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Company type | Public company |
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NYSE: WOR S&P 600 component | |
Industry | Steel Processing Metal fabrication |
Founded | 1955in Columbus, Ohio |
Founder | John H. McConnell |
Headquarters | |
Number of locations | 51 facilities |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Andy Rose, President & CEO John P. McConnell, Executive Chairman Geoff Gilmore, Executive Vice President & COO Joseph B. Hayek, Vice President & CFO |
Products | Steel Processing, Pressure Cylinders, Industrial Components, Retail Products, Propane Cylinders |
Brands | Balloon Time, Bernzomatic, Coleman |
Revenue | ![]() |
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Total assets | ![]() |
Total equity | ![]() |
Number of employees | 7,500 (2021) |
Website | worthingtonindustries |
Footnotes /references [1] |
Worthington Enterprises, Inc. (formerly Worthington Industries) is an industrial manufacturing company headquartered in Columbus, Ohio. The company is composed of two business segments, Consumer Products and Building Products. Within these segments, the company designs and manufactures pressure vessels such as propane, oxygen and helium tanks, refrigerant and industrial cylinders, camping and residential use cylinders, water system tanks for storage, treatment, heating, expansion and flow control, as well as a variety of retail products under several brand names.
Worthington Enterprises has 39 facilities, including Joint Venture locations, worldwide and employs nearly 6,000 people.
Consumer Products
Worthington Enterprises is the parent company of consumer brands including Balloon Time helium tanks, Bernzomatic, Garden Weasel, General, HALO, Hawkeye, Level5 Tools, Mag-Torch, Pactool International and more. Worthington Enterprises is the only manufacturer of disposable 1lb propane cylinders in North America, which are sold under the Bernzomatic and Coleman brand. These gas cylinders are commonly used by consumers for soldering, brazing and welding, and to fuel cooking appliances like camp stoves and grills in a variety of recreational settings like campgrounds, parks, stadium parking lots and other outdoor areas.
Building Products
Worthington Enterprises manufactures building products used in a variety of markets including heating, cooling, construction, power generation, water and other specialty areas. The company also operates two Joint Ventures within this business segment: WAVE (Worthington-Armstrong Venture), a joint venture with Armstrong World Industries, that produces all of the suspended metal ceiling grids supplied by Armstrong, and ClarkDietrich, a joint venture with ClarkWestern Building Systems and Dietrich Metal Framing that manufactures light-gauge metal framing and finishing products, systems and services for commercial and residential construction.
Worthington Industries was founded in 1955 by John H. McConnell, a steel salesman. McConnell saw an opportunity for custom-processed steel and purchased his first load of steel by borrowing $600 against his 1952 Oldsmobile. He founded the company in Columbus, Ohio, where it is still headquartered.
In his first year of business, McConnell grossed $342,000; his profit was $11,000. Throughout the late 1950s and 1960s, he continued to add processing facilities. In 1966, he started sharing his profits with the people he worked with. In 1968, Worthington Industries made its first public stock offering of 150,000 shares at $7.50 per share. Throughout the 1980s, the company continued to expand rapidly. [2]
In 1996, John H. McConnell's son, John P. McConnell, took over as chairman and CEO. He had worked for the company for more than 20 years, having started as a general laborer and later advancing to sales, operations and personnel. [2]
In 2000, Worthington Industries moved to the New York Stock Exchange. [2] [3]
In June 2017, the company acquired Amtrol for $283 million. [4] Amtrol produces pressure cylinders and water system components, and is the largest provider of expansion tanks to the plumbing and HVAC markets in the United States,
In September 2020, former company President Andy Rose was named Worthington Industries' President & CEO, succeeding long-time Chairman and CEO John P. McConnell.
In January 2021, the company made two acquisitions. The first was the acquisition of German valve and component company PTEC Pressure Technology GmbH. The second was the acquisition of General Tools & Instruments Company LLC (General Tools), a provider of over 1,200 feature-rich, specialized tools, primarily for measuring and marking, found in supply houses, home centers, and hardware stores worldwide.
In 2022, the company announced its intent to spin off its Steel Processing business and split into two separate, publicly traded companies. On November 9, 2023, the separation was approved by the Board of Directors. [5]
On December 1, 2023, Worthington Industries completed its planned separation into two companies: Worthington Enterprises and Worthington Steel. [6] Andy Rose remained president and CEO of Worthington Enterprises and Geoff Gilmore, former VP and COO of Worthington Industries, was named president and CEO of Worthington Steel.
In 2024, Worthington Enterprises made two significant acquisitions. First was the acquisition of HALO, an outdoor cooking company that makes pizza ovens, griddles and pellet grills. [7] In June, the company announced two transactions with Hexagon Composites in Norway: the partial sale of its Sustainable Energy Solutions (SES) business to create a Joint Venture, and the complete purchase of Hexagon Ragasco, the composite cylinder division of Hexagon Composites. [8]
In October 2024, president and CEO Andy Rose announced his retirement. Joseph Hayek, who served as the company’s executive vice president and CFO, was selected to replace Rose and officially became president and CEO of Worthington Enterprises on November 1, 2024.
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