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The History of Hyde
Tools
 Isaac
P. Hyde
He began as an engineer, craftsman, salesman and
deliveryman. In those early days, Isaac P. Hyde, did
everything.
New England's leather and shoe industry needed
high-quality knives to cut and shape its wares. Hyde
saw the need and filled it.
By budgeting his time, he could fashion the knives
by hand, finish them, load them in his buggy,
distribute them, factory to factory, and get back to
Southbridge in time to sweep up the workshop.
From this modest beginning, Hyde built first a
reputation, then a factory. By the close of the 19th
century, he had expanded his line of knives to
include special ones for a variety of industrial
uses.
In 1917 another factory was built, this one in
the shape of a letter H. Beyond the initial
coincidence of that shape and the company name, the
new building was designed for efficient work flow,
improved illumination and expected expansion.
And expand Hyde did. Today, Hyde is into its
second century of service to American industry and
the home handyman. To the uninitiated, the variety
of uses for Hyde products is astonishing. In fact,
if it's made of paper, cloth, plastic, leather, or
rubber chances are a
Hyde
blade was involved in its manufacture. Likewise,
Hyde helps harvest and process a wide variety of
food products around the world. The diamond wheel
industry relies on Hyde for the steel centers used
to make their product run straight and true.
The essence of Hyde's success is concentrating on
what it knows best; laser cutting, blanking, heat
treating, grinding and polishing steel. The
standards that Isaac Hyde established in the 1870's
still hold true today: Make the best possible
product from the most appropriate steel and try
every day to improve on yesterday's best. Day after
day, in every product, Hyde gives America the edge
it needs. |