dysonman1
Well-known member
Filtex started life in Jackson, Michigan with their first cleaner in 1937. Mr. Hoppe was alive then. The machines were sold door to door and caught on quickly since the filtex tank was on wheels where electrolux was on runners. It used a Black and Decker motor (which would become Lamb).
After Mr. Hoppe died, his wife moved the company to LA. Still sold by door to door salesmen, the Filtex never quite got as popular as other tank cleaners. The first instruction manual talked about germs and bacteria and how the filter (fiberglass) could stop their spread.
The Filtex Company in LA made war items during World War II and got back into vacuums in 1946 like everyone else. They used a smaller amount of aluminum due to the cardboard tank, and had no problem going back into peacetime production.
By the end of the 1950's the lack of change to the cleaner combined with the rise of discount stores and the wariness of the housewife to door to door salesmen, plus the rise of "buying clubs" (which is what EMDEKO was) made sales slip. Interstate Engineering (Compact) and Filtex, plus White Sewing Machine made items to be sold by EMDEKO buying clubs.
After Mr. Hoppe died, his wife moved the company to LA. Still sold by door to door salesmen, the Filtex never quite got as popular as other tank cleaners. The first instruction manual talked about germs and bacteria and how the filter (fiberglass) could stop their spread.
The Filtex Company in LA made war items during World War II and got back into vacuums in 1946 like everyone else. They used a smaller amount of aluminum due to the cardboard tank, and had no problem going back into peacetime production.
By the end of the 1950's the lack of change to the cleaner combined with the rise of discount stores and the wariness of the housewife to door to door salesmen, plus the rise of "buying clubs" (which is what EMDEKO was) made sales slip. Interstate Engineering (Compact) and Filtex, plus White Sewing Machine made items to be sold by EMDEKO buying clubs.