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During the
Vietnam War, Mercury made the hinges and hasps for a million
ammunition boxes. Each
kit required 12 stampings. When
people asked Jack's wife, Evelyn, what Mercury built, she told
them sky hooks and skeleton closets.
"We made the hooks that went on the winches on the
helicopters, and then made the cabinets that the skeletons went in
which were made in Gatesville at Medical Plastics," Jack
said. One of Jack's
projects over the years included manufacturing play money - an
endeavor that almost got him into trouble with the law.
In the 1950s, Jack, his brother, Herbert Richards, Wallace Rusch
and Rudy Nails started a company called Texatoy to make play
money, hobby horses, sheriff's badges and spinning ropes.
The play money included a copper penny.
They were careful not to make the penny the same size as a
real penny, in compliance with the law, but unbeknownst to them,
the play copper penny was the same size as the New York City
subway tokens. "One
day, two of the biggest guys I ever saw came in with guns and
badges, from the Treasury Department, and confiscated all the
copper for making the coins, and all the coins we had," Jack
said. The company was
paying women to package the money in their homes, and all of those
packages had to be unpacked, as well. "It was scary,"
Jack said. "We
thought, 'Oh, we're in big trouble.'"
Today Mercury Tool fills a complex of six buildings.
At peak times, it employs more than 90 workers, and true to
Jack's vision, the company remains diverse.
"We do welding, precision machining, precision sheet
metal, stamping, tool and die and assembly work.
We make motor houses for DC motors and will be making AC
motor housings shortly." The list goes on: Round mirrors on
UPS trucks, chairs for Superior Chaircraft, book boxes for school
desks, pumps and valves. Recently,
Mercury got an order for 1.7 million sample chips for Wilson
Plastics. Jack's son Jack is vice president of manufacturing
for Mercury; Bob is plant manager; and Janice is human resources,
payroll and insurance. Richard
has his own business interests now - from used building materials
and insulation installation to multi-level nutritional marketing -
but for years he operated Mercury's go-cart shop.
The machines at Mercury today differ greatly from those the
company started with 50 years ago.
Employees now tend to be technicians rather than true
machinists, Jack said. "The
work ethic has changed over the years - loyalty, and I think the
desire to do something well," Jack said. "Before, we
always figured we could do it faster or better."
Jack still enjoys the daily challenge of working at
Mercury. "I
think I'm pretty good at what I do," he said.
"I take the whole project.
Like this last one I took, I found the punch press, we
designed and built the die, we buiilt an automatic robot to feed
it through a rolling machine, we built the twin spindle welder,
and then tooled the expander to make a motor shell."
"When you figure 60 years in the business, if I don't
know it now, I better quit," Jack laughs.
In 1985, Evelyn had a heart attack, followed by
double bypass surgery in 1992.
She lost the use of half of her heart, and gradually
congestive heart failure took over.
She died June 30, 1998, at the breakfast table in their
home on Crestwood Drive, where she and Jack had lived for nearly
30 years and were
looking forward to celebrating their 60th anniversary in
September. "She was a very spiritual woman," Jack
said. "She held
out for everybody to come to the Lord.
She was always super-sensitive.
She thought of everyone else before herself.
And that kind of inspires you."
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