Type | Private |
---|---|
Founded | 1977 |
Headquarters | Columbia, Missouri |
Key people | Matt Fleming (President & CEO) |
Products | shooting, hunting, camping supplies gunsmithing accessories, fishing |
Revenue | 19,121,130 United States dollar (2019) |
Website | midwayusa |
MidwayUSA is a family-owned American retailer of various hunting and outdoor-related products. The company is headquartered in Columbia, Missouri, and sells in the continental United States. The company markets online.
History
Ely Arms, Inc., the original name of MidwayUSA, was a small start-up gun shop in Columbia, Missouri – opening on June 18, 1977. Larry Potterfield, with his next younger brother Jerry, opened the business in a 151 square metres (1,630 sq ft) metal, pole-frame building. Jerry sold his half interest to Larry in 1980 and returned home to farm.[1]
The mail-order division was started quite modestly later in 1977, with a small offering of ‘hand-made’ 8mm Japanese pistol ammunition and 25 Remington rifle ammunition. In 1980 Midway received the first shipment of what was to be a total production run of 500,000 rounds of 8mm Nambu brass, produced by B.E.L.L. Labs of Chicago.[2] Much of this brass was loaded into ammunition and can still be found at gun shows in a bright orange box. The first press releases were under the name Ely Arms, Inc., which turned out to be in conflict with the Eley Division of Kynoch Industry; the term Eley was trademarked. So the name Ely Arms, Inc. was changed to Midway Arms, Inc., to avoid the conflict. The name Midway comes from the small community of Midway, in which the business was originally located. The name MidwayUSA was adopted as a dba in April 1998. Starline Brass was just starting up in the mid-1970s and MidwayUSA became their first distributor of bulk pistol brass, and in turn, the grandfather of the bulk components business in the United States. Winchester began selling bulk components to MidwayUSA in 1984 and Remington came on board in 1987. The Volker-McClure act was passed in 1986, modifying the 1968 Gun Control Act to allow the sale of cartridge cases directly to the end consumer and MidwayUSA immediately changed their model from business to FFL, to also include business to consumer.
In 1987 Midway USA began adding other reloading products, the first of which was Lee Precision.
Computerization played a major role in the development of MidwayUSA; Potterfield had one computer class in college, and in 1982 he purchased the Company's first computer, an Apple III. In 1986 he bought the first IBM; in March 1987 they began networking their computers together.[3] All of this is the basis for the Information System and Website Management Departments at MidwayUSA today.
In 2014 MidwayUSA became an online-only retailer moving away from mail orders and the master catalog upon which the company was built.
Modern Management Practices
MidwayUSA is a proponent of the use of Modern Management Practices in business management. Modern Management Practices include Baldrige, Lean, ISO and Six Sigma. MidwayUSA received the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award in 2009,[4] 2015,[5] and 2021.[6] MidwayUSA is one of only eight organizations to earn the award three times since the first award cycle in 1988. The 2015 Baldrige National Quality Award was a follow-up to MidwayUSA's receipt of the Missouri Quality Award from the Excellence in Missouri Foundation in 2015, an award the organization also received in 2008.[7][8]
NRA support
Larry and Brenda Potterfield created two programs[9] and several educational endowments in the NRA Foundation. Brenda also served as the Vice President of the NRA Foundation's Board of Trustees. Since 1992, MidwayUSA has asked customers to round up the total of each order and donate the change to the NRA/ILA.[10]
References
- ↑ Potterfield, Larry. "How It All Got Started". MidwayUSA. Archived from the original on April 24, 2014. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
- ↑ Potterfield, Larry. "The 8mm Nambu Project" (PDF). Retrieved April 24, 2014.
- ↑ Potterfield, Larry. "How It All Got Started". MidwayUSA. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
- ↑ Newman, Michael (December 15, 2009). "Five Organizations Honored with 2009 Baldrige National Quality Award". National Institute of Standards and Technology. Retrieved November 30, 2015.
- ↑ "Announces Four Recipients of 2015 Baldrige Award". Office of Public Affairs. Department of Commerce. November 17, 2015. Retrieved November 30, 2015.
- ↑ louann.scott@nist.gov (November 5, 2021). "MidwayUSA 2021". NIST. Retrieved June 21, 2022.
- ↑ "CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR 2015 RECIPIENTS!". Excellence In Missouri. Excellence In Missouri Foundation. Archived from the original on December 8, 2015. Retrieved November 30, 2015.
- ↑ What effect has winning Malcolm Baldrige had on MidwayUSA? -- Interview with Larry Potterfield. YouTube. Archived from the original on December 10, 2021.
- ↑ "New NRA Gunsmithing Endowment" (Press release). National Rifle Association of America. November 2006. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
- ↑ "MidwayUSA tops $3 million in NRA donations" (Press release). MidwayUSA. September 2005. Retrieved September 16, 2007.