The American Crayon Company, steeped in Sandusky’s colorful history as one of the premier and foremost manufacturers of school art supplies and other industrial products in the nation during its time, originally grew out of the need for a high quality chalk. It soon branched out of a humble kitchen into a national company primarily operated and concentrated in the city of Sandusky. It expanded over time by merging with and absorbing other companies and redirecting its product line focus, and also established itself as a lifetime employer of countless Sanduskians. With the acquisition of Prang’s Educational Company around 1915, the American Crayon Company adopted and incorporated Prang Educational Company’s mission to make art accessible to the common American household and child by way of the public classroom, thus cementing its historical impact on a local and national scale.In 1835, Dr. Francis F. Field, a dentist in Waltham, Massachusetts experimented with chalk, which was later developed into a commercial product by Parmenter, Powell & Powers Company to become known as Waltham Crayons. Similarly, Marcellus F. Cowdery, the first superintendent of Sandusky’s Public Schools, frustrated by existing chalks constantly scratching slate boards, encouraged his brother-in-law, William D. Curtis, to formulate an improved chalk. In 1850 Curtis began conducting experiments in the kitchen of his small home, located on Hayes Avenue near Polk Street and was able to create a few sticks of pure white, processed chalk. Plentiful gypsum and limestone deposits, used in the production of this chalk, were conveniently located nearby, alongside Sandusky Bay. Initially, the business remained small and was operated out of Curtis’s kitchen, as he peddled the product from house to house. The invitation of John S. Cowdery, Marcellus’s brother into this new business venture, sparked company growth, as by 1869, John Cowdery’s cellar on Columbus Avenue became the center of operations for chalk production for the Mississippi and Ohio River Valley markets. By 1860, the American Crayon Company had made the first tailor’s chalk, the first carpenter’s chalk, and in 1878 created the first railroad chalk. Originally labeled as the J.S. Cowdery Manufacturers the company quickly renamed itself Western School Supply in 1884 after expanding production facilities in 1881 near Hayes Avenue and Polk Street to meet the growing demands for school related products.
In 1890, the Sandusky based Western School Supply Company merged with Tiffin Crayon Company and the Parmenter Crayon Company in Waltham, Massachusetts to officially form and establish the American Crayon Company. On October 4, 1901, a fire destroyed the company’s original Sandusky plant, and a larger one on Hayes Avenue south of the New York Central Railroad tracks was opened in September 1902. The revitalized company began purchasing additional art supply companies in New England and the Midwest.
World War I interrupted commercial trade between many nations including the United States and Germany. Prang’s heavy reliance on German chemicals and products to manufacture its own items was impeded by decreased availability before and during World War I. These circumstances pushed Prang Educational Company and American Crayon Company into a merger in 1913. The combined companies organized their own small independent watercolor factory in Sandusky called Kroma Color Company. American Crayon Company’s complete take- over of the Prang Educational Company around 1915 gave them the rights to use the unmistakable “Prang” trademark of the “Old Faithful” geyser at Yellowstone National Park as their advertising logo symbolizing quality, value, and tradition. The American Crayon Company manufactured a long line of crayons, chalks, blackboards, erasers, watercolors, pencils, paste, cleaners, and other more industrial items, such as chalk for tailors, carpenters, textile mills, and railroad stockyards. The growing success and popularity of the American Crayon Company led to its prosperous operation at the original Sandusky plant through the 1920s to the 1950s.In January 1957, the American Crayon Company became an affiliate of Joseph Dixon Crucible Company, based in Jersey City, New Jersey. The news was followed by high hopes and promises to continue labor operations in Sandusky and deter little from the existing set up. The unpredictable nature of business and changing economy led to the Bryn Mawr Corporation’s 1984 purchase of American Crayon’s parent company, Joseph Dixon Crucible. Dixon Ticonderoga, established much earlier than American Crayon Company, produced similar products but tended to focus more on industrial supplies. Although predictions and negotiations continued and were meant to reassure the ongoing operation of the Sandusky plant following its acquisition, gradually labor and plant operations along with a host of selected employees were outsourced to Canada and Mexico. Eventually, all the operations were progressively moved out of the original Sandusky plant, and it closed its doors in 2002 after 167 years of service in Sandusky, Ohio as a loyal and long-term employer in the community. American Crayon Company opened a new world of art to young children and provided a major source of employment for the local community, earning itself an important place in Sandusky’s history of development and business.

7 comments:
Very interesting article. Three of my four grandparents worked at American Crayon at some point during their lives, and my father can remember visiting the factory with his dad. Does anyone know a year for the group picture in the article?
"Does anyone know a year for the group picture in the article?"
We don't have an exact year for that image, but judging from appearances, it was in the early 20th century -- possibly as early as 1900, but probably around 1910-1915.
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I just came across about 6 boxes of these crayons. They are the gross boxes where the chalk is boxed in a wooden box with sawdust. There is blue, pink, green, purple, and mixed box of pieces. It was neat to see the history of these crayons.
If anyone out there knows of a value of these crayons, please let me know. I was just going to use them in the classroom, but it might be worth hanging on to them. Thanks!
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What an interesting article! The mention of railroad chalk reminds me of my childhood in Sandusky. We lived on McEwen Street, right on the Bay, where the trains would run by throughout the day. As youngsters without computers and other gadgets we played outside all day long and make our own fun. When we would hear the whistle and knew the train would be coming along, we'd run as fast as we could to the tracks and wait for the train which was either slowing down or just leaving, from where I did not know. In unison we'd yell, "chalk!" "chalk!" and sure enough the man on the train would toss out to us these large yellow sticks of chalk they used on the cars. The chalk was not at all the the chalk we were used to in school, which was small,white,and brittle. This chalk was soft and wonderful to use. We'd spend countless hours drawing all over the sidewalks and driveways of our neighborhoods. All of us budding artists! The magic lasted until Mom or Dad used the garden hose or we'd get a summer rain. The tracks there are long gone but the chalk still makes its way into childrens eager hands. Except they call it "sidewalk chalk" now and sell it in stores in lots of colors. I'll bet kids today don't know how their sidewalk chalk got it's start. I suppose the box of colors is a lot of fun, but I still like our way best!
I used to make the railroad chalk at American Crayon. I was probably 19 years old and worked there for a few months while I was laid off from Ford. I was trying to explain the machine I used to make the chalk to my son and Googled American Crayon to see if I could find a photo of it and found this website. Pretty cool! Another part of Sandusky's history, and jobs, gone forever.
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