By Anthony Alegero
Anthony (Tony) Alegero started
at James Millen Manufacturing in 1949 as an
assistant foreman in the production of
variable capacitors. Later he moved on to
become foreman of the coil winding and
distributed delay line department. Tony
provides a great deal of insight into the
working of the Millen operations during the
years when employment was at some of the
largest numbers in the companies history.
I was green out of eighteen months of
electronics school in the USN and looking for
a job. Born, schooled and still living in
Malden made Millen a good spot to start
jobhunting. I applied and was interviewed by
Phil Eyrick and hired to be asssistant foreman
of the Variable Capacitor department. working
under Ray Fittz. He was an ME Tufts grad who
had worked during the war at RCA in NJ.
Helluva nice guy to work for and a great
mentor. When I read of OSHA and EPA these days
I often think of working with cyanide to
remove silver plate tarnish, the girls (today
ladies) were busy all day scrubbing all the
ceramic parts of finished caps with of all
things carbon tetrachloride. Somewhere in the
early fifties someone became aware of what
CCL4 could do to your kidneys so we padlocked
the 55 gal drum spigots and only the
supervisors could dispense it. We also had
vent hoods built in our own sheet metal shop
for the girls to work under. These simply
discharged out the adjacent windows. Most of
our shaft couplings and terminal strips were
manufactured in this same department.
Phil Eyrick was production manager over the
whole plant during my whole stay. After a
couple of years they moved Howard Stone from
coil winding foreman to final assembly and I
took over the coil winding and distributed
delay line winding depts. There I had anywhere
from 10-12 girls winding rf chokes, IF xfmrs,
large xmitter tank coils and coil forms
(ceramic and plastic). In an adjacent elevated
gallery we had the distributed delay winding
machine run by one woman. This consisted of
roughly 3/8 saran tubing in up to 100 foot
lengths which was continuously wound with from
about #36 to #40 formex insulated wire. This
in turn was continuously wrapped with a very
thin teflon tape which in turn was covered
with a copper braid shield. It was unique
because the long lengths were then chopped off
at so many microseconds delay per foot
depending on the customers need. My memory
sugggests this process was developed by GE and
licensed to Millen but I may be wrong.
In the early fifties Bob Pearson, ME Iowa
State, came aboard and was originally Ray
Fittz's right hand man. He, Dick Evans and I
became sort of a triumvirate on and off the
job as we were all in our marrying days and
were part of each others wedding parties. Bob
was a real nautical man and collectively owned
about four boats. We on occasion would all
head for the boat after work, including
another name that just occurred to me, George
Pike. George was the company purchasing agent
and did all the company buying. We thought
nothing of heading from Lynn MA to Marblehead
at 6 pm and returning by 12. Eventually both
Bob Pierson and Ray Fittz left to go to Towle
Silversmiths as ME's.
All through my days Gene Williams was Millen
Sales Manager. And of course, as in so many
companys the real force behind the company was
"Miss" Bearse.
CRT shields was a very profitable business at
the time, as a considerable amount of work on
radar development was going on. These were
made of a high permeability alloy called
Mumetal. If the design required spinning (a
shaping process) to achieve a certain shape or
size this was done by a couple of companies in
the Malden, Everett, MA area. They were then
painted, labelled, etc. The metal also
required annealing after any drilling,
punching, etc. This also represented a good
source of business for several Greater Boston
heat treating firms. The sizes we made kept
growing as available CRT sizes increased. Mu
metal was tough to work with as it was a
pretty hard metal that came in about 4X12 foot
sheets and was pretty thin. It could and did
inflict some pretty rough cuts on workers.
According to other article on the JMS website
it sounds as though the business was bought by
one of the original spinning companies.
The Paint department was run by Frank Weaver.
He was able to spray paint almost anything to
some pretty tight specs, including a few
government jobs of my own. A lot of the delay
line assemblies were hermetically canned and
thus were painted, all CRT shields were
painted as well as the classic black wrinkle
that you have all seen as the classic Millen
finish.
The Sheet Metal department was run by I
believe Bob Carlson. They made all chassis,
housings, CRT shields, cases for delay line
cans, etc. A well run group with capable
people.
Dick Evans was responsible for the Machine
Shop, at least part of my time of employment.
Can't think of any of the others. There was
one, to me at the time, elderly gentleman
whose name escapes me who was the super
machinist, whose job was to make the molds for
injection molding. The Injection Molding
department was run, I think, by Frank Weaver
when he wasn't spraypainting. These were jobs
that weren't full time. All those polystyrene
coil forms that were turned out by the
thousands for GDO coils were made on a pretty
good sized injection mold press. Another
interesting note on the subject of plastics,
the poly strips that many tank coils were
mounted on were cut by bandsaw from large
sheets. In order to get rid of the saw marks
on the edges after manufacture we dipped the
whole coils in vapor degreasers with TCE which
took out the marks and gave them a polished
edge.
Jim Millen was in the plant most days. He was
a very quiet man and seemed a little aloof to
us peasants. He very commonly closed his door
after lunch and took a nap on the leather
couch in his office carefully guarded by
"Miss" Bearse. There weren't many who called
him "Jim". In later years, I often wondered
whether he wasn't actually a shy man. He would
often make his way around the departments
observing but saying nothing. You would hear
later from Phil Eyrick about his observations.
I would disagree, at least during my stay,
about no smoking. There were breaks where you
could go outside in the shipping area or out
on a deck outside the machine shop on the roof
for a "butt". Also, there were always a few
who would grab a smoke in the mens room where
the window was always wide open. Once in a
while Phil Eyrick would come in, and out the
window would go all the butts. Speaking of
"out the window", the back of the factory
overhung the Malden Brook. All the plants back
windows were over the brook. When there were
too many rejects they were known to have
landed in the brook. Thank God for no EPA in
those days.
Enough for now.
Tony Alegero
January 2004
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