Westinghouse
The Westinghouse plant in Mansfield, OH began production in 1918, at first making only ranges and toasters, but soon grew to make a wide variety of large and small appliances. It eventually became the headquarters of the Westinghouse Appliance Division. Refrigerators, washers, dryers, water heaters, dishwashers, irons, electric skillets, waffle irons, and the famous Westinghouse Electric Roaster were also made there. Although vacuum cleaners and electric fans were made in another plant in Springfield, MA, they still said Mansfield, OH on the data plate.
Refrigerators, water heaters, and dishwashers were moved to another plant in Columbus, OH in the mid 50's. Small appliances were moved to a plant in Byesville, OH in 1967, then sold to Hamilton Beach/Scoville in 1970. Vacuum cleaners were last produced in the Springfield plant around 1970, about 3 years after the Convert-o-vac was introduced. A few years earlier, an upright that looked similar to a Regina brush-n-beat was introduced.
The entire Westinghouse Major Appliance Division was sold to White Consolidated Industries in 1975. I worked at the Mansfield plant on the dryer floor for about 6 months in 1977. By then the plant was only making washers, dryers, and ranges.
Jeff