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Where The Arts Live In Santa Cruz
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Salz Leathers History Timeline
1856 Tannery built by James Duncan and William Warren.
1862 Tannery washed away by winter storms that flooded the San Lorenzo River.
1865 The 8-acre property is purchased by Anton Fischer and Wygand A. Mathew.
1866 Rebuilt San Lorenzo Tannery purchased by Prussian immigrant Jacob Kron.
1870 San Lorenzo Tannery is one of 10 in Santa Cruz County , which supplied more than 50 percent of all the saddle leather produced in the state.
1879 Kron dies; his eldest son manages the Kron Tannery Company.
1880s Tannery begins relationship with Kullman-Salz and Company.
1917 Tannery sold to Kullman-Salz and Company.
1919 to 1929 The firm runs tanneries in Santa Cruz , Benecia and San Francisco .
1929 Ansley K. Salz partners with Stuart Miller and Joseph Bellas, longtime plant managers.
1934 Plant catches fire that results in $200,000 damage.
1946 The tannery makes a traveling case for President Harry S. Truman.
1948 Norman Lezin marries Margaret Salz, daughter of Ansley K. Salz. Lezin joins the company as an apprentice.
1954 Lezin named tannery president at age 29. He is one of the youngest tannery executives in the country. In the same year, photographer Ansel Adams photographs the tannery and the tanning process at work. (Pictures available at the Salz Web site at www.salz.com) The same year, Salz Tannery gives a leather purse to each contestant in the Miss California pageant, then held in Santa Cruz . Lee Meriweather tours the plant during the pageant.
1970s Company merges with Beck Industries, a New York-based conglomerate.
1976 Tannery employee Larry Ramirez, 28, dies in toxic hydrogen-sulfide gas leak.
1977 A fire causes $10,000 damage. The same year, Lezin and a group of key tannery employees purchase the plant back from Beck Industries, which had filed for bankruptcy.
2001 Salz Leathers closes.


Sources: Sentinel archives, historian Carolyn Swift

 
© 2008 Tannery Arts Center