Archive

A Digital Archive · 1961–1998

The workers, managers, and community of Uniroyal Chemical in Naugatuck, Connecticut — told through company newsletters and press clippings.


660+ Documents
37 Years Covered
8,500+ People Named

About This Archive

This collection preserves the internal newsletters and newspaper clippings of the Naugatuck Chemical Division of Uniroyal — later Uniroyal Chemical Company — one of the largest employers in western Connecticut for most of the twentieth century.

The company newsletters — CHEM-TEXTS (1967–1980), ChemWorld (1990–1991), and The Flagship (1998) — reported on retirements, safety awards, bowling leagues, and suggestion plan winners. Read between the lines and you find the texture of daily life in an American factory town: who was promoted, who retired after forty years, which departments were growing and which were quietly disappearing.

Hundreds of newspaper clippings from the Naugatuck Daily News, Waterbury Republican, and other regional papers tell the public side of the story — strikes, contract negotiations, environmental concerns, and the slow unraveling of an industrial economy.


A Brief Chronology

1892
Nine rubber companies in Naugatuck consolidate to form the United States Rubber Company. The chemical division grows alongside tire manufacturing.
1961
U.S. Rubber rebrands as Uniroyal, Inc. The Naugatuck plant operates as a company town — sponsoring Little League teams, running a credit union, and publishing employee newsletters.
1967
A major strike led by the URW shuts down the plant — the single most documented event in this collection, with over 200 related clippings. CHEM-TEXTS newsletter launches the same year.
1970s
Ongoing labor tensions, additional strikes, and the beginning of economic headwinds. The plant navigates between worker demands and corporate cost pressures. Safety culture and environmental awareness begin to evolve.
1980s
Restructuring and decline. Uniroyal merges tire operations with B.F. Goodrich (1986). The chemical division is spun off. Workforce reductions accelerate. A significant gap in the archive reflects the turbulence of the era.
1990s
The chemical company attempts reinvention through quality programs and new management. The Flagship (1998) chronicles the final chapter of company publishing at the Naugatuck plant.

Why This Matters

The Uniroyal Chemical story is not unique — thousands of plants, in hundreds of American industrial towns, experienced parallel trajectories of growth, pride, struggle, and loss. What makes this archive unusual is its completeness: decades of internal newsletters and press coverage, preserved and digitized, that let us see how transformation was experienced rather than just measured.

For historians, the collection offers rich material on labor relations, corporate communication, workplace safety, and the changing American social contract. For former workers and community members, these are memory and evidence — proof that their work mattered and that the plant shaped lives in profound ways.


About This Project

This digital archive was created to support research into the evolution of corporate social contracts in American industry. The original documents — scanned from physical newsletters and newspaper clippings — have been processed using AI-assisted OCR to make their contents searchable and accessible.

The archive is an ongoing project. If you have documents, photographs, or memories related to Uniroyal Chemical in Naugatuck, we would love to hear from you.