Hubbell Incorporated
TypePublic
NYSE: HUBB
S&P 500 component
IndustryElectronics
Public utility
Founded1888 (1888)
FounderHarvey Hubbell
HeadquartersShelton, Connecticut,
Number of locations
98
RevenueIncrease $4.947 billion (2022)
Increase $545 million (2022)
Total assetsIncrease $5.402 billion (2022)
Total equityIncrease $2.370 billion (2022)
Number of employees
16,300 (2022)
Websitewww.hubbell.com
Footnotes / references
[1]

Hubbell Incorporated, headquartered in Shelton, Connecticut, is an American company that designs, manufactures, and sells electrical and electronic products for non-residential and residential construction, industrial, and utility applications. Hubbell was founded by Harvey Hubbell as a proprietorship in 1888, and was incorporated in Connecticut in 1905.

The company is ranked 651st on the Fortune 500 list of the largest United States corporations by total revenue.[2]

The company operates two segments: the utility solutions segment, which produces items such as arresters, insulators, connectors, anchors, bushings, enclosures, cutoffs and switches and the electrical solutions segment, which produces application wiring device products, rough-in electrical products, connector and grounding products, and lighting fixtures, as well as other electrical equipment.[1]

Hubbell has manufacturing facilities in the United States, Canada, Switzerland, Puerto Rico, Mexico, China, Italy, the United Kingdom, Brazil and Australia and maintains sales offices in Singapore, China, India, Mexico, South Korea, and countries in the Middle East.

History

Hubbell Incorporated was founded as a proprietorship in 1888 by Harvey Hubbell II. Born in Connecticut in 1857, he was a U.S. inventor, entrepreneur, and industrialist. Hubbells best-known inventions are the U.S. electrical plug[3] and the pull-chain light socket.[4] Hubbell graduated from high school and began working for companies manufacturing marine engines and printing machinery. During this time, he accumulated several ideas for new inventions, and in 1888 he set out on his own, opening a small manufacturing facility in Bridgeport, Connecticut. Hubbell's first product was taken from his own patent for a paper roll holder with a toothed blade for use in stores that sold wrapping paper. This cutter stand became a tremendous success; it was a common feature of retail stores that used wrapping paper in the early 1900s and remained widely used into the late 20th century.

Soon Hubbell discovered that he had to design machinery to make its parts. One of the first was a tapping machine, also his patent. Around 1896 with his business in machinery progressing, Hubbell's next patent was a major breakthrough in the fastener industry: the process and machinery for cold rolled screw threads which reduced the rate of material lost in production by more than 50%. He designed and built progressive blanking and forming dies, patented machinery to slot screw heads, a machine to assemble screws and small parts, devised tools to indicate speed, and patented a changeable speed screwdriver. Hubbell's idea was to provide convenience, safety, and control to an electric light with his new "pull socket" which was patented in August 1896.[5] The same familiar device with its on/off pull chain is still in use today. Hubbell built three prototypes by hand using metal and insulated wood parts to design a product with individual wires permanently attached in the proper sequence and correct polarity, and one which could be connected or disconnected, easily and safely, to a power supply in the wall. cartridge fuses and fuse block, lamp holders, key sockets - soon followed the same path Later, Hubbell's "separable plug" design took shape on the drawing board back in Bridgeport, and then submitted to the patent office in Washington, D.C. Additional designs based on that basic concept - separable plugs in different configurations, a single flush mounted receptacle - as well as new products for electrical circuits.[6] One of the most successful and the one most familiar today, was the duplex receptacle which is still found everywhere that electrical power is used.

In 1901 Hubbell published a 12-page catalogue that listed 63 electrical products of his company's manufacture, and four years later he incorporated his enterprise as Harvey Hubbell, Incorporated , In the same year, the company registered its trademark of "...a sphere with meridian lines and the name 'Hubbell' centered within." Hubbell's pace of new ideas and product design did not falter. In 1909 the company began constructing a four-floor factory and office building that would become the first building in New England made of reinforced concrete.

Between 1896 and 1909, he was granted 45 patents on a wide variety of electrical products company's product lines had been continuously expanded. Catalogue #17 was published in March 1917 .[7] The catalogue had more than 100 pages and listed more than a thousand products. In bulb sockets alone, the company manufactured 277 different types and sizes. Hubbell's toggle action light switch which incorporated a "quick make or break" feature to meet the rigid requirements of Underwriters' Laboratories (UL) was replacing the former two button type push switch. Hubbell designed a "Loxin" mechanism which fit into any standard socket and locked the bulb in place. Falling lightbulbs no longer endangered streetcar passengers, and overly thrifty commuters had to find a new source of replacement bulbs for home use. For the home, the company developed a system for lighting fixture connections called "Elexit" which allowed the homeowner to install most fixtures without hiring an electrician.

Company's first era ended when its founder Harvey Hubbell II died on December 17, 1927. He was succeeded as president of the company by his son, Harvey Hubbell III. Twenty-six years old when he succeeded his father, Harvey Hubbell III had already spent years working in the business. That early experience with electrical equipment engineering and learning the discipline of production was to stand the company in good stead in the decades to come.

Harvey Hubbell III soon showed that he had inherited his father's twin acumen for product innovation and business development. In product innovation, he devised the company's lines of Twist-Lock industrial connectors with new 2-,3-,and 4-wire devices of various ratings, designed a whole new series of locking connectors for industrial use which he named "Hubbellock", and introduced heavy-duty, circuit-breaking devices. The company played a large part in the war effort by meeting the demand for electrical components and systems to power the nation's industries and by developing products for the special applications needed by military. These included components for military vehicle electrical circuits, battery-charging systems for M-4 tanks, power jacks for test meters, vacuum tube sockets for radio communications, and a line of electrical and electronic connectors for aircraft. The company's years of experience in building devices reliable enough for industrial use was a valuable asset in the production of products which could perform under rugged battlefield conditions. A second plant was opened in Lexington, Kentucky, in order to meet the demand and as a safety measure since the main plant in Bridgeport was considered vulnerable to air or sea attack.

Hubbell Inc. assisted Allied efforts during World War II by manufacturing military vehicle electrical circuits, battery-charging systems for M4 Sherman tanks, power jacks for test meters, vacuum tube sockets for radio communications, and a line of electrical and electronic connectors for aircraft.

Hubbell had been one of the first to manufacture flush toggle switches for alternating current only. The first Safety Receptacle was designed and produced as were the original "grounding only" devices which helped to set the standards for the industry. And while Hubbell was busy on land, the company found new opportunities at sea. In 1952, the ocean liner "SS United States" was launched in Newport News, Virginia. Queen of the seas for many years, the ship was completely fitted with Hubbell wiring devices designed expressly for narrow stateroom partitions and to withstand the effects of salt air. An ardent yachtsman himself, Harvey Hubbell III designed a complete family of corrosion resistant devices including both on-board and dockside equipment for the expanding pleasure boat industry. Familiar sights at marinas today, these first products were so successful that alternative designs were produced for many industrial applications where corrosive atmospheres and materials posed challenges for standard wiring devices.

The company's sales in new products and continuing lines increased proportionately to these successes, but more was to come as Harvey Hubbell Incorporated added diversification. Beginning in 1960, the company entered a new period of rapidly expanding growth in both sales and income. Much of the growth resulted from the company's internal product development, a longstanding Hubbell tradition, and a source which expanded under the industry leadership of Harvey Hubbell III and other Hubbell engineers. A second source of growth through acquisition. 1960 onwards to till now Hubbell Incorporated has acquired many brands working for power, electric, lighting sectors. Hubbell Incorporated has grown to be an international manufacturer of electrical and electronic products for a broad range of non-residential and residential construction, industrial, and utility applications.

In 2010, the company moved its headquarters from Orange, Connecticut to Shelton, Connecticut.[8][9]

Acquisitions

Sortable table
Company or asset acquired Location Date From Products Notes
Kellems Co. Inc Shelton, Connecticut 1962 Kellems Co. Inc Mesh grips, cord connectors, and wire management products
Ohio Brass Wadsworth, OH and Aiken, SC 1978 Ohio Brass Polymer and porcelain insulators and arresters used in the transmission, substation, and distribution markets. Designs include suspension, station, and line post, as well as polymer insulator and arrester combinations for lightning protection.
Bryant Electric Company Bridgeport, Connecticut, United States 1991[10] Bryant Electric Company Wiring devices, electrical components, and switches
Haefely Hipotronics United States, Switzerland 1992[10] Haefely Hipotronics EMC Test Equipments, High Voltage Test system, Instruments, OEM Equipments
E. M. Wiegmann, Inc. St. Louis 1993[10] E. M. Wiegmann, Inc Fabricates cabinets, panels, and other enclosures
A. B. Chance Industries, Inc Centralia, MO 65240 USA 1994[10] A. B. Chance Industries, Inc Electric utility transmission and distribution products for the telecommunication, construction, pipeline, and consumer markets.
Anderson Electrical Products StLeeds AL 35094 January 2, 1996[11] Square D Company Electrical connectors, clamps, fittings and accessories for substations, transmission and distribution lines, crimping tool.
Gleason Reel Corp. Mayville, Wisconsin January 31, 1996[11] Gleason Reel Corp Manufactures cable and hose reels, protective steel and nylon cable traks (cable and hose carriers), cable festooning hardware, container crane reels, slip rings, workstation accessories and components such as balancers, retractors, torque reels, and column, tool support, boom and jib kits.
Fargo Manufacturing Company, Inc Poughkeepsie, New York February 14, 1997[12] Fargo Manufacturing Company, Inc Manufacture distribution and transmission line products for the electric utilities.
Devine Lighting Kansas City, MO 1998[13] Architectural, Step Lights & Surface Mount
Sterner Lighting Eden Prairie, MN 1998,[13] Extruded Site & Precision Flood lighting
Chalmit Lighting Hilington, Scotland 1998,[13] Lighting for Harsh & Hazardous Area
Siescor Technologies, Inc Tulsa, OK 1998,[13] Siescor Technologies, Inc Manufactures digital loop carrier systems used to connect subscribers to central office telephone switches, fiber and digital microwave networks.
Certain Assets of Chardon Electrical Components, Inc. Greenville, TN February, 1999,[14] Chardon Electrical Components, Inc. Manufacture loadbreak and deadbreak products, splices, and terminations.
Haefely Test AG Basel, Switzerland July, 1999,[14] Trench Switzerland AG High voltage test systems, instrumentation equipment, electromagnetic test equipment used in compliance testing of telecommunications and Local Area Network Systems (LANS).
GAI-Tronics Corporation Mohnton, Pennsylvania July, 2000[15] GAI-Tronics Corporation Supplier of communications systems designed for indoor, outdoor, and hazardous environments.
MyTech Corporation Austin, Texas October, 2001[15] MyTech Corporation Manufacture sensors, high intensity discharge ("HID") dimming controls, photocells and other lighting related electronic control products. Is included in Electrical Segment
Hawke Cable Glands Limited Ashton-Under-Lyne, England March, 2002[15] Hawke Cable Glands Limited Manufacture cable glands, cable connectors, light fixtures, control centers, panel boards, motor control enclosures and electrical equipment, cable transit, breathers, and field bus products. Is included in Electrical Segment
LCA Group, Inc. [Lighting Corporation of America] S. Houston, TX 77587-3028 March, 2002[15] U.S. Industries, Inc Manufacture outdoor and indoor lighting products.
Atlas 2005[16] Civil helical anchor business
Fabrica de Pecas Electricas Delmar LTDA Brazil 2005 Manufacturer of surge arresters, cutouts, and utility products
Victor Lighting United Kingdom 2005 Above ground Lighting and Cable Products for Harsh, Hazardous, & Industrial Areas
Strongwell Lenoir City, Inc Lenoir City, TN June,2006 [17] Strongwell Lenoir City, Inc Manufacture concrete products, surface drain products. Renamed Hubbell Lenoir City, Inc
Austdac Pty Limited New South Wales, Australia November 2006[17] Austdac Pty Limited Manufacture hazardous applications utility products Added to the Industrial Technology segment.
PCORE Electric Company, Inc LeRoy, New York October 2007[18] PCORE Electric Company, Inc Manufacture high voltage condenser bushings Included in the Power segment
Kurt Versen, Inc. Westwood, New Jersey January 2008[19] Kurt Versen, Inc. Manufacture lighting fixtures Added to the lighting business within the Electrical segment.
USCO Power Equipment Corporation Leeds, Alabama August 2008[19] USCO Power Equipment Corporation Provides switches and accessories to the electric utility industry. Added to the Power segment
CDR Systems Corp. Ormond Beach, Florida September, 2008[19] CDR Systems Corp. Manufactures polymer concrete and fiberglass. Added to the Power segment
Varon Lighting Group, LLC California, Florida, and Wisconsin December, 2008[19][20] Varon Lighting Group, LLC Provides lighting fixtures Added to the lighting business within the Electrical segment.
Burndy LLC Manchester, New Hampshire October 2, 2009[21] Manufacturer and seller of compression and mechanical connectors; transmission and substation grounding connectors and overhead line connectors), cable accessories, battery tools, cable management systems. Added to electrical segment
Wiley Electronics Manchester, New Hampshire 2011 Wiley Electronics Provider of grounding, bonding, and cable management solutions for solar panel and rack mounting applications
Metron Inc 2011 Fire pump control products manufacturer
Cableform Incorporated Delaware 2012 Mining and tunneling products
TayMac Corporation 2012 Weatherproof 'while-in-use' outlet enclosures
Trinetics 2012 Utility switches, capacitors and component parts
Vantage Technology 2012 Plugs and connectors
Continental Industries, Inc 2013[22] Continental Industries, Inc Pipeline connectors and electrical connector products
Connector Manufacturing Company 2013[22] Aluminum and copper connectors, offering mechanical and compression designs
Norlux 2013[22] LED component
Powerohm Resistors Inc., Pen-Cell Plastics Inc, Opti-Loop Fiber Cable and Accessories Inc, Reuel Inc, Litecontrol Corporation, RigPower LLC, RFL Electronics Inc. (RFL Electronics- North America) 2014[23] Powerohm Resistors Inc. (resistors); Pen-Cell Plastics Inc. (utility enclosures); Opti-Loop Fiber Cable and Accessories Inc. (cable storage); Reuel Inc. (apparatus bushings and insulators); Litecontrol Corporation (Fluorescent and LED Lighting); RigPower LLC (single pole connectors); RFL Electronics Inc. (protective relays, multiplexors, telecontrols)
Electric Controller and Manufacturing Company LLC, Acme Electric Corp., Turner Electric 2015[23] Electric Controller and Manufacturing Company LLC (mill-duty crane control products); Acme Electric Corp. (dry-type transformers and toroids); Turner Electric (disconnect switches)
Aclara Technologies LLC St. Louis, Missouri 5 February 2018[24] Electricity meters, Smart meters, Advanced Metering Infrastructure, Smart Grid Monitoring sensors Added to Power segment

Operations

Hubbell designs, manufactures, and sells various product under three major sections which are Electrical Solutions and Utility Solutions.[1]

Electrical segment Lighting products Power segment
  • Cable reels
  • Wiring devices & accessories
  • Junction boxes
  • Plugs & receptacles
  • Cable glands & fittings
  • Switches & dinners
  • Datacom connectivity & enclosures
  • Connectors & tooling
  • Pin & sleeve devices
  • Specialty communications equipment
  • Floor boxes
  • Electrical motor controls
  • High voltage test systems
  • Ground fault devices
  • Steel & plastic enclosures
  • Mining communication & controls
  • Canopy lights
  • Parking lot/parking garage fixtures
  • Decorative landscape fixtures
  • Emergency lighting/exit signs
  • Bollards
  • Fluorescent fixtures
  • Floodlights & poles
  • Bath/vanity fixtures & fans
  • Ceiling fans
  • LED components
  • Chandeliers & sconces
  • Site & area lighting
  • Recessed
  • Surfaced mounted & track fixtures
  • Athletic & recreational field fixtures
  • Occupancy dimming & daylight harvesting sensors
  • Arresters
  • High voltage bushings
  • Grounding equipment
  • Cutouts & fuse links
  • Insulators
  • Programmable reclosers
  • Pole line hardware
  • Cable terminations & accessories
  • Sectionalizers
  • Helical anchors & foundations
  • Formed wire products
  • Lineman tools
  • Hoses & gloves
  • Overhead pad mounted & capacitor
  • Switches
  • Splices
  • Tapes & connections
  • Polymer concrete & fiberglass enclosures
  • Equipment pads

The utility segment markets products under the following brands:[1]

  • Aclara
  • Chance
  • Anderson
  • PenCell
  • Fargo
  • Hubbell
  • Polycast
  • Opti-loop Design
  • Quazite
  • Quadri*sil
  • Trinetics
  • Reuel
  • Electro Composites
  • USCO
  • CDR
  • RFL Design
  • Hot Box
  • PCORE
  • Delmar
  • Turner Electric
  • EMC
  • Longbow
  • Ohio Brass
  • Meramec
  • Reliaguard
  • Greenjacket
  • Armorcast
  • Beckwith Electric
  • Continental
  • R.W. Lyall
  • Gas Breaker
  • AEC
  • Ripley

The electrical solutions division markets products under the following brands:

  • Hubbell
  • BellRaco
  • Gleason Reel
  • ACME Electric
  • Kellems
  • TayMac
  • Hipotronics
  • Powerohm
  • EC&M Design
  • Bryant
  • Wiegmann
  • AccelTex Solutions
  • iDevices
  • Progress Lighting Design
  • Burndy
  • Killark
  • GAI-Tronics
  • Connector Products
  • Austdac
  • CMC
  • Hawke
  • Chalmit
  • PCX

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Hubbell Incorporated 2022 Form 10-K Annual Report". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  2. "Fortune 500 Companies: Hubbell". Fortune.
  3. U.S. Patent #774,250, Separable Attachment Plug
  4. U.S. Patent #565,541, Socket for Incandescent Lamps
  5. "Patent".
  6. "Patent".
  7. "Catalogue". worthpoint.com.
  8. Juliano, Michael C. (July 26, 2010). "Move comes with strong 2Q". Stamford Advocate.
  9. Prevost, Lisa (May 7, 2010). "Hubbell Plans Housing for Its Orange Site". The New York Times.
  10. 1 2 3 4 "Hubbell Inc, Form 10-K 1993". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  11. 1 2 "Hubbell Inc, Form 10-K 1995". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  12. "Hubbell Inc, Form 10-K 1996". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  13. 1 2 3 4 "Hubbell Inc, Form 10-K 1998". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  14. 1 2 "Hubbell Inc, Form 10-K 1999". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  15. 1 2 3 4 "Hubbell Inc, Form 10-K 2001". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  16. "About Us". Hubbell Incorporated.
  17. 1 2 "Hubbell Inc, Form 10-K 2006". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  18. "Hubbell Inc, Form 10-K 2007". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  19. 1 2 3 4 "Hubbell Inc, Form 10-K 2008". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  20. "Hubbell adds Varon Lighting Group to lighting business". ledsmagazine.com. January 2, 2009.
  21. "Hubbell Inc, Form 10-K 2009". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  22. 1 2 3 "Hubbell Inc, Form 10-K 2013". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  23. 1 2 "Hubbell Inc, Form 10-K 2014". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  24. "Hubbell Incorporated Completes Acquisition of Aclara Technologies LLC". Retrieved 15 October 2019.
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