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Borough of Ford City

1000 Fourth Avenue
724-763-3081

Ford City came into being from the plans of Captain John B. Ford, an industrialist interested in establishing a plate glass industry. In prior endeavors, Captain Ford had owned and operated, among many things, a river shipping line from which he drew his capitol. The site upon which Ford City is located consisted of roughly 460 acres broken primarily into three farms owned by the Ross, Spencer and Graff families. Captain Ford's explorations of our area prior to his land acquisitions had discovered the Allegheny River offered a unique asset in its composition. Besides the obvious advantage of low cost shipping, the Allegheny River is one of only four gravel bottom rivers in the world. Characteristic of this type of river was massive deposits of glacial sand, an essential element in the manufacture of glass. Also discovered in our area were huge deposits of natural gas, the fuel source required to fire the immense kilns used to melt the glass' elements. Having secured his resources, all that Captain Ford required to begin his venture was a very large labor force.

Through the early Twentieth Century, Ford's company-Pittsburgh Plate Glass-became the leading manufacturer of glass in the entire world. Producing a better type of glass at a lesser price than their European competitors, PPG's efficiency and product quality virtually ended the importation of European glass to the United States. As demand increased, the need for more laborers in the Ford City Works also increased. Our town grew daily.Through the early part of the Twentieth Century, Ford City prospered. We spoke proudly of how Ford City touched every skyscraper of the United States in the glass that formed the exteriors of the magnificent structures. Our common bond was found in the changing of the shifts at PPG and at the Friday night basketball games. Ford City High School basketball has seemingly prospered for the life of our town. Winning the section title was an annual event and our teams amassed a WPIAL record thirty-four section titles. It used to be said that every garage in every alley in Ford City had a basketball hoop attached to it. Boulder Park became a mecca of summer league basketball, drawing teams from as far away as Pittsburgh and New Castle. Our own "Lower End Gang" team featuring the Heffners, Commodore and Cutts brothers and others won their share of league titles.

In the late 1990s, a new effort at Ford City's Economic Revitalization was begun with lobbying missions to Washington D.C., Harrisburg and Pittsburgh. Initiated by the efforts of Don Mains, the Ford City Economic Revitalization Project involved people from every sector of the community. Business leaders, citizens and local government officials all contributed heavily to a plan that used the remaining PPG buildings to attract new employers and the resulting employees. The plan was simple yet complex. The existing PPG Buildings deemed structurally sound by our engineers would be completely refurbished internally and furnished with the most modern amenities in an effort to establish a small business incubator and adjoining industrial/cultural museum. After a five year process of extensive lobbying and laborious grant writing, grant money from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Armstrong County and the Federal government began arriving. One of the first grants, a $3 million check, was delivered in December 2000 by Lieutenant Governor Mark Schweiker in the Ford City High School Auditorium. Congressman John Murtha followed up with another $2.6 million in federal grant money in June of 2001. Our reasons for optimism had greatly increased and remain there to this day. Captain Ford would have been proud to see that the buildings he had built over one hundred years earlier are once again being used to pump Ford City's economic heart.

 


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