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'''C. Russell Feldmann''' (1898 - [[Greenwich, Connecticut]], December 13 1973) was an American businessman who in the 1930s built up a large conglomerate based on [[automobile radio]]s. His first company, Winton Engine Company, was sold to [[Alfred P. Sloan]] and later became the diesel division of General Motors Corporation. His second company Automobile Radio Corporation, grew into National Union Electric Corporation which included non-automobile divisions including Eureka Williams Company, Emerson Quiet Kool, and Napco Plastics and Advanced Science.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/1973/12/14/archives/c-russell-feldmann-75-dies-national-union-electric-head.html?_r=0 C. Russell Feldmann, 75, Dies; National Union Electric Head]</ref>
'''C. Russell Feldmann''' (1898 - [[Greenwich, Connecticut]], December 13 1973) was an American businessman who in the 1930s built up a large conglomerate based on [[automobile radio]]s. His first company, Winton Engine Company, was sold to [[Alfred P. Sloan]] and later became the diesel division of General Motors Corporation. His second company Automobile Radio Corporation, grew into National Union Electric Corporation which included non-automobile divisions including Eureka Williams Company, Emerson Quiet Kool, and Napco Plastics and Advanced Science.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1973/12/14/archives/c-russell-feldmann-75-dies-national-union-electric-head.html?_r=0 C. Russell Feldmann, 75, Dies; National Union Electric Head]</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 04:20, 25 August 2017

C. Russell Feldmann (1898 - Greenwich, Connecticut, December 13 1973) was an American businessman who in the 1930s built up a large conglomerate based on automobile radios. His first company, Winton Engine Company, was sold to Alfred P. Sloan and later became the diesel division of General Motors Corporation. His second company Automobile Radio Corporation, grew into National Union Electric Corporation which included non-automobile divisions including Eureka Williams Company, Emerson Quiet Kool, and Napco Plastics and Advanced Science.[1]

References