Archive Record
Images
Metadata
Collection |
Waterloo Region Museum |
Object ID |
2018.011.003 |
Object Name |
Handbill |
Title |
Electrohome Large Screen Display Solution |
Description |
Handbill is printed on black, coated paper. The title is printed in colour along the upper edge and in white lettering along the lower. Also printed along the upper edge is "ECP 3000/High Brightness Data/Graphics Projection System". In the centre of the handbill is an image of a man doing a presentation using one of the projectors. There is a colour image of the projector and its remote in the lower right corner. "Full Zone/Digital/Convergence" is printed on a yellow oval with spikey edges to the left. A man's face is in the lower left corner. A business card is stapled to the upper right corner. It reads "Applied Electronics Limited/David Muscat/299 Evans Avenue/Toronto, Ont. M8Z 1K2". Handwritten in pencil on the card is "$700 per day/possibly $350 per day/Susan Stechly". The specifications and information about the projector are printed on the reverse of the handbill. |
Date |
1980 |
Date |
1985 |
History |
Electrohome Limited was an international manufacturer of home electronics, appliances, furniture, and high-tech commercial projection and display systems based in Kitchener, ON. In 1933, the company was formed by Arthur B. Pollock (1877-1951) under the name Dominion Electrohome Industries Limited. The company combined the assets of two of Arthur's companies - Pollock-Welker Limited and the Grimes Radio Corporation Limited. His son, Carl Arthur Pollock (1903-1978), was general manager. The company, known as Electrohome, had three manufacturing divisions - radio and communications, appliances and metal products, and furniture and woodworking. Electrohome became a publicly traded company in 1946. Electrohome produced a diverse range of consumer and commercial products, including furniture (brand name Deilcraft), fans, humidifiers, electric motors, stereos, televisions, and electric organs. In 1951, Carl became president and changed the organization to better manage the complex company. In 1967, the company name was officially changed to Electrohome Limited, and in 1969, Carl's son, John Albon Pollock (b.1936), became vice-president. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, Electrohome began to focus on commercial products, including specialized video and data display monitors. By the end of the 1980s, the company withdrew from manufacturing consumer products. In 1998, Electrohome was divided into Electrohome Limited and Electrohome Broadcasting Inc. The display and projection business was sold in 1997 and 1999, and in 2004 the last manufacturing plant and head office on Wellington Street was sold. In 2007 the company sold its trademarks and in 2008, the corporation's shares were cancelled and delisted. |
Search Terms |
Electrohome Limited |
People |
Muscat, David Stechly, Susan |
Creator |
Electrohome Limited |


