Honeywell Thermostat
Credit: Photo by Moja Msanii on Unsplash

The company eventually known as Honeywell began in 1885 with Albert Butz’s invention of the “damper flapper.” The flapper opened a damper that allowed outside air to enter a coal-fired home furnace. This increased the oxygen in the furnace and made the fire burn hotter. When the temperature rose to a desired point, the damper closed.

Butz, a Swiss immigrant who had moved to St. Paul in 1881, patented the device. In 1886 he founded the Butz Thermo-Electric Regulator Company in Minneapolis.

Two years later, Butz left the business, but his patents were retained for its use. In 1888 it was renamed the Consolidated Temperature Controlling Company. Andrew Robbins (the namesake of Robbinsdale) became company president in 1889.

William. R. Sweatt, a Minneapolis businessman, joined the company and by 1900, he owned all of it. By then the name had changed again to the Electric Heat Regulator Company.

Sweatt’s thermostats were stamped with “Electric Heat Regulator Co” in the form of a semicircle. The first three words formed the arc and the last one appeared within the circle. Underneath the semicircle were the words “Minneapolis, Minn.” Because the company often received letters addressed to “The Minneapolis Heat Regulator Company,” in 1912 Sweatt renamed the firm yet again.

Between 1888 and 1937, the company evolved. It moved from making one thermostat and one motor to producing more than three thousand control devices and holding a thousand patents. When Sweatt’s sons, Harold. W. and Charles. B., turned eighteen, they were named company directors.

Meanwhile, by the 1920s, Mark Honeywell’s Wabash, Indiana-based plumbing company was succeeding in the heating-oil business. At the time, oil was replacing coal as the preferred fuel for heating homes.

In 1927 the Minneapolis Heat Regulator Company merged with Honeywell Heating Specialties. The new firm, the Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Company, was based in Minneapolis. Harold. W. Sweatt became its president in 1934.

In 1941 engineer Carl Kronmiller and industrial designer Henry Dreyfuss created a round-shaped home thermostat. The project, however, was shelved because of World War II. The Round was introduced to the public in 1953, when Minneapolis-Honeywell was seeking a new product to increase sales.

The T-86 Honeywell Round thermostat — known simply as The Round — was easy to make, easy to use, and easy to identify. Sales to both contractors and homeowners soared.

Minneapolis-Honeywell offered The Round in various shades, to match wall colors. In 1960 a day-night version was introduced. It featured a windup timer for semiautomatic lowering of temperature at night. By 1966, customers could buy a model that controlled both heating and cooling.

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According to Jeffrey L. Rodengen’s 1995 company history The Legend of Honeywell, about one million units of The Round were sold each year. The Round has also been widely praised as a fine example of modern industrial art. It was featured in a 1997 exhibition of Henry Dreyfuss’s work at the Smithsonian Institution’s Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum in New York. It remains part of the Smithsonian’s collection.

In 1963 the company’s name changed to Honeywell. The group became involved in aerospace, turbochargers, computing, and military weaponry as well as electrical controls. It later shed some of these divisions through new acquisitions and mergers.

In 1999 Honeywell merged with AlliedSignal. Its headquarters moved from Minneapolis to Morristown, New Jersey. The new company kept the name Honeywell because of its strong brand recognition — due in no small part to the enduring popularity of The Round.

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