formerly (until 1958) Allied Chemical & Dye Corporation, or (195881) Allied Chemical Corporation, or (198185) Allied Corporation American corporation, a leading manufacturer of aerospace systems and components. Headquarters are in Morristown, N.J. The corporation was formed in 1920 in the consolidation of several chemical manufacturers; the Barrett Company (founded 1903), supplying coal-tar chemicals and roofing; General Chemical Company (founded 1899), specializing in industrial acids; National Aniline & Chemical Company (founded 1917), producing dyes; Semet-Solvay Company (founded 1894), manufacturing coke and its by-products; and Solvay Process Company (founded 1881), producing alkalies and nitrogen materials. In the 1940s these companies were transformed into divisions of Allied Chemical. There were further reorganizations and acquisitions of companies and plants during the 1950s, '60s, and '70s, and Allied became a conglomerate. In 1982 the company acquired Bendix Corporation, a manufacturer of automotive and aerospace equipment. In 1985 Allied merged with Signal Companies, a major aerospace and engineering firm, to form Allied-Signal Inc., in a transaction that was the largest industrial merger to that time. In 1986 Allied-Signal spun off about 35 of its diverse subsidiary operations into a new and separate company so that the parent corporation could concentrate on its growing aerospace electronics, and automotive operations.
ALLIED-SIGNAL INC.
Meaning of ALLIED-SIGNAL INC. in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012