Andrew J. Phillips Biography, Genesee County, Michigan This Biography extracted from “Portrait and Biographical Record of Genesee, Lapeer and Tuscola Counties, Michigan…”, published be Chapman Bros., Chicago (1892), p. 972-973 This copy contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives. ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/mi/mifiles.htm ************************************************ ANDREW J. PHILLIPS, one of the most prominent citizens of Fenton, and one of the leading manufacturers of the State, was born in Hartland Township, Livingston County, Mich., October 9, 1837. His father, Charles B. Phillips, who was a New York farmer, came to Michigan in 1835 and became a pioneer in Hartland Township. He is now spending his latter days in Fenton as he has passed his eightieth milestone. He was the son of a seafaring man who did a good mercantile business on the seas for some years. The mother of our subject bore the maiden name of Mary E. Morse. She became the mother of seven children. and died in 1850. Andrew was born in a log house which was erected by his father, and until the was seventeen attended the log schoolhouse but after that time was sent to the Union Schools at Milford. At the age of twenty he went to Calhoun County, where he worked for a pumpmaker, whose methods in machinery he was able to greatly improve. About the same time he was engaged for several years in operating a thresher during the season. In 1861 Mr. Phillips was married to Miss Julia Bullard, and the following year he removed to Milford, where he engaged in the manufacture of reapers and mowers in partnership with Wells Bros. As the machinery at that time was almost entirely of iron and steel, the complications following the Civil War impaired the success of his business, and he returned to the manufacture of pumps. He sold out his outfit in the fall of 1869 and came to Fenton, where he enlarged his business and purchased steam power, adding milk safes to his output. About this time he invented and made the first bent snow shovel ever made, and in his endeavor to perfect this invention he boiled the timber for the first shovel in a boiler in his own kitchen and thus was able to bend the wood. This novelty sold from the start and his trade in it increased until he sold seventy-five thousand a year. About this time he also invented a new style of adjustable window screens of which he now manufactures a large stock. In 1888 our subject organized the firm of A. J. Phillips & Co., with capital stock paid up, and took his two sons, Winfield B. and E. Ashley, and also his brother, Judson B., into the firm. They have several large buildings, the one built last year containing more than twenty-six thousand square feet of floor and another is four stories high with dimensions of 80x100 feet. From seventy-five to one hundred men are here constantly employed and the product of this establishment is shipped to every State in the Union. The young men of this firm are active and enterprising and each has charge of a separate department in the business. They manufacture goods to the extent of $150,000 annually and they utilize over fifty-thousand square feet of floor space. One million five hundred thousand feet of wire screening are used by them annually, and between three and four million feet of lumber. They employ traveling salesmen and pay over $10,000 a year in freights. “Not how much, but how well" is the motto of this firm, as is shown by the fact that they have the reputation of making the best goods in the market. They have a free library for_the use of their workmen and look after the interest of those who are their helpers. They have now four warehouses and have recently purchased seven acres of land, to be used for storage. The three children of our subject are Winfield B., E. Ashley and Harry T., and to each has been given a good commercial education. Mr. Phillips is a Republican in politics and was on the common council for several years, besides being a member of the Water Works Commission which put in the fine water works at Fenton. He has for a number of years been a member of the Masonic order. He visited in Europe at the time of the Paris Ex-position. In 1890 he erected one of the finest and most imposing residences in Genesee County. He is prominent and well respected and is a liberal contributor to any enterprise tending to the upbuilding of Fenton and his business is a great advantage in every way to the town. j