8522e122931c76a02817060b8fe0d550.ppt
- Количество слайдов: 125
American Optical History Click mouse for each slide Copyright 2008 - the Optical Heritage Museum
1826 • William Beecher arrives in Southbridge and opens a Jewelry and Watch Shop on Main St. ; below photo is of Beecher trunk (Optical Heritage Museum collection)
1833 • AO’s “Birth” – Beecher and 3 apprentices make silver eyeglass frames in rooms above Jewelry Shop
1839 • Beecher moves to 2 Story building on corner of Chestnut and Main St. • Referred to as “Old Spec Shop” • Later became Hyde Tools building when AO moved to Mechanic St.
1843 • First steel Spectacles made in America were produced by machinery invented by Beecher
1848 • First gold frames made in America
1850 • Gold frames (14 K-18 K) sell for $7. 50/pair
1853 • Frame sales nationwide total 14, 919 pair
1853 • Old Spec Shop switches from Cohasse Brook power to steam power
1864 • 17 year old George Wells hired by Beecher • George & Brother, Hiram, hired by company now called R. H. Cole & Co. , both are fired short time later • George W. Wells (age 17) arrives in Southbridge with $100 in his pocket
1865 • George Wells rehired by R. H. Cole Daniel Wells Schreck, Direct descendant of George W. Wells (Portrait) in Southhbridge (2004)
1869 – Feb 26 th • American Optical Company formed • Gross business of $50, 000 • R. H. Cole offers 22 year old G. W. Wells partnership in business
1871 • First 3 story Wooden Structure on AO Main Plant site; drawing below shows 1872 view • Cost to build = $35, 000 • 20, 700 square feet
1872 • G. W. Wells becomes General Supervisor of new plant
1874 • AO introduces first Rimless Spectacles
1883 • AO plans to make its own spectacle lenses in Southbridge
1884 • First AO spherical lenses made • Production started when Import tarriffs were imposed. • Fireworks celebration in Southbridge on November 15, 1884.
1880 s
1886 • AO sells 1, 304, 280 pairs of Spectacles • George Wells invention for drawing eyewire for spectacle frames
1888 AO Workers
1891 • George W. Wells becomes President of AO
1892 Map of AO Southbridge MA complex
1893 • AO adopts Dioptric system of lens power which is now in use throughout the world • AO begins to manufacture Toric lenses • Torics used to correct for Astigmatism
AO Main Plant ~1899 before clock tower
1898 • U. S. Bureau of Standard accepts AO’s system of lens power
1901 AO Main Plant Clock Tower
1905 • AO London office opens • Begins its International operations
1907 • AO begins making Automobile goggles • AO had 2000 employees with a payroll of $1, 000
1909 • J. Cheney Wells founds the AO Research laboratory
1910 • • New “Lensdale Building” built Made entirely of Cement Site of Lens Manufacturing until 2005 AO Kryptok Bifocals first Manufactured
1910 -AO Power Plant Built
1913 • Crookes glass • Later called Calobar (UV and IR Protection)
1916 • Dr. Edgar Tillyer hired by AO, Dr. Estelle Glancy 1 year later
1916 - AO Truepower Standards Calibrated at Bureau of Standards
1917 • Dr. Tillyer files first Patent • Use of common curves for selected powers • Allowed practical manufacturing of mass produced lenses • Cole’s sell final 127 shares of company stock to Wells family for $1. 25 Million
1917 • AO Designs WWI mobile optical units • Self contained eyeglass facilities for the War • 2, 500, 000 lenses furnished to Government for War effort
Early AO Logo- AOC
1919
1919 -1921 • First AO LENSOMETER introduced in 1921, revolutionizing the industry • Measures spectacles lens power
1923 • AO Establishes 114 National Branches • Industrial Eye Protection Department established • Wise Owl Eye Safety Program established
1924 • Dr. Estelle Glancy • Progressive Lens Patent #1, 518, 405
1925 • AO acquires De Zeng Instrument of America • Expand to Ear, Nose and Throat products
1925 Safety Glasses Ad
1925 • Tillyer Lens introduced, revolutionizes spectacle lens industry “Americanization class” at AO
1926 • Tillyer patents ophthalmic lens series where off-axis power & astigmatism errors were controlled
~1927 • AO commissions artist Norman Rockwell to paint 6 paintings for Tillyer Lens Advertising
1930 • High Temple Fulvue frame introduced
1931 • Fulvue fused ¾ segment bifocals introduced
1933 - AO celebrates 100 th Anniversary
1935 • AO acquires Spencer Lens • Expands into precision optics
1936 • Joel Cheney Wells retires after 43 years at age 62 • He began work as office boy • George B. Wells elected President of AO • Son of Albert Wells • Grandson of George W. Wells
1936 - 1939 • In spite of the Depression • Employees increased from 5, 000 to 7, 000! • Sales increased from $16 million to $19 million!
1938 • Dr. Tillyer credited with the Additive Power Phoroptor
1938 • AO Bureau of Visual Science was founded
1939 • AO Legal and Patent Department established
1940 • AO first introduces plastic safety lenses made from methyl methacrylate
1941 • AO Putnam Connecticut Safety Product Facility Opens • Labor shortage in Southbridge causes expansion
1942 • AO Opens Brattleboro, Vermont facility • Began to produce 18. 5 Million pairs of lenses for Armed Services
1943 • By 1943, facility has 380 workers and produces 2 Million Safety and Aviator lenses • AO provided 14 Million prescription eyeglassed to Armed Forces & still filled civilian orders WWII Prism compenstated glass goggles (Dr. Estelle Glancy)
1944 • AO has 45% of sales in Government contracts for War effort • Sales doubled since 1934
1945 • AO Sight Screeners introduced to check vision • Industrial vision protection plan begun – The American Plan
1945 • AO Monoplex Eye opens in Southbridge • Produces life-like hand painted artificial eyes
1946 • AO begins research on Contact Lenses • First Manufacture in 1947
1947 • AO and Polaroid produce first successful curved polarized lens
1947 • Metal spectacle goggles, new 10 K & 14 K gold alloys for frames • Metal Frame Plant in Southbridge was completed
1948 • AO forms Plastics division • Lenticular E one-piece cataract lens introduced • Microfilm reader, Calobar uniform density lens
1950 • AO Products diversify • Camera lenses, projectors, binoculars, molded items for automobiles
1952 • AO begins to manufacture Glass Executive bifocals • Process and location stays the same until 2005 closing!!!
1953 • Quarter Century Club (25 years with company) has a record attendance of 755!
1953 • Glass Microscopic Lenses for Low Vision introduced
1954 • • • AO Student Microscopes introduced AO / CIA work together on Fiber Optics Will Hicks joins AO AO becomes publicly owned 9000 investors buy stock in AO Advantages of Minus Toric surfaces for finished lens series proposed
1954 Photo – AO Main Plant
August 19, 1955 • Flood devastates area, AO considers closing
1955 • Flood almost closes Southbridge facility • 15 feet of water where Hotel lobby is today • High water mark shown at second floor window (top mark)
1955 • Todd – AO’ s first production • Wide screen projection, improved Sound • Oklahoma opens in October 1955 in NYC
1955 • Diamond Studded Elsa Schiaparelli designer frame commissioned
1955 • AO sales reach $75 million
1955 • AO Electronic Lensometer patented and manufactured • Displays in Chicago
1956 • First cast finished single vision 56 mm lens • Originally called Plasticor • Later to be renamed AOLITE
1957 • AO expands research in Fiber Optics, Wide Screen television, military applications
1958 • AOLITE CR-39 Aspheric Cataract Lens Introduced • New products include Rx master phoroptor & high lift ophthalmic chair
1959 • Ultra high speed camera patent & intravenous measurement device of oxygen in human blood • Fiber Optics business developed • R&D develops Sidewinder Missile for the Military
1960 • Polarstar (polarizing) & Flouristar Microscopes introduced for cancer research • Justice Dept. ruling results in AO divesting from Rx laboratories • Ophthalmic Division maintains sales, growing acceptance of Tillyer Exec & AOLITE Aspheric cataract
1961 • Optical lasers developed for the Air Force • Laser Inc. formed to R&D optics, electronics, lasers • AO Cardiometer & DC Defribrillator
1961 • Davis, Fernald & Rayner design Masterpiece FSV glass series corrected for off-axis performance errors
1961 – Dec 7 • Dr. Edgar Tillyer turns 80 (at Left) • Dr. Estelle Glancy and John Davis (bowtie) at his side
1962 • AOLITE plastic lens market rapidly expands • Record number of new frame styles • AOLITE 62 mm Finished Single Vision lenses introduced
1963 • Fiber Optics • Solar powered laser transmitter completed for the Air Force
1964 • Noel Roscrow (founder of SOLA) visits the AOLITE CR-39 manufacturing plant operation in Southbridge, Mass. • AOLUX laser glass reached market, new endoscope introduced
1965 • Medical Division develops implantable Pacemaker • Tillyer Masterpiece lens, first new SV lens in 30 years • AOLITE Executive Bifocal introduced
AO Southbridge ~1965
1967 • Warner-Lambert buys American Optical (becomes publicly owned)
1975 • AO Tumble Abrasion Test developed by John Young
1973 • AOLITE 66 mm FSV lens series introduced
1976 • Aspheric lens design patent – John Davis
1978 • AO’s first Progressive lens introduced (Ultravue / AO 7 in Europe) – Dr. John Winthrop
1979 • Glass manufacturing plant closed at Southbridge facility (6 Million Dollars in Platinum sold off)
1980 • Fulvue Cataract lens patent – Donald B. Whitney • Fulvue Cataract lens introduced • AOLITE 77 mm FSV product line introduced
1981 • Unique polycarbonate decentered plano safety lens introduced called the S 1000. • Prism correction for lens faceform angle
1980 • First Abrasion resistant hard coating introduced Permalite
1982 • Photolite, the first plastic photochromic lens is introduced
1982 • Closed the Frederick, Maryland Frame Plant (out of Frame making business) • Warner-Lambert sells American Optical to M&R (Mo Cunniffe & Rudy Wood)
1983 • AO Museum opens in Southbridge (John Young, Curator) • AO Brattleboro plant closes, Safety Lens Manufacturing moves to relocate to Southbridge • AO celebrates 150 th Anniversary; Optical Heritage Museum founded
1985 • AO Truvision Progressive Lens patent – Dr. John Winthrop • Fused Glass Bifocal operation closes in Southbridge
1984 • AO produce Polycarbonate Plano and Rx lenses for the Apache Helicopter pilots • Steep curve (22 Diopters!) • RX’s – individual plus torics individualized for pilots
1989 • AO OMNI Progressive Lens Bi-Polar patent – Dr. John Winthrop
1990 • Technica Progressive Lens introduced (designed for computer use) • Polycarbonate OMNI product released • Safety Division sold to Cabot Corporation
1992 • AO Pro 15 Progressive Lens released • ASPHERLITE (Aspheric SFSV) product released • Manufacturing completed its move to Tijuana (except for Glass Executives)
1993 • Tijuana (AO Lens Mex) plant flood • Aspheric Single Vision “Inside-Out” patent issued – Dr. John Winthrop / R. B. Whitney
1994 • AO Pro 16 Polycarbonate product introduced • Fire in Glass Progressive Plant at the AO Lens Mex Tijuana facility
1995 • AO Force 55 Progressive Lens introduced in 1. 549 Nd Index material
1996 • Introduce AO 55 SFSV 1. 549 Index (Nd) Aspheric Single Vision design • SOLA International Inc. purchases AO Ophthalmic Lens Division from AO Corporation (M&R) & renames it AO Lens Company • AO Lens Co. Corporate Headquarters relocates from Southbridge, Mass. To San Diego, CA. • Reunion of Todd-AO Researchers occurs / Visit Southbridge complex
1998 • AO Compact Progressive Lens introduced (Project Name = Short Corridor)
1999 • AO Compact Progressive Lens awarded “Best in Lens Design” at Optical Laboratory Association Convention
2000 • DOD Lease signed on March 31, 2000; Demolition of Main Plant begins in April for Hotel and Conference Center • AO & SOLA merge Sales & Marketing (East Coast Southbridge, West Coast Petaluma) • SOLA buys Oracle Lens for $17. 4 Million • AO b’Active General Purpose Lens released / For Active Lifestyles – Includes Polarized version
AO Main plant today – Now Southbridge Hotel and Conference Center
2001 • AO Southbridge Warehouse closed in June 2001 / Consolidate of AO and SOLA Distribution Centers
2002 • AO Reunion at Southbridge Hotel and Conference Center - ~500 attend
2005 • AO/SOLA/Carl Zeiss Ophthalmic merge to become Carl Zeiss Vision • AO Glass Executive Lens operation ceases after ~53 years
2006 - AO Compact Ultra First Introduced (Completing Dr. John Winthrop’s long series of AO Progressive Lens Designs) • • • Lens Date Introduced Ultravue 1974 Truvision® 1981 Truvision OMNI 1988 Truvision Technica® 1990 AO Pro® 15 1992 AO Pro® 16 1994 AO Force® 55 1996 AO Compact® 1998 AO b' Active™ 2000 AO Pro Easy™ 2002 AO Compact® Ultr 2006
Chronology of AO history provided by the Optical Heritage Museum • For more info, go to: • http: www. dickwhitney. net (click on AO history) • http: www. opticalheritagemuseum. org