Pittway Corporation was a diversified holding company best known as a manufacturer and distributor of professional and consumer[5] fire and burglar alarms.
In 1962, Neison Harris became president, after having worked as an executive at Gillette, at a time when the company was transitioning from a trolley operating company to a diversified concern running multiple businesses.[1] Pittway completed its divestment out transportation in 1964 through sale of trolley operations to the Port Authority of Allegheny County, receiving more than US$16 million for the operations.[2][nt 1] The demise of the trolley operations could likely be attributed to the rise in personal car purchases.[2]
Neison Harris' brother, Irving B. Harris, also played a significant part in the company.[2]Leo Guthart was previously the company's vice-chairman.[6]
Among the company's acquisitions in the 1960s were Barr-Stalfort Co., an aerosol cans filler company, Alarm Device Manufacturing Co., and Industrial Publishing Co.[2]
It relocated its headquarters to Chicago in 1967.[7][when?] In 1967, the company was renamed to Pittway Corporation.[8][9] Later, Pittway became best known as a manufacturer and distributor of the First Alert brand of home smoke alarms, professional fire and burglar alarms, and other security systems, and as a real estate firm.[8] It also owned the fire alarm companies Fire-Lite and Notifier.
By 1968[update], the company's vice-chairman was C. D. Palmer, who was also the senior executive based in the company's former home town of Pittsburgh.[2]
In the 1970s, specifically in 1977[update], Pittway and General Electric were the dominant consumer smoke alarm manufacturers.[4] At that time, Pittway units were distributed by Sears.[4] In 1978, the Consumer Product Safety Commission assessed a US$100,000 fine against Pittway for selling smoke detectors which were themselves fire hazards.[10]
Proposed in December 1999 and completed in February 2000, Honeywell acquired Pittway for US$2.2 billion as a play to expand the breadth of their business in its home and building control unit.[1][3][11]
Notes
^The phrase used in the source is "...Port Authority Transit took over its people-carrying business in a condemnation proceeding...." That would seem to imply that the divestment was involuntary, but need better citation to get a clearer picture.
References
^ abcMowatt, Raoul V. (September 9, 2001). "Neison Harris, 86". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved February 10, 2012.
^ abcdefghijkMarkowitz, Jack (May 1, 1968). "New Track At Pittway". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 33. Retrieved 2012-02-10 – via Google News.
^ abcMetz, Robert (December 3, 1977). "More smoke than fire in home alarm market?". Business. The Sun-Telegram. Gannett. New York Times News Service. p. 8–7. Retrieved 2018-04-30 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Smoke detector may be smoke maker". The Sun. California: Gannett. Associated Press. November 7, 1978. p. 1. Retrieved 2018-04-30 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Pittway Corporation". Bloomberg. Snapshot > Company Overview. Archived from the original on January 18, 2013. Retrieved February 10, 2012.