Thomas Stauble and Andrew Tubby conducting destructive range test at Hercules Port Ewen plant
- 1960
General view of employees Thomas Stauble (left, foreground) and Andrew Tubby (right, foreground) using assorted machinery to test the destructive range and effectiveness of detonators and initiators manufactured at the Hercules Powder Company plant located in Port Ewen, New York. Per notations on the verso of the photograph, Tubby is using a Beckman (Berkeley) Time Interval Meter to apply the correct firing load to a test device located behind the wall, while Stauble photographs the effects of the detonation. The three employees visible in the background are identified as follows (left to right): Henry Meigel; James Ellsworth, Jr.; and Edwin Smedes.
Formed in 1912 as part of an anti-trust settlement with DuPont, the Hercules Powder Company (later Hercules Inc.) specialized in the manufacture of explosives and smokeless powders. The company's Port Ewen plant produced a range of special detonators designed for military use, as well as construction jobs that required blasts of dynamite, such as the clearing of quarries, mines, and tunnels.
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Cite as
Hercules Incorporated. “Thomas Stauble and Andrew Tubby Conducting Destructive Range Test at Hercules Port Ewen Plant,” 1960. Photographs from the Records & Ephemera of Hercules Incorporated, Box 2, Folder 38. Science History Institute. Philadelphia. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/9g54xj17g.
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