Their first venture together was in 1912, on a pump plant in nearby Grand View for $14,000; they lost money but gained experience. MK earned some revenue in 1914, when they constructed the Three Mile Falls Diversion Dam, south of Umatilla, Oregon.[13] For several years, the firm built irrigation canals, logging roads, and railways; they incorporated in 1923, the year gross revenues topped $1 million. MK reached a significant milestone with its joint venture in the construction of Hoover Dam(1932–35).[14]
World War II
During World War II, MK built airfields, storage depots, and bases throughout the Pacific, and built ships along the West Coast. Japanese forces captured 1,200 workers, including many MK employees, stationed on Midway and Wake Islands in late 1941.[15][16] After the war, MK expanded into a variety of international construction fields.
Post-war projects
MK won contracts for many domestic and foreign Cold War projects. It built the locks on the St. Lawrence Seaway, the Distant Early Warning Line system, also known as the DEW Line or Early Warning Line, Minuteman missile silos, NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, and over 100 major dams. In 1946, King Mohammad Zahir Shah and the Kabul government tasked Morrison-Knudsen with a large array of construction tasks in Afghanistan, including irrigation and a hydroelectric dam in the Helmand Province area.[17]
Morrison was featured on the cover of Time magazine on May 3, 1954, and the article claimed Morrison was "the man who has done more than anyone else to change the face of the earth."[18]
In the late 1950s, MK constructed the railroad causeway that spanned across the Great Salt Lake in Utah. The Lucin Cutoff causeway allowed trains to operate at full operating speeds instead of the slower speeds required to safely travel over the deteriorating wooden trestle crossing parallel to it. The causeway is estimated to have used 65 million tons of rock and gravel.[19][20]
From 1962 to 1972, MK managed a joint venture to serve the U.S. military as civilian contractors for infrastructure in the Vietnam War;[25] in 1971, they constructed 384 of the infamous "tiger cage" cells of Côn Sơn Prison.[26][27]The group was called RMK-BRJ and included Raymond International, Brown & Root, and JA Jones Construction Company.[15]
Morrison–Knudsen spun-off MK Rail in 1993; it became a publicly traded company in 1994.[32] After Morrison–Knudsen's bankruptcy in 1996 the company renamed itself MotivePower.[33] The company merged with Westinghouse Air Brake Company in 1999 to form Wabtec.[34] MotivePower is now a wholly owned subsidiary of Wabtec.[28]
By 1995, Morrison–Knudsen was facing bankruptcy, with more than 60% of the company's previous-year net loss of $350 million occurring in the MK Transit division.[40] A special purpose company, named Amerail (American Passenger Rail Car Company), was formed so that Morrison–Knudsen could divest itself of this loss-making division, while also allowing the remaining MK Transit contracts to be completed. The new company was funded by Morrison–Knudsen's creditors, led by the Fidelity and Deposit Company in Baltimore, and was headquartered in Chicago.[41][42]
The Pittsburg site was transferred to Adtranz in December 1995, following completion of the BART C2 cars. After this transfer, the site was used for overhaul of the older BART A and B cars.[43][44] Morrison–Knudsen had also bid on this contract, but lost out to AEG Transportation Systems (who were then acquired by Daimler-Benz, becoming part of Adtranz shortly after).[45] The Hornell site was bought by GEC-Alsthom in July 1997, following unsuccessful attempts at a joint venture to bid on new contracts.[46][47] The final site in Chicago closed in mid-1998, when work on contracts for Metra was completed.[47]
Financial difficulty
In 1991, MK purchased a 49% shareholding in New Zealand construction contractor McConnell Dowell.[48]
By the 1990s, Morrison–Knudsen had been led into some risky non-core areas by Boise native William Agee, who became CEO in 1988 and was ousted by the board of directors in February 1995. MK had announced a loss of $310 million for fiscal year 1994, and a leak of an intended Agee resignation drew broad media attention which resulted in Agee resigning earlier than originally planned.[49][50] The company had been in financial difficulty for several years,[51] and declared bankruptcy that same year.[49][52][53][54] It was purchased by Washington Group in 1996 for $380 million.[55][56][57]
Additional growth
For several years after the 1996 merger, the company continued as Morrison–Knudsen. Growth by acquisition brought it into the top tier (by size) of American construction firms.
In 1999, MK acquired the government-services operations of Westinghouse Electric Company,[58] becoming a science and technology services leader.[59]
The company expanded its market leadership in 2000 by acquiring Raytheon Engineers & Constructors,[60] which owned engineering giant Rust International of Birmingham, Alabama,[61] to produce one of the largest companies in the industry.
End
Following the acquisition, the MK's corporate name changed to Washington Group International in July 2000.[60] Issues with the Raytheon acquisition[62] caused WGI to declare bankruptcy in 2001[63] – virtually eliminating all shareholder value, but later successfully exited it.[64]
WGI was acquired by rival URS Corporation of San Francisco in 2007,[65] which was acquired by AECOM of Los Angelesin 2014.[66] With a greatly diminished presence in Idaho, the last positions in Boise were eliminated in 2015.[8]
^Herman, Arthur. Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II, pp. 37, 51–5, 169–74, Random House, New York, NY, 2012. ISBN978-1-4000-6964-4.
^International Directory of Company Histories. Vol. 28. St. James Press. 1999. page 287
^ abInternational Directory of Company Histories. page 288.
^Herman, Arthur. Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II, pp. 37, 51–2, 55, 169–74, Random House, New York, NY, 2012. ISBN978-1-4000-6964-4.
^Rakove, Robert. Developing Afghanistan since 1950. Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 2024-09-20.
^Tregaskis, Richard (1975). Southeast Asia: Building the Bases; the History of Construction in Southeast Asia. Washington, DC: Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 37. OCLC952642951.
^After the Signing of the Paris Agreements: Documents on South Vietnam's Political Prisoners. Cambridge, MA: NARMIC/VRC. 1973. p. 10.
^Brown, Holmes, and Don Luce (1973). Hostages of War: Saigon's Political Prisoners. Washington, D.C.: Indochina Mobile Education Project. p. 43.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)