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R. T. Vanderbilt
R. T. Vanderbilt Company opened its doors for business on 42nd Street in
New York City in 1916. It was started by a 31-year-old named Robert Thurlow
Vanderbilt who had $1,000 of his own, a $24,000 family loan, and a contract to
sell clay for a company in the South. |
Since the paper industry was a prime market for clay, it was here that Robert
Vanderbilt saw his Company begin to grow. His success led him to form R. T.
Vanderbilt Company's first subsidiary, Continental Clay Company (now Dixie
Clay Company) in South Carolina. However, while soft clay was geared to the
needs of the paper industry, Continental Clay and North American Clay
Company (of which Robert was a director) were also mining hard clays more
suitable to the rubber industry. This introduced Vanderbilt to the rubber
industry.
And so the Company has grown from year to year until today we sell more than
sixty categories of minerals and chemicals, made up of over 800 products, to
twelve different industries: rubber, plastics, petroleum, paint, paper,
pharmaceutical, agricultural, ceramics, adhesives, wire and cable, cosmetics,
and household products. The Company now has seven wholly-owned
subsidiaries operating chemical manufacturing plants in Connecticut and
Kentucky, and mining and minerals processing facilities in New York, North
Carolina, South Carolina, Nevada, Arizona, California and Kentucky. In addition
to our own minerals and chemicals, we distribute products of many
distinguished companies under continuing contracts dating back to the mid-
1920's. The Company employs over 620 men and women, selling throughout the
United States and in some 80 countries around the world.
We expect our growth to continue. As long as we produce quality minerals and
chemicals and render a useful service to our customers, there will always be a
market for the products of R. T. Vanderbilt Company
Web address: www.rtvanderbilt.com
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