Marlin Firearms Plant Closing

A half-dozen workers were in otherwise empty offices Friday at The  Marlin Firearms Co. as the company wound down 141 years of manufacturing  in Connecticut.

A security phone at the visitor’s gate was  unattended next to a large barren parking lot off Bailey Road near I-91.  A reception room that resembles a ski lodge, complete with a fireplace,  was dark. The few people left working Friday declined to comment, but  one employee said there were six people inside and that Friday was their  last day of work.

Marlin was acquired in 2008 by Remington Arms Co. Inc., which is a  subsidiary of Freedom Group Co. of Madison, N.C. Three years ago, Marlin  employed 345 people at its headquarters in North Haven and 225 in  Gardner, Mass., at the former Harrington and Richardson plant that  Marlin had acquired.

“I think it’s a huge loss,” said Larry  Lazaroff, co-owner of Arnold’s Jewelers, a longtime local business in  the North Haven Shopping Center.

He cited Pratt & Whitney  closing its North Haven plant in 1993, saying that the loss of any major  employer reduces the customer base for local businesses.

Remington  said in March 2010 that it would close the North Haven Marlin plant,  which had 265 employees at that point. The company has been at its  225,000-square-foot facility on a 23-acre site in North Haven since  1968. Before that, it was on Willow Street in New Haven.

Marlin  was founded when John M. Marlin left Colt in 1870 and started  manufacturing his own line of revolvers and derringers. In 1924, Frank  Kenna, an attorney, bought the company at auction and the Kenna family  owned Marlin until its sale to Remington.

Marlin was the rifle of choice for famous sharpshooter Annie Oakley, who was in William “Buffalo Bill” Cody’s circus.

Remington said last year that it was consolidating manufacturing because of “intense” competition in the market. The company did not respond to requests for an interview this week.

Remington also closed a Bushmaster’s plant in Windham, Maine, and is moving operations from both the North Haven and Maine facilities to plants in Ilion, N.Y., and Mayfield, Ky. At the upstate New York plant southeast of Utica, the company said it plans to add nearly 100 jobs and spend $5 million in three years. It was supported, in part, by a $1.65 million grant from the Empire State Development Corp. and a New York State Community Development block grant of $750,000.

In Kentucky, the state Economic Development Finance Authority approved incentives up to $4.5 million over a 15-year period. Kentucky also provided a $250,000 grant. Remington is expected to add 100 jobs and invest $5 million in the Mayfield facility. source: courant

 

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