Supply House Times logo Supply House Times
search
cart
facebook instagram twitter linkedin youtube
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
Supply House Times logo Supply House Times
  • NEWS
    • ASA NEWS
    • Company News
  • PRODUCTS
    • Interactive Spotlights
  • COLUMNS
    • Natalie Forster: From the Editor
    • Alicia Branham: Marketing Matters
    • Brad Williams: Succession Planning
    • Melissa Rasico: Luxury Plumbing Lounge
    • Letter from ASA President
    • Guest Columnists
    • Safety Columnists
  • MARKETS
    • Codes & Legislation
    • Heating & Cooling
    • Industrial PVF
    • Plumbing
    • Radiant & Hydronics
    • Solar Thermal | Geothermal
    • Technology
    • Women in Industry
  • BATH & KITCHEN PRO
    • Bath & Kitchen News
    • Bath & Kitchen Products
  • SPECIAL EDITIONS
    • B.I.G. Book Directory
    • Premier 150
    • Rep Locator Directory
  • MEDIA
    • Podcasts
    • Videos
    • eBooks
    • Webinars
  • RESOURCES
    • Radiant Comfort Report
    • Industry Calendar
    • Industry Links
    • Custom Content & Marketing Services
    • Market Research
    • Supply House Times Store
  • EMAG
    • EMAGAZINE
    • ARCHIVE ISSUES
    • CONTACT
    • ADVERTISE
  • SIGN UP!
Market SectorsPlumbingHeating & Cooling

From automobiles to water heaters

A. O. Smith celebrates 150 years.

By Natalie Forster, Editorial Director
A. O. Smith's the Mechanical Marvel, the world’s first fully automated automobile frame assembly plant.

A. O. Smith unveils the Mechanical Marvel, the world’s first fully automated automobile frame assembly plant, capable of making 10,000 frames a day. The plant operated until 1958. Images courtesy of A. O. Smith

A. O. Smith engineers smelt mixed ingredients into a liquid mass under 2,000 degree (F) heat.

A. O. Smith engineers smelt mixed ingredients into a liquid mass under 2,000 degree (F) heat. This was one step toward glass-lined innovations

A. O. Smith's the Mechanical Marvel, the world’s first fully automated automobile frame assembly plant.
A. O. Smith engineers smelt mixed ingredients into a liquid mass under 2,000 degree (F) heat.
June 5, 2024
✕
Image in modal.

Once the provider of automobile frames to Henry Ford, a key player in the U.S. war effort and manufacturer of the very first glass lined water heater — A. O. Smith is celebrating 150 years in 2024. The company’s roots begin in 1874 as a skilled metalworker; C.J. Smith grew to become a major supplier of metal components for manufacturers of baby carriages and bicycles.

Carrying on the family business, Smith’s sons, Charles S., George H. and Arthur O., played an integral part in the automobiles revolution of the late 1890s. Arthur O. Smith engineered a new, lightweight pressed stele car frame and began selling them to major car manufacturers like Packard, Cadillac, Oldsmobile, Studebaker, Buick, Chevrolet and Ford. Soon after, more than 60% of new passenger cars in the states were built on an A. O. Smith frame.

The 150 years of A. O. Smith history is home to numerous fun facts and interesting anecdotes, but a favorite one of David Chisolm, vice president and general manager of APCOM, is the story of how the company planted its roots in Milwaukee in the first place.

C.J. Smith’s intention when emigrating from England was to move to New York and set up shop. Plans changed when he met a woman on the boat who was headed to Milwaukee. Smith changed his plans and headed to Milwaukee with his soon-to-be wife, and thus, A. O. Smith’s corporate headquarters was born.

A. O. Smith is a leading global water technology company

A. O. Smith remains committed to its work as a leading global water technology company.

A. O. Smith’s patented glass lined Permaglas Water Heaters.

A. O. Smith’s patented glass lined Permaglas Water Heaters.

According to Chisolm, A. O. Smith has long been known for saying “yes,” and figuring out how to make things happen.

“Henry Ford approached A. O. asking to make 10,000 automobile frames — a scale the company did not yet have the capacity to produce,” he says. “But the answer was ‘yes,’ and A. O. figured out how to make it happen.”

This grit has carried on through the company’s history. “We’ve stayed committed to using our engineering minds to solve hard problems,” Chisolm says. “Problem-solving innovation is part of our DNA as an organization.”

Branch into water heating

So how did a metalworking company branch into water heating? Well, it all started with a patent in 1936 on the glass lining process and connections to the brewing industry. A. O. Smith discovered how to glass-line steel and became the creator of the first glass-lined water heater.

“As mass production of beer expanded, brewers needed larger storage vessels,” Chisolm explains. “But the problem with large vessels is you would see corrosion and flavor exchange.”

A. O. Smith discovered that glass lining these vessels would solve these issues, but due to navigating The Great Depression, company leadership told engineers to halt glass lining to focus on the company’s core projects.

“The engineers were so close to cracking the code that they kept working on the glass lining project on their own time,” he says. “They ended up figuring it out and patenting the process.”

The dedication of these engineers ended up being the company’s Segway into water heating.

Reinvention

A. O. Smith has been involved in numerous industries and product sectors, many of which it was the largest producer of its time, as with automobile frames and bicycle frames. According to Chisolm, the company has never been afraid to reinvent itself or push for innovation to solve problems.

“We’ve never been afraid to reinvent the wheel,” Chisolm says. “As important as automobiles were to our business, we decided that wasn’t the core of who we wanted to be, so we spun that off and reinvented ourselves to focus on other industries.”

Charles J. Smith's small machine shop in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in 1874

Charles J. Smith opens a small machine shop in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in 1874, producing metal parts for baby carriages and other hardware specialties.

Henry Ford, left, and A. O. Smith, sit in a Ford built on an A. O. Smith frame.

Henry Ford, left, and A. O. Smith, sit in a Ford built on an A. O. Smith frame.

One example of this is A. O. Smith’s commitment to energy efficiency that, according to Chisolm, the company brought to market “before it was cool.”

“We’ve been into efficiency since the 1990s before it became the trend it is now,” he says. “We brought the first high-efficiency condensing commercial water heater, the Cyclone series, to market in the late 1990s.”

The company has also branched into water treatment via several acquisitions. “We’ve got a lot of expertise surrounding water treatment under our roof, and it’s exciting to see about the overlap between water treatment and water heating,” Chisolm says.

A. O. Smith recently launched its own design and engineered tankless product that doesn’t require annual maintenance — The Adapt Series.

“Something not talked about enough is that most of the U.S. has hard water, meaning our water heaters need annual maintenance to reduce scale buildup and product failure,” Chisolm says. “We used our water treatment/quality knowledge to create a tankless product from the ground up that doesn’t require annual maintenance.”

This tankless heater has integrated scale prevention and a heat exchanger with scale prevention. Innovations like this are examples of how the company is positioning itself has water technology experts in today’s marketplace.

Heat pump technology is taking off in the water heating space. According to Chisolm, A. O. Smith is “all in” on this technology.

“Standard electric water heaters are great, reliable products, and we will continue to make millions of them every year,” he says. “Heat pump technology isn’t new, but it’s starting to get more traction in the water heating sector, so we are working to educate on the annual cost-savings, benefits and installation of heat pump water heaters.”

An A. O. Smith display in China, built to help merchandise its products to Chinese consumers. A. O. Smith entered the Chinese market in 1995.

An A. O. Smith display in China, built to help merchandise its products to Chinese consumers. A. O. Smith entered the Chinese market in 1995.

A. O. Smith expanded into the Indian market in 2005.

A. O. Smith expanded into the Indian market in 2005.

A. O. Smith has been a leader in training and education for quite some time with numerous live streaming and on-demand resources for contractors. The company even began putting QR codes — prior to their resurgence due to the pandemic — on every water heater with any and all product information a contractor could need.

“We’re always looking to solve the problems or contractors face day in and day out with new product innovations,” Chisolm says. “Making their lives easier and giving them the ability to add value to their customers is what drives us every day.”

Although A. O. Smith is a publically traded company, member of the Smith family are still very much involved in the business.

“We have Smith family members on our Board and we have Arthur O. Smith IV on our product development team,” Chisolm points out. “We have roughly 12,000 employees globally and we are publically traded, but we have connections that allow us to remain true to the Smith family and make decisions that reflect that of a family business.”

A 150-year milestone is surely one to celebrate. According to Chisolm, the company plans to celebrate all year long.

“We’re doing equal parts celebrating our history, our employees, our innovation and our connections to the Smith family,” he says. “And ultimately it’s about staying true to our core values: We’re going to be a good place to work, be respectful, treat people with dignity all while focusing on innovation and growth.”

Chisolm says A. O. Smith loves talking about its history, but it doesn’t plan to stay there.

“We’re a 150 year-old-company but we’re still hungry,” he says. “We aren’t resting on our laurels. We’re motivated to drive change and leave things better than we found them.”

KEYWORDS: contractors plumbing industry water heaters water heating

Share This Story

Looking for a reprint of this article?
From high-res PDFs to custom plaques, order your copy today!

Natalie forster headshot 2025 200x200px
Natalie Forster is the director of communications for the American Supply Association (ASA), where she leads the association's public and media relations strategy, social media efforts, and member-focused online and print communications. Prior to joining ASA, she was the Editorial Director of Plumbing & Mechanical and Supply House Times. Before that, she served as an editor and digital content director for Southern Trade Publications, a publishing company focused on the PHCP trades and real estate industries. Natalie holds a bachelor's degree in communication studies from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

Recommended Content

JOIN TODAY
to unlock your recommendations.

Already have an account? Sign In

  • Stock financial index show successful investment on property business and construction industry with graph and chart for presentation and report background.

    2025 predictions: Twelve trends supply houses should know

    As 2024 ends, I’ll review last year’s predictions and...
    Market Sectors
    By: Brad Williams
  • Background of aerial view of Industrial container port part of shipping in nighttime with a blue overlay.

    2025 Next Gen ALL-STARS: Top 20 Under 40 PHCP-PVF Professionals

    The future of the PHCP-PVF industry is being shaped by a...
    Market Sectors
    By: Natalie Forster
  • Premier 150: The top PHCP-PVF Distributors of 2026

    Premier 150: The Top PHCP-PVF Distributors of 2026

    Combined revenue across this year’s Premier 150 once...
    Market Sectors
    By: Natalie Forster
Manage My Account
  • eMagazine
  • Newsletters
  • Manage My Preferences
  • Online Registration
  • Subscription Customer Service

More Videos

Popular Stories

Rob Micklus, Chris DellaSala, John McKeown and Bob DellaSala

2026 Manufacturers Rep of the Year: Keystone Sales & Associates

Commercial outlook tech looking at pipes

Commercial Market Outlook: Retrofit Projects Lead the Way

Price Increase Image

PHCP-PVF Price Increases: June 2026

2026 Premier Rankings

Events

December 30, 2030

Webinar Sponsorship Information

For webinar sponsorship information, visit www.bnpevents.com/webinars or email webinars@bnpmedia.com.

View All Submit An Event

Poll

Identifying Daily Time Loss Areas for Your Team

Where does your team lose the most time each day?
View Results Poll Archive

Products

The Water Came To A Stop

The Water Came To A Stop

See More Products

Download the FREE 2025 Water Conservation, Quality & Safety eBook

Download the Fifth annual Bath & Kitchen Pro eBook

Related Articles

  • American Standard Water Heaters announces 4-year warranty on commercial water heaters

    See More
  • American Standard Water Heaters electric heat pump water heaters

    American Standard Water Heaters electric heat pump water heaters

    See More
  • American Standard Water Heaters non-CFC foam-insulated water heaters

    American Standard Water Heaters non-CFC foam-insulated water heaters

    See More

Related Directories

  • Falsken Water Systems Inc.

    Home of the Heater Treater line of scale protection for tankless, tank, and solar hot water heaters. Wholesale Line of Quality water treatment systems for residential, commercial and food service applications. Drinking water systems, water softening, chlorine and chloramine-reduction units, lead reduction, filtration, UV, filters, housings, cartridges, consulting/specifying, sizing and correct process determination.
  • Major/Lozuaway & Associates

    We offer mini-split and other HVAC equipment for both, residential and commercial applications. We offer plumbing products from pipe, valves, toilets, and water heaters.
  • RepCo Sales LLC

    Whenever wholesale distributors in Illinois and Indiana need industry-leading plumbing, hot water heaters, boilers, circulators and HVAC equipment, they look to RepCo Sales, LLC. Our greatest strength as a company is our customer service, product knowledge, application knowledge and our expertise in plumbing, water heaters, hydronic equipment and HVAC equipment.
×

Stay in the know on the latest PHCP-PVF industry trends.

Get tailored content delivered your way.

JOIN TODAY!
  • RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Directories
    • Store
    • Want More
    • Plumbing & Mechanical
  • SIGN UP TODAY
    • Create Account
    • eMagazine
    • Newsletter
    • Customer Service
    • Manage Preferences
  • SERVICES
    • Marketing Services
    • Reprints
    • Market Research
    • List Rental
    • Survey/Respondent Access
  • STAY CONNECTED
    • LinkedIn
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • X (Twitter)
  • PRIVACY
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY

Copyright ©2026. All Rights Reserved BNP Media, Inc. and BNP Media II, LLC.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing