A talk given by Herb Pearce, A. C. Gilbert's former plant superintendent, at the Eli Whitney Museum in the Spring of 1992.
A. C. Gilbert built the largest toy company in the world, and he did it for the satisfaction of competition and to accomplish his goal more than he did it for money.
I want to start with my original relationship with A. C. Gilbert--how it started, how it progressed, and what effect it had on me. I have to admit that the original contact was not on a very high level. I was in the Spring Glen Grammar School and had a paper route that included A. C. Gilbert and his brother F. W., and there weren't too many houses in the Ridge Road area at that time. A. C. had an English country home there. Originally, he had about 25-30 acres and he had a golf course, five or six holes. So, in addition to delivering papers, I used to caddy for him in the evening when he came back from the factory.
In 1935, after I graduated from commercial high school, I applied for a job at the A. C. Gilbert Company and gave F. W. Gilbert and A. C. as a reference: F. W., who was Charlton's father (Charlton is A. C. Gilbert's nephew and the son of F. W. Gilbert. He was director of personnel at the A. C. Gilbert Co. in the 1940s.) and A. Co's brother, was the vice-president and general manager, and he instructed the personnel department to hire me, although he didn't know me too well.
My first job there was building models for displays in the stores during the Christmas holiday and that was the bascule bridge and things like that. The job paid 25 cents an hour and if you worked 40 hours, that's $10 a week. Now remember the country was still in a recession and gas was 10 cents a gallon, bread was 10 cents a loaf and you could find a place to get an 18 ounce schooner of beer for 10 cents. My kids would describe those days as "the olden days." Well, it was the olden days, but it was the golden days, too, because everything wasn't that bad.
During my time at the plant, after model making, I was assigned various jobs such as timekeeper, inspector, expediter, and production planner, always under the watchful eye of F. W., who was my mentor.
(Text reprinted from The S Gaugian 30:4 (July/August 1992), 38-40.)