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Author Topic: History of Weber, Chicago tribune article from 1990  (Read 1862 times)

pbe gummi bear

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History of Weber, Chicago tribune article from 1990
« on: July 12, 2013, 10:46:22 PM »
This is a great article on the history which tells a different side of the story.

http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1990-06-24/features/9002210657_1_weber-bros-mr-weber-weber-grill

He left Wood Dale in 1966 for Arlington Heights, then moved to the still- larger facility in Palatine in 1980, which employs 11 family members. The corporate wing today is remarkable chiefly for the number of barbecue grills in odd corners where other businesses might display plants.

A bright-red spanking new charcoal kettle is the centerpiece of the reception area. Mike Kempster Sr. has one of the original, podlike grills next to a copy of this year`s model in his office. Out in the secretarial area are several grills here and there, most notably a hideous lime green model attached to a serving cart with wheels.

``We don`t make these anymore,`` said Kempster, patting it on its offensive dome. ``In the 1970s we had a lot of bright yellows and bright greens because that was the trend in outdoor furniture. We follow the trends very carefully, we don`t dictate them. Today, we`re looking at the emergence of more gray and blue tones.``

The lime kettle was called ``The Gardener.`` The copper-colored kettle was ``The Warrior.`` Names for other colors and sizes of grill included ``The Statesman,`` ``The Gourmet,`` ``The Imperial,`` ``The Penthouse,`` ``The Fleetwood.``

In 1980, however, the company dropped nearly all the elegant designations for its charcoal grills because they had meaning only to the company salesmen who could keep them all straight. Instead Weber began using only four names:

``Bar-B-Kettle,`` for the basic model; ``One-Touch,`` the basic plus a cleaning device; ``Smokey Joe,`` for the tiny picnic model; and ``Ranch,`` for the jumbo grill that can cook 19 whole chickens at once.


Other interesting things:

The original wok was called the coolie pan.

Weber made an indoor exhaust system(!) so you can bbq inside.

The black porcelain is actually grey before it gets fired up. Perhaps the fading black is due to discrepancies when baking it.

Their gas kettles were a flop. No surprise there!

Kettles were nicknamed Sputnik due to their shape.

George Stephens was a sailor and tried to launch the galley que early on but it didn't pick up.
« Last Edit: July 12, 2013, 11:06:49 PM by pbe gummi bear »
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Chasing_smoke

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History of Weber, Chicago tribune article from 1990
« Reply #1 on: July 12, 2013, 11:38:26 PM »
Great story, lots of cool facts and insight into the company. My favorite quote was from the other competitor "what's shape got to do with cookin?!" Lol


 "my kettle is more powerful it will do almost anything."
MH Copper mist, Daisy Wheel P, Homer Simpson OTG, Blue 18, Blue Mastertouch, SJS, Genesis Sliver B, Red 18 Bar-b-q-kettle Pat Pending, Copper performer

Thin Blue Smoke

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History of Weber, Chicago tribune article from 1990
« Reply #2 on: July 13, 2013, 05:21:46 AM »
Very cool link! Thanks

Craig

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History of Weber, Chicago tribune article from 1990
« Reply #3 on: July 13, 2013, 06:29:02 AM »
Good read!

sparky

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Re: History of Weber, Chicago tribune article from 1990
« Reply #4 on: July 13, 2013, 06:31:24 AM »
Wheres this loading dock of bird feeders at ;D

vader06

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Re: History of Weber, Chicago tribune article from 1990
« Reply #5 on: July 13, 2013, 10:57:06 AM »
Cool story.  Thank for posting it.
Genesis Gold B, 18" WSM, 18" Yellow, 22" Blue OTG, 22" Lime MBH, 22"  Black SJ, Black Jumbo Joe Platinum and Red 22" LE.

jcnaz

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Re: History of Weber, Chicago tribune article from 1990
« Reply #6 on: July 14, 2013, 08:57:29 PM »
"A cow's worst nightmare"...
AWESOME!!>:D

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A bunch of black kettles
-JC