LOS ANGELES, Feb. 17,
2012/PRNewswire/ -- Vulcan Materials Company, West
Region, a company whose predecessor companies have operated
in the Los Angelesarea since the turn of the
20th century, this week donated its archive to the
Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens
in San Marino, CA.Valued at over
$34,000, photographs depicting the
company's role in infrastructure development and the
construction of area landmarks including Los
Angeles' City Hall, Union Station, Hollywood
Bowl, Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, and
Pasadena's iconic Colorado Street Bridge
are the focal point.
(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20090710/CL44887LOGO
)
Daniel Lewis, the Huntington's Chief
Curator of Manuscripts, explains that the archive "is
a great fit with our other history of civil engineering
collections." Images of the construction of
California's first freeway, the Arroyo
Seco Parkway, are among those that depict infrastructure
development in the region. "Roads have been so
important to Southern Californiafor so long,
so anything related to paving work really typifies the
processes that have helped to grow Southern
California," explains Lewis.
Beginning in the early 1920s, and for several decades
thereafter, the company regularly retained professional
photographers to document conditions at its plants,
quarries, and projects, as well as many special events.
Well-known Los Angelesphotographers
Dick Whittington, who photographed almost
every major business and organization in Los
Angelesbetween the 1920s and the mid-1980s; and
Otto Rothschild, who served as the official
performing arts photographer for the Los
Angeles Music Center, Hollywood Bowl, and L.A.
Philharmonic are among those who worked for the
company. "The archive is extremely important as
a resource for the development of Southern
California," notes Jeff Weber, the
owner of Weber Rare Books, and the appraiser of
Vulcan's collection.
Jock Scott, former vice president of engineering, began
collecting material for the Archive in 1979. "I
was always interested in old machines, buildings and
bridges, which is typical of a lot of engineers," he
says. "When I joined the company, there were a
lot of senior employees and retirees whose careers spanned
many decades, and who had a huge array of first-hand
knowledge of the company from the 1930s to the 1970s.
Many of them collected or knew people who collected
material that went back to the turn of the
century." Scott combined his collection with
that of Joanna Pierce, the retired director of
corporate communications who spent years gathering
materials ranging from photographs to correspondence.
Scott continues to collect historical materials from older
employees, retirees, and surviving family members of
deceased employees.
Douglas Sprague, manager of reclamation, and
long-time supporter of the Archive took the lead in
negotiating the transfer of the cataloged items to the
Huntington. "My focus has always been
'Let's keep this together and find a home for it,
where it will be protected and where Vulcan and future
researchers and scholars will have access.'"
ABOUT VULCAN: The West Region was created in January
2012and it consists of the facilities and other
locations that were part of Vulcan's former Western
Division. The West Region operates aggregates,
asphalt mix, asphalt coating, and ready-mixed concrete
production facilities in Californiaand
Arizona. In addition, we accept inert fill
materials at several locations.
We strive to provide the highest level of quality and
service in the markets we supply. Many of the West Region
operations have long histories stretching back to early
20th century predecessor companies including the CalMat
Co., Consolidated Rock Products, Industrial Asphalt and
California Portland Cement. Today, the West Region
maintains over one billion tons of aggregates reserves in
several of the highest growth markets in the nation. With
these reserves, we are committed to remaining the supplier
of choice in the markets we serve.
In addition, the employees of our West Region are firmly
committed to managing our property in an environmentally
responsible manner for the benefit of the communities
neighboring our facilities. We are proud to participate in
the reclamation of post-mined land with such programs as
native habitat restoration, water conservation and
agricultural, commercial, residential and industrial
development.
ABOUT THE HUNTINGTON: The Huntington Library, Art
Collections, and Botanical Gardens is a collections-based
research and educational institution serving scholars and
the general public.www.huntington.org.
SOURCE Vulcan Materials Company
CONTACT: Atisthan Roach, Community and Media Relations,
Vulcan Materials Company, West Region, +1-909-213-7292,
roacha@vmcmail.com