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  2. Shay Motors Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shay_Motors_Corporation

    Shay Motors Corporation was an automobile company founded by Harry J. Shay in February 1978 as the Model A & Model T Motor Car Reproduction Corporation. [1] Harry Shay arranged with Ford Motor Company to build a limited run, modern-day reproduction of the Ford Model A Roadster, with a rumble seat, that was to be sold through the network of Ford Automobile Dealers and built in Battle Creek ...

  3. Laurel Fork Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laurel_Fork_Railway

    The Laurel Fork Railroad locomotive roster included three 70-3 Shay geared steam locomotives, road numbers Nos. 1, 2, and 3 c/n 2390, 2391, and 2760, respectively. Two smaller Shays have been incorrectly identified by several authors as being owned by the Laurel Fork. Conversion work on c/n 187 was performed at their shops for another owner.

  4. Back painted glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Back_painted_glass

    Back painted glass is any form of clear glass that is painted from the back side and viewed from the front side, or "first surface" side. Back painted glass is widely used for architectural spandrel glass, colored glass walls for interior glazing, colored glass back splashes, glass markerboards and dry erase boards, colored glass counter tops, shower walls, artistic glass, auto glass, marine ...

  5. Libbey-Owens-Ford - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libbey-Owens-Ford

    Louis Gilles of Libbey-Owens-Ford helping to create the United States Declaration of Independence enclosure Advertisement for the Edward Ford Plate Glass Company in a 1905 Toledo Chamber of Commerce book

  6. Shay locomotive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shay_locomotive

    Ephraim Shay (1839–1916), was a schoolteacher, a clerk in an American Civil War hospital, a civil servant, a logger, a merchant, a railway owner, and an inventor who lived in Michigan. In the 1860s, he became a logger and wanted a better way to move logs to the mill than on winter snow sleds.

  7. Earl Scheib - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earl_Scheib

    Earl Scheib Auto Painting sign, Olympic Boulevard, Beverly Hills, California, 1991 Founded by Earl Scheib (February 28, 1908 – February 29, 1992) [2] in Los Angeles in 1937, [3] the company grew quickly following World War II and by 1975 had branches in Germany and England, all company-owned, with Scheib manufacturing his own paint through a wholly owned subsidiary.

  8. Pacific Architects and Engineers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Architects_and...

    [4] [7] Shay continued as chair, CEO, and sole shareholder of PAE until 1974 when 40 percent of the company was sold to an employee stock ownership program. [8] The program sold its shares back to Shay in 1988. [8] Following Shay's death in 1995, his son – Allen E. Shay – assumed control of the company as chairman and CEO. [9]

  9. Chaise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaise

    A chaise (/ ʃ eɪ z / shayz), sometimes called shay, is a light two-wheeled carriage for one or two people. It may also have a folding hood. It may also have a folding hood. [ 1 ] : 55 The coachmaker William Felton (1796) considered chaises a family of vehicles which included all two-wheel one-horse vehicles such as gigs and whiskies , whereas ...