Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
| |
Industry | Aerospace Defense Gaming Medical |
Founded | Indianapolis, Indiana, 1906 |
Founder | John Esterline |
Headquarters | |
Number of locations | Over 50 locations |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Curtis Reusser, CEO |
Revenue | $2.035 billion (2018) [1] $2.035 billion (2017) [1] |
Number of employees | Over 12,000 |
Parent | TransDigm Group |
Divisions | Avionics & Controls Sensors & Systems Advanced Materials |
Website | esterline |
Esterline Technologies Corporation was a publicly traded company that designs, manufactures, and markets specialty products primarily for aerospace and defense customers. [2] [3] The company is best known as a supplier of products and equipment for aerospace companies such as Boeing and Airbus; [4] [5] and for American and allied military forces. [6] [7] [8] [9]
Esterline is based in Bellevue, Washington. [3] Curtis Reusser serves as company chairman, president, and CEO. [3]
On March 14, 2019, TransDigm successfully completed the acquisition of Esterline Technologies Corporation (formerly NYSE:ESL). [10]
Esterline was founded in 1906 by John Esterline, an electrical engineer and former head of the electrical engineering department at Purdue University. [11] [12] Esterline originally made magnets and recording devices. [13] The company was renamed the Esterline-Angus Company when Esterline began working with Donald J. Angus. [12] [14]
Esterline-Angus merged with Boyar-Schultz, Inc., a manufacturer of surface grinding materials, in 1967. [6] The newly merged company was renamed Esterline Corporation. [6] Esterline went public in 1968. [7] Later that year, the company entered the aerospace and defense sectors with its acquisition of Babcock Electronics. [6]
The company began acquiring medical supply and equipment companies in 1969. [6] By the early 1970s, the company held businesses specializing in ophthalmic goods and hearing aids. [6] The company had sold the majority of its healthcare businesses and subsidiaries by 1978 when Esterline sold its hearing aid manufacturing business. [6] After exiting the healthcare sector, Esterline had acquired 20 additional companies by 1986. [7]
In 1987, after releasing poor financial reports, the Esterline board dismissed the company's entire executive team including then-chief executive officer Thomas Howes. [6] [15] Later that year, Esterline appointed seven new senior officers, all of whom were affiliated with Criton Technologies, an aerospace manufacturer. [16] Criton Technologies was wholly owned by Dyson-Kissner-Moran (DKM), a New York City-based investment firm that had also been Esterline's largest shareholder since the firm bought Esterline in 1967 and took it public in 1968. [16] Carroll Martenson, Criton's chairman, was appointed chairman and CEO of Esterline. [16] Esterline also relocated from Darien, Connecticut, to Bellevue, Washington, in order to share its headquarters with Criton Technologies. [17] The company had been located in Darien, Connecticut since 1975. [13]
The new management team reorganized the company and sold underperforming businesses and subsidiaries. [6] In 1989, Esterline purchased DKM's remaining 23% share in the company and Criton Technologies' aerospace and defense businesses for a collective $147.5 million. [18] [19] The company was then renamed Esterline Technologies.
By the early 1990s Esterline operated in ten separate industries [20] and the company refocused itself on the defense and aerospace sectors. Esterline also changed chief executives in 1992, with company president and COO Wendell Hurlbut succeeding the retiring Carroll Martenson. [21] Robert Cremin succeeded Hurlbut in January 1999. [22] Cremin had served in executive positions for the company for 22 years, and had most recently served as company president and COO. [22]
From 1997 to 2003, Esterline acquired 22 companies while selling businesses that did not fit the company's new focus. Esterline's acquisitions included Fluid Regulators Corporation, a manufacturer of hydrologic controls for the commercial aviation and defense industries; [23] Kai R. Kuhl Company, a manufacturer of seals for the aerospace industry; [24] Kirkhill Rubber, a manufacturer of custom molded engineered elastomers for the aerospace industry; [24] and Advanced Input Devices, a manufacturer of custom keyboards and multifunction data-input subsystems. [25] The company also expanded its European business with acquisitions of Muirhead Vactric and Norcroft Dynamics, two United Kingdom-based manufacturers of aerospace parts. [26]
Esterline continued its acquisition push into the defense and aerospace industries throughout the 2000s. In 2002, the company acquired the BAE Systems' North American electronic warfare countermeasures business. [27] The deal consisted of two facilities, which manufactured anti-radar chaff and aircraft-dispensable flares designed to thwart infrared homing missiles. [27] The company purchased Leach International in 2004 for $145 million. [28] Esterline had been attempting to acquire Leach since 1994 and the deal was Esterline's largest acquisition at the time. [28] Leach was a manufacturer of controls and analytical instruments for aerospace and medical diagnostics. [29]
Esterline acquired Darchem Holdings, a British manufacturer of thermally engineered aerospace and defense products including ducting systems and heat shields, in 2005. That year, 80% of Esterline's revenue came from the company's aerospace and defense business, up from 17% in 1995. [20] In 2006, Esterline purchased Wallop Defence, a British manufacturer of electronic warfare countermeasures, including flares. [30] The company then acquired CMC Electronics, a Canadian aerospace and defense avionics manufacturer in 2007 for $335 million (USD). [31]
In 2009, Esterline acquired Racal Acoustics, a British manufacturer of combat communications equipment ranging from noise-canceling communication headsets to secure telephone networks for use in active battlefields. [32] R. Bradley "Brad" Lawrence succeeded Robert Cremin as Esterline CEO in November of that year. [33] Lawrence had worked at Esterline since 2002, most recently serving as company president and COO since June 2009. [34] Cremin stepped aside to take on the Chairmanship of Dover Corporation. [33]
Esterline continued its expansion into the military communications and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) markets with its purchase of Eclipse Electronic Systems, a manufacturer of signal and communication intelligence hardware for aerospace applications in 2011. [35] Later that year, Esterline acquired the Souriau Group, a French aerospace and defense connector company, for $715 million. [36]
In September 2013, Esterline appointed Curtis Reusser to succeed Brad Lawrence as the company's CEO. [37] Reusser had formerly served as president of United Technologies Corporation's aircraft systems business. [37] Esterline then acquired Joslyn Sunbank Company, an aerospace connector accessory supplier, a few months later in December 2013. [38] [39] In February 2015, Esterline acquired the defense and aerospace division of the Belgium-based display manufacturer, Barco. [40] [41] In February 2017, the company announced a new advanced displays engineering and manufacturing facility in Kortrjik, Belgium called the "Spidle" site. [42]
Esterline is the producer of the well known Korry switches and control devices used in most airliners and flight simulators on the market, including Airbus, Boeing and others. [43]
Esterline manufactures products for the aerospace, defense and general industry sectors. [3] The company is organized into three segments: Avionics & Controls; Sensors & Systems; and Advanced Materials. [3]
The Avionics & Controls segment manufactures avionics equipment and communication systems for both commercial and military applications. [3] The Sensors & Systems segment manufactures connectors, sensors and power management systems, which are primarily used in the aerospace industry. [3] The Advanced Materials segment manufactures elastomer products and thermal components for commercial and military applications; and military ordnance and electronic warfare countermeasures. [3]
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