include William Stanley, Nikola Tesla and Oliver Schallenberger. It was historically the rival to General Electric.

Contents
Timeline of company evolution
See also
External links

Timeline of company evolution



1889 - renames itself the ''Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company''

1890s


1891 - build world's first commercial AC system (Ames Hydroelectric Generating Plant)


1893 - supplies electric lights and power for Chicago World Fair


1895 - installs hydropower AC generators at Niagara Falls which supplied power to Buffalo, NY


1899 - founds British Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company

1900s


1901 - acquires Bryant Electric Company of Bridgeport, Connecticut, which continues operation as a subsidiary


1909 - ousts George Westinghouse as chairman during bankruptcy reorganization

1910s


1914 - acquires Copeman Electric Stove Company in Flint, Michigan from Lloyd Groff Copeman, moves it to Mansfield, Ohio and enters the home appliance market (sold in 1974 to White Consolidated Industries)


1915 - New England Westinghouse Company opens for business. First product: Mosin-Nagant rifles for the Czar's army.


1916 - share of British Westinghouse purchased by a British holding company, which becomes Metropolitan-Vickers

1920s - enters the broadcasting industry, with stations like KDKA in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

1930s - enters the nuclear age with an industrial atom smasher.


1934 - opens its Home of Tomorrow in Mansfield, Ohio, to demonstrate Westinghouse home appliances


1935 - completes longest continuous electric steel annealing furnace in the world at Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, Michigan

1930s - funds invention of the magnetohydrodynamic generator
Close up of Westinghouse logo on historic kitchen stove at John & Mable Ringling Museum, Sarasota


1940s - enters aviation with airborne radar (defense electronics sold 1996), jet engine propulsion, and ground based airport lighting.


1945 - renames itself the ''Westinghouse Electric Corporation'', and makes first automatic elevator.

1950s - enters consumer finance with Westinghouse Credit Corporation

1960s - acquires ThermoKing, begins automated mass transit (sold 1988); adopts "You Can Be Sure If It's Westinghouse" as advertising slogan for home appliances

1970s - sells well-known home appliance division to White Consolidated Industries which becomes White-Westinghouse

1980s - acquires cable television operator TelePrompter (sold 1985) and robot maker Unimation; sells street light division to Cooper Lighting, elevator/escalator division to Schindler Group, and lamp division to Philips.


1988 - closes the East Pittsburgh plant, which had once been the primary Westinghouse manufacturing facility.


1989 - sells watthour meter division at Raleigh, North Carolina to Asea Brown Boveri Group.

1990s


1994 - sells electric power distribution and control business unit to Eaton Corporation for $1 billion


1995 - buys CBS for US$5.4 billion.


1996 - buys Infinity Broadcasting


1996 - sells Westinghouse Electronic Systems defense business to Northrop Grumman for $3 billion, becoming Northrop Grumman Electronic Systems.


1997 - sells most non-broadcast operations; renames itself CBS Corporation


1998 - sells remaining manufacturing asset, its nuclear energy business, to BNFL which sold it to Toshiba in 2006 which still operates it as Westinghouse Electric Company today.


1998 - CBS Corporation creates a new subsidiary called Westinghouse Electric Corporation to manage the Westinghouse brand.


1999 - sells itself to Viacom, Inc.

See also



Westinghouse Works, 1904

Group W, the broadcasting division of Westinghouse

External links



Timeline of Westinghouse historical events

"Who Killed Westinghouse?" - Contemporary ''Pittsburgh Post-Gazette'' article detailing Westinghouse's history and break-up

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves