28 F
West Bend

Throwback Thursday | Nancy Mehring models pots and pans for the West Bend Company in 1958

1800389_1512093765739586_9207208458690019479_n
July 7, 2018 – West Bend, WI – If you live in West Bend or Washington County chances are you have a family member or two that worked for the West Bend Company.

It was one of the largest employers in the community as entire families would be on the lines manufacturing aluminum cookware or electrical appliances. The West Bend Company was a place where men met their wives, where their children worked and their children.

In 2010 the West Bend Co./Regal Ware Museum held an open house as part of a year-long celebration. Mixed in with the pots and pans were murals that traced the timeline and marketing of the cookware along with the changing roles of women.

Nancy Mehring -1958-1
‘In the 1950s the wife was depicted as the queen of the house but with limited independence. Women were to be devoted to house, husband and family.’

Pictured beneath the short description was a woman, sitting on the floor amidst pots and pans wearing a simple teal blue dress with white piping and pearl earrings.

That woman was Nancy Mehring, a volunteer at the open house wearing the same outfit from when the photo was taken in 1958.

“It was 60 years ago and I was like a girl sitting there dreaming about getting married,” said Mehring recalling her inspiration.

Mehring started work at the West Bend Company when she was 17, in high school and her last name was Furger.

“I was in the wholesale and premium division. I worked for Harold Ziegler, Bernie Ziegler, Allan Kieckhafer, Bob Claus and Harry Haugen as a stenographer and office gal or secretary until I earned enough money to go to college,” she said.’

SeeOurHistory2
Back in the day the West Bend Company was in its prime; 1,100 people worked in the factory and police were needed to direct traffic at the intersection along Hwy 33 when shift changes occurred at 3:30 p.m.

Families were the bedrock of the workforce at the West Bend Company. Mehring’s father Ed Furger worked at the company as did her Aunt Ann Rossman, Aunt Loretta Furger Paasch, and Aunt Rita Schwinn.

Mehring’s brief modeling career started at the West Bend Company as industry leaders were trying to toe the bottom line.

“West Bend Company tried to keep prices down and they used staff for the photos and booklets,” said Mehring. The photos were taken in the company’s test kitchen. Mehring made about $1 an hour and said there were no fringe benefits and her dress was simply what she wore to work. “I think I got this at J.C. Penny’s,” she said, the dress now faded a bit to a soft, powder blue.

Kitchen Craft and Lustre Craft were big products at the time for the West Bend Company which placed ads nationally in newspapers across the country and Modern Bride magazine.

Mehring has a scrapbook of clippings of the ad including one that ran in an Iowa newspaper.

Nobody ever saw the ads in West Bend, the only way people in town may have caught Mehring in print was if they bought the cookware; her photo, pleasantly flipping hamburgers on a stove filled with Kitchen Craft stainless steel cookware, was on the front of the cookbook included with each piece.

Exterior

Machinery  photo courtesy Terry Becker.

Cast Iron Luxury Living
cast iron
Cast iron

1 COMMENT

  1. Nancy is my first cousin and she is as beautiful as she was back in the 50’s
    Pat Rossman Meisenheimer

Leave a Reply

Work or the content on WashingtonCountyInsider.com cannot be downloaded, printed, or copied. The work or content on WashingtonCountyInsider.com prohibits the end user to download, print, or otherwise distribute copies.

Subscribe

FREE local news at Washington County Insider on YouTube

Related Articles