AMF-Harley in York, by the numbers

| | Comments (0)

Blaw-Knox.jpg
Blaw-Knox Special Ordnance Division employees mug for the camera in 1944 in a rally to raise morale - and production - during World War II. The Navy sold the plant to American Machine and Foundry in 1963. Today, Harley-Davidson occupies the plant. 'Hog' label linked to Harley for 80-something years and 'Harley's Journey a Good Ride'.

AMF - the forerunner of Harley-Davidson in York - is back in the news.

The Brunswick Corp. bowling pin manufacturing plant in Antigo Wis., is closing.

That leaves QubicaAMF in Lowville, N.Y., as the last manufacturer of bowling pins in the United States... .

AMF took over the former Naval Ordinance Plant in February 1964. AMF was familiar with York County. Some sources place its origin in Hanover, and an AMF plant operated in Glen Rock for years.

So, here are some facts about the AMF-Harley plant, by the numbers, according to a 1964 AMF brochure on file at the York County Heritage Trust:

No. of employees transfered to York with arrival of AMF: 1,000.
No. of acres on AMF's new site: 232.
No. of structures on site: 40.
No. of square feet under roof: 645,000.
Length of tunnel that is part of Proof Range: 300 feet.
Caliber of guns that use Proof Range: 40 mm.
Original construction date of plant by York Safe and Lock: 1941.
Blaw-Knox took over plant management: 1944.
Navy takes over plant: 1946.
Peak employment, WWII: 3,650
Average employment under Navy ownership: 1,200

Leave a comment


Type the characters you see in the picture above.

From our history blogs




Civil War Echoes looks back 150 years to the War Between the States, with a particular focus on the southcentral Pennsylvania home front and its men in uniform. Read More



Follow me on Twitter

Powered by Movable Type 4.25

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Jim McClure published on January 19, 2008 5:24 AM.

York's mayor: 'We're going to clean up this site ... ' was the previous entry in this blog.

Classes offer rare op to learn Pennsylvania Dutch is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.