Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Schering-Plough. SDI Technologies. Smarties Candy Company. Standard Aircraft Corporation.
Just for Feet – bankrupt in 1999, acquired by Footstar, final stores closed in 2004. MC Sports – filed for bankruptcy and closed in 2017. Modell's Sporting Goods – first store opened in 1889. On March 11, 2020, the company filed for bankruptcy, and announced it would close all 115 stores.
Joseph Horne Company. The Joseph Horne Company, often referred to simply as Joseph Horne's or Horne's, was an American department store chain based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The store was one of the oldest in the country being founded on February 22, 1849, but was often overlooked as it maintained only a regional presence. [1]
The NJBIA's annual survey showed businesses are still struggling with inflation and efforts to fill positions, but inflation hit them worse in 2022 NJ business owners shared their views on economy ...
The $1 billion tax cut to multinational corporations is often pitched as “pro-business” as though it were a universal truth. But when you look at the numbers, a whopping 99.6% of New Jersey ...
There are eight Fortune 500 companies headquartered in the Pittsburgh metropolitan area. [1] 120 PNC Financial Services (financial) 220 PPG Industries (industrial) 226 Howmet Aerospace (industrial) 245 Wesco International (industrial) 254 Viatris (pharmaceuticals) 310 U.S. Steel (industrial) 330 Alcoa (metals/mining)
It also had a metal decorating plant for coating and lithographing tin, terne, and black plate, and two electrolytic tin plate lines that produced tin plate at up to 1,000 feet per minute. Wheeling Steel was acquired by Pittsburgh Steel to form the Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corporation in December 1968. The merger added:
Was renamed Ford Aerospace and sold to Loral in 1990. Another part of the original Philco International moved to Pittsburgh in 1988. Philadelphia Savings Fund Society: Philadelphia: financial: failed: seized by the FDIC and sold to Mellon Financial: Reading Company: Philadelphia: railroad: failed: became SEPTA.