The Summitville Story
The
Summitville Story dates back to 1912 when a share of stock in the company
sold for 50 dollars, when shale and clay were dug by steam shovel, when
beehive kilns we re loaded by hand and fired by coal…and when the offices
of the Summit Brick Company were housed in the old abandoned C & P
Railroad Station.
F. H. Johnson
came to Summitville in 1920 and converted operations over to the
manufacture of face brick. Soon his Summitville Face Brick Co. was
flourishing…well known for its deep red colored bricks known as
“Summitville Reds”.
Following World War II, a second generation
joined the company. And by 1947, Fred
and Pete Johnson renamed the company Summitville Tiles and began to
produce quarry tile in a wide variety of colors and shapes. A second
quarry tile plant was purchased in 1965, doubling the company’s output.
 In 1980, Summitville Laboratories was
launched to produce a full line of tile installation materials…from latex
mortars and grouts to chemical resistant epoxies and seamless epoxy floor
systems, and more!
A
third generation of the Johnson family took the reigns of the company in
the mid 1980’s and today brothers Bruce and Dave Johnson are at the
helm. Under their
direction, the company is refocusing itself back to the core product lines
for which the company is best known: premium grade quarry tiles,
acid-resistant industrial floor brick, precision-cut thin brick and
installation materials that go with these product lines.
Efforts
are under way at the company to modernize and expand the output of kilns,
to enhance the shade control of the tile and brick products before they
are fired and to increase production flexibility…all to better serve the
customer.
 And new
product lines are in development…such as a new line of frost resistant
ceramic roof shingles, with all the trims. In conjunction with the development of
this new product line, Summitville has supplied roof shingles for a number
of installations…from the 1850’s Victorian home of Senator Mike DeWine to
several dormitories at Berry College near Atlanta, Georgia.
Summitville Tiles will celebrate its 95th
birthday in 2007…making it one of the nation’s oldest continuously
operating tile manufacturers and the only
surviving charter member of the industry’s national trade association, the
Tile Council of America. Summitville Tiles has withstood the test of
time. And, it is poised for a bright
future.
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