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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Five of the state’s leading business
and civic leaders will be inducted into the Alabama Business Hall
of Fame on Thursday, Oct. 16 at the Bryant Conference Center on
The University of Alabama campus.
This year marks the 30th anniversary of the Hall of Fame sponsored
by the board of visitors of the Culverhouse College of Commerce
and Business Administration. The five inductees exemplify hard work
and determination as well as a commitment to excellence and the
entrepreneurial spirit.
Inductees for 2003 are Frank H. Bromberg Jr., of Birmingham, president
of Bromberg and Co.; Garry Neil Drummond Sr., of Birmingham, chairman
and CEO of Drummond Co. Inc.; Leroy McAbee Sr., of Tuscaloosa, CEO
of McAbee Construction Inc.; Roy J. Nichols of Huntsville, Chairman
of Torch Concepts; and H. Pettus Randall III (deceased, Sept. 7,
2002), past chairman and CEO of Randall Publishing Co.
Past honorees, which now total more than 100, include George Washington
Carver, Mildred Westervelt Warner and Albert Bellingrath.
The keynote speaker at this year’s program will be Lewis
B. Campbell, chairman, president and CEO of Textron. Campbell will
address the community and friends and family members of the inductees
at the 7:30 p.m. black tie dinner.
Campbell joined Textron in September 1992 as executive vice president
and COO. He has been instrumental in developing Textron’s
strategic and operation focus and leading the company to achieve
greater operating efficiencies.
Campbell joined Textron after nearly a quarter-decade with General
Motors, where he held a number of positions, including general manufacturing
manager, Rochester Products Division; manufacturing manager, Chevrolet-Pontiac,
GM Canada group; and executive director, GM/UAW Quality Network.
In 1988 he was named a vice president of General Motors as the general
manager of the Flint Automotive Group, and in 1991 he was named
general manager of GMC Truck.
Campbell received a bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering
from Duke University and attended the Advanced General Management
Program sponsored by GM and the Harvard International School in
Switzerland. He is no stranger to Tuscaloosa, as he lived here while
employed with the Rochester Products Division.
Textron is a $12 billion multi-industry company with more than
51,000 employees in 40 countries. The corporation is known worldwide
for their brands, which includes Bell Helicopter, Cessna Aircraft,
Kautex, Lycoming, E-Z-Go, and Greenlee.
Frank H. Bromberg
(1931- )
The name Bromberg’s is synonymous with fine jewelry. It has
become one of the oldest and most successful businesses in Alabama’s
history, as well as the largest supplier of fine crystal and sterling
flatware in the southeast. The company ranks 45th on a list of the
102 oldest U.S. companies, and it is the second oldest retailer
in the nation. Bromberg’s is even older than Birmingham, the
city the company now calls home.
Born in Birmingham on Nov. 15, 1931, the only child of Frank Bromberg
Sr. and Annie Maud Wilkinson, Frank Bromberg Jr. was destined to
one day head the family business. But before he could take his place
as head of Bromberg and Co., Bromberg would have to make his own
place in the family business by proving himself to his father’s
generation. He would accomplish all of that and more.
After graduating summa cum laude from The University of Alabama
business school in 1954, Bromberg and his wife, Lella Clayton Bromberg,
moved to New York so that he could enter the master’s program
in retailing at New York University. Upon completion of the program,
Bromberg returned home, but it wasn’t for long. Duty and country
called, and Bromberg was shipped overseas so that he could run the
Post Exchange at Dreux Air Force Base in post-WWII recovering France.
Two years later, Bromberg and his family returned to Birmingham,
this time to stay. Finally back home, Bromberg began an ascent up
the Bromberg and Co. chain that ended at the top. He began in sales
in 1957 and took on the role of assistant treasurer a year later.
At that time, Bromberg’s wasn’t making enough money
to allow three Bromberg families to earn a comfortable living. Bromberg
pushed the family to open branch stores, the first of which was
opened in Mountain Brook in 1959. In 1960, Bromberg became the company’s
vice president, a position he occupied for 24 years. In 1984, he
became president of the company.
Bromberg was instrumental in the family business’s move to
open new stores in the late 1950s, despite the hardships the business
faced at the time. His foresight has proven invaluable to the company.
Despite his heavy workload, Bromberg finds time to remain involved
with several civic organizations. He served as president of the
Kiwanis Club of Birmingham from 1969-70. He is and has been a member
of countless University organizations.
Bromberg’s ability to anticipate the financial benefits of
expansion in his family’s business is part of the reason Bromberg’s
is still around today. The company has remained in the family for
more than 167 years, and it appears that is the way it will remain.
Garry Neil Drummond Sr.
(1938 - )
Garry Neil Drummond Sr. is chairman and CEO of Drummond Co., which
was founded by his father, Heman Drummond, in 1935. Drummond Co.,
in almost 68 years of operation, has become one of the leading coal
producing companies in the nation.
Drummond Co. employs more than 3,300 people around the world and
has annual revenues of more than $800 million, placing the company
in the top 500 of the Forbes list of largest private companies.
The company’s holdings include large coal mines in Alabama,
Wyoming and Columbia, South America; a worldwide coal sales organization,
ABC Coke, the largest merchant foundry coke producer in the United
States, and a real estate division with major community developments
in Alabama, Florida and California. The company headquarters is
located in Jasper, with some executive and staff offices in Birmingham.
Garry Neil Drummond, one of five sons, has been actively involved
in the company since his graduation from The University of Alabama
in 1961, where he earned a civil engineering degree. He and his
brothers have built the company into a major economic force.
The 1960s were a period of growth for the Drummond Co., which leased
new reserves, developed new mines, and acquired larger and most
efficient equipment. By the late 1960s the company had coal sales
approaching $8 million.
Coal industry observers say the company’s big break came in
1969 and 1970 when Garry Neil Drummond, who had then been with the
company eight years, negotiated a contract with Ataka & Co.
of Tokyo, a Japanese company, to deliver $100 million in coal over
the next 10 years. The Japanese company needed a metallurgical quality
coal that was found in the eastern half of the Warrior Basin, Drummond
Company’s backyard. That was the firm’s first export
sale, but it opened the way for what became a major part of the
business and Drummond, after becoming CEO in 1973, has negotiated
many more ventures with the Japanese steel industry.
The company expanded rapidly during the 1970s to meet the Japanese
demand and to compete for additional business worldwide. A major
step in the growth of the company was the merger with Alabama By-Products
Corp., which was incorporated in 1920. The ABC coke plant at Tarrant
is the largest single producer of foundry coke in the United States.
Drummond Co. acquired majority control of ABC’s voting stock
in 1977, and eight years later completed acquisition of all ABC
stock through a tender offer. By the end of 1985, ABC was merged
with Drummond, and continues to operate as a division of Drummond
while maintaining its nationally recognized name.
It was also in 1985 that Drummond ventured into real estate development
in Florida and California, developing office and business parks,
residential communities and golf courses.
Larry Neil Drummond has been chief executive officer of Drummond
Co. Inc., since 1973. The four other brothers also have been involved
continuously in company operations. E. A. “Larry” Drummond
is president of the company, Segal E. Drummond is executive vice-president
and assistant to the chief executive officer, Donald D. Drummond
is president of the Drummond Coal Division, and John H. Drummond
is vice-president/asset management.
Among his many honors, Garry Neil Drummond was awarded an honorary
Doctorate of Science from The University of Alabama, and was the
UA College of Engineering Distinguished Lecturer for 1987-88 and
outstanding Fellow in 1987. He received the Keith-Woodman Award
in 1987 and was inducted into the Alabama Engineering Hall of Fame.
He served on The University of Alabama Board of Trustees from 1983
through 2001, during which time he served three years as President
Pro Tempore.
He is actively involved in state, national and international organizations
within the coal industry and has served on the boards of numerous
local and state organizations dedicated to charitable causes and
economic development.
Drummond is the father of four sons and one daughter. He lives in
the Birmingham area with his wife, the former Peggy Snoddy. Mr.
Drummond’s father was inducted into the Alabama Business Hall
of Fame in 1990.
Leroy McAbee
(1931- )
Leroy McAbee is the oldest son of Homer Ray and Sarah Mae McAbee.
He attended school in Sylvania, and graduated in 1949. After graduating,
he served with the Army Combat Engineers in Korea, 1950-52.
After he was discharged, he worked on construction projects across
the country, and eventually enrolled at The University of Alabama,
where he earned a degree in mechanical engineering in 1962. A year
later he founded McAbee and Co., which he began as a small mechanical
contractor and engineering company. It was incorporated in 1972,
and became McAbee Construction.
The company is one of the largest heavy industrial contractors
in the Southeast and has had contracts throughout the country, working
in all types of manufacturing facilities performing piping, mechanical
work, equipment erection, steel erection, and concrete work. For
industrial customers, many of which are Fortune 500s, McAbee Construction
does work with power generation, chemical processes, pulp and paper,
and in the automotive and manufacturing industries.
McAbee’s Fabrication Division, located in Tuscaloosa, is
one of the largest of its kind in the Southeast, utilizing more
than 120,000 square feet of workspace and shipping its fabrication
work to 35 states and 17 countries.
McAbee founded his business on three concepts: safety is first,
quality of work is second, and a fair day’s work for a fair
day’s pay. These were recognized in 1983 when McAbee Construction
was awarded a certificate from the National Society of Professional
Engineers.
McAbee works closely with many organizations and groups to bring
new industry and business to West Alabama. His efforts have made
a real difference in the type of new businesses that the area can
attract.
McAbee currently serves on The University of Alabama’s President’s
Cabinet and the Board of Visitors of the C&BA. He has also established
the McAbee Foundation for the purpose of providing scholarships
to qualified students to attend the University’s engineering
school.
He was recognized as “Volunteer of the Year” in 1981
by the Park and Recreation Authority, and he was honored with the
“Patron of the Arts” award in 1984 for his support of
the Tuscaloosa Arts Council.
In February of 2003, McAbee was inducted into the State of Alabama
Engineering Hall of Fame for significant contributions to the advancement
of engineering and technology and for being an inspiration to those
wishing to enter the field of engineering.
Roy J. Nichols
(1938- )
In 1976, along with lifelong friend Chris Horgen, Roy J. Nichols
founded Nichols Research, which would become one of the nation’s
most prominent research and development organizations. The effect
the company will have on Huntsville, the state and the nation will
be long lasting.
Nichols Research specializes in sensor, missile and information
systems. Under Nichols’ and Horgen’s tutelage, the company
has grown to more than 40 locations throughout the U.S. that employ
more than 3,000 workers, and generating revenues in upwards of 400
million dollars.
In 1999, Nichols Research merged with Computer Sciences Corp.,
an information technology company out of California. Soon after
the merge Nichols decided to start something new. He founded Torch
Concepts, and he is now chairman of the board.
Torch uses advanced pattern-recognition technology developed for
the Department of Defense, which allows it to automatically find,
retrieve, organize and deliver content relevant to each user’s
individual needs.
Nichols was born in Chicago, and he and his family moved around,
finally settling in Detroit. After completing high school, he entered
The University of Michigan, where he earned both his undergraduate
and graduate degrees in aeronautical and astronautical engineering.
After he, his wife and their three daughters moved to California,
Nichols took a job with McDonnell Douglas, heading the discrimination
and data processing department. His work with the aerospace giant
led him to Hunstville in 1973, where he became chief engineer and
met Horgen. Three years later the pair formed Nichols Research.
A decade later, in 1986, the company had grown from the two of
them working for themselves and each other to employing more than
500 employees with eight offices.
Nichols has almost 40 years of experience in defense technologies,
including systems engineering, optical and radar sensors, discrimination
and countermeasures, and advanced simulation. The company has been
recognized by the military for exceptional service to the nation,
for such work as their part in developing the Patriot and Hawk systems
for the armed forces.
In 1988, Nichols was named Manager of the Year by the Hunstville
Chapter of the National Management Association. He received the
Community Service Award in 1998 from the National Space Club, and
in the same year was awarded the Distinguished Service Award from
the Chamber of Commerce of Huntsville/Madison County.
H. Pettus Randall III
(1945-2002)
Randall Publishing Co. was started by H. Pettus Randall Jr., and
H. Pettus Randall III made the company what it is today through
his far-reaching vision and foresight.
The company is one of the largest privately held trade magazine
publishing enterprises in the country, producing more than 35 magazines,
directories, periodicals, and Web sites, and employing more than
500 people. In 2000, Folio, the premier magazine for the
publishing industry, ranked Randall Publishing as the sixth fastest
growing and the 22nd largest U.S. publishing company.
Much of that growth came in the 27 years Randall, who died of pancreatic
cancer on Sep. 7, 2002, headed the company.
The foundation of the company is the publication Who’s
Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges. An
addition was added in 1969 that also covered junior colleges, and
the Who’s Who books have become some of the most
prestigious to be found in more than 2,000 university and college
libraries across the country, The books include students from all
50 states, as well as the District of Columbia.
After his father’s death in 1976, Randall merged his company
with Award Company of America, and the company entered the magazine
world. Randall chose magazines covering industries at the center
of the American economy: construction, industrial and trucking.
In 1986, Randall acquired Overdrive, the oldest and most
respected independent trucker magazine in the nation. The magazine’s
expanded coverage of, and presence in, the trucking industry made
it a favorite for truck drivers and those who support them.
Randall’s next move was to add a construction industry publication
to Randall Publishing’s growing list of periodicals. Since
then, TOP BID has become known as the “Bible” of off-highway
and equipment auctions.
Randall earned his bachelor’s degree in history and English
from UA in 1967, and received his J.D. degree and finished law school
there in 1971. He later attended the New York University Graduate
School of Business. His widow, Dr. Cathy Randall, serves as director
of the Computer Based Honors Program at UA and serves as chairman
of Randall Publishing.
Randall was a member of many civic, fraternal and religious organizations,
such as the Tuscaloosa Jaycees and the Masons, and he was also an
active member of Christ Episcopal Church.
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