Midway USA
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From time to time I am asked to relate how
MidwayUSA got its start. Most people think it was a great
stroke of genius, but it wasn't. Simply stated, the beginning
of the Company was a little bit of dream and a lot of
circumstance.
From my earliest days I was interested in guns, shooting and
hunting. I have great memories of being with my dad Gilbert,
while he hunted and hunting with him when I was old enough. We
hunted mostly rabbits, squirrel, quail and raccoon. Dad had a
Remington Model 12, 22 caliber pump that I restocked in high
school woodworking class and a Belgium made, 12 gauge
hammer-type double-barrel shotgun. Later on, he bought a Marlin
30/30 as the whitetail deer herd in Missouri flourished. My
first gun was a Stevens 12 gauge single-shot, handed down from
my older brother Marion, on my 13th Christmas.
We were a family of eight, living in rural northeast Missouri
(near Ely) and didn't have much money. Reflecting back, Dad's
subscription to Outdoor Life must have been a Christmas
present. I read every issue as a teenager, reveling at the
exploits of Jack O'Connor and the "This happened to me" page.
Somewhere I got a Shooter's Bible, again probably for
Christmas. What a marvel this was for a poor country teenager.
I fell in love with Browning guns, though it would be years
before I owned one.
While attending the University of Missouri, I
was introduced to skeet by a friend from back home. I
loved breaking clay targets and it was a good opportunity
to be around guns. I bought a Remington 870 12 gauge with
an improved cylinder barrel, for $112.50. It was a
wonderful gun and I shot my first 25 straight with it.
Brenda and I were married in 1970. We bought her an 870 20
gauge, with a skeet barrel for $116.25. There was no real
gun shop in Columbia, but I got to know a local gunsmith
named Bill Morgan and regularly visited the few stores
that carried guns.
I joined the Air Force in 1971, after finishing my degree in
business. My first duty assignment was Blytheville Air Force
Base, Arkansas. Here I got to know John Baregi at the base
firing range and helped set up the base Rod and Gun club where
we built a modest trap range. I made a friend named Truman
Wilson, who was also in the Air Force. Truman had a Federal
Firearms License and was instrumental in my getting one about
1973. Brenda and I shot skeet regularly at the police
department skeet range. When I turned 21, a Smith & Wesson
Model 39 in 9mm was my first purchase. Standing at seven yards
from a standard upper-torso target, I could barely keep the
bullets in the cardboard. This was my first experience with a
handgun.
In 1972, I read a letter to the editor from the July
Guns&Ammo. It mentioned a man named George Spence, who
lived in Steele, Missouri about 12 miles from Blytheville.
George was recommended as a source of 8mm Japanese pistol
ammunition.
I desperately wanted to meet a man important enough to get his
name in Guns&Ammo, so I called Mr. Spence. Brenda and I
went to visit him a few days later and my life was again
changed forever. As it turned out, George was a locksmith
working on the Air Force Base, only a few hundred yards from
the building I worked in. Later, when Brenda and I moved to
Steele, George and I carpooled back and forth to the base on
most days. George was the most knowledgeable person I had ever
met in the areas of guns, bullet casting, reloading and wildcat
cartridges. There is no telling how many hours George and I
spent together, him working and my hanging around asking
questions and learning. George was kind enough to loan me some
of his fine Hensley and Gibbs four, six and ten cavity bullet
moulds when I began to learn bullet casting. I also bought a
7mm Mauser rifle from George that he helped me make up some
brass for. We shortened and reformed 30/06 military as new 7mm
Mauser brass was very expensive and hard to find.
The most intriguing thing that George did was
to make 8mm Japanese Nambu pistol cartridges and lots of
them. He used military 38 Special brass and the process
was about like this: 1) shorten the case about 1/4" using
a modified copper tubing cutter; 2) turn the rim down to
about .410 on an old Sears lathe; 3) size the neck down
from about .375 to about .345; 4) cast the bullets, lube
and size, 5) load the ammunition, package and ship. How
fascinating! My cousin Charlie had a Type 14 Nambu pistol.
I got a box of ammo for him from George and we shot it off
his deck one Sunday afternoon. This wasn't good
ammunition. It was too small in the body (some cases would
split) and it didn't feed well through the magazines of
the Type 14 and Type 94 Japanese pistols. It was, however,
the only 8mm Japanese Nambu ammunition being produced for
the thousands of service pistols the American GIs brought
back from the Pacific Theater after World War II. The base
diameter of 8mm Nambu is about .410 and it could be better
made from 30 Remington brass, or 30/30 brass with the rim
turned off, as the base diameter is about the same. This
didn't matter to George. He had an inexpensive source of
38 Special brass, but didn't have any 30 Remington or
30/30 brass to spare.
Brenda
and I left Blytheville in July of 1974, just after our
son Russell was born. We spent three months at school in
Texas, then on to the next duty assignment at Ellsworth
Air Force Base in Rapid City, South Dakota. I was a
Lieutenant now and had considerably more flexibility with
my time. In Rapid City, I was introduced to prairie dog
hunting (shooting) by Ron Burnside, a friend at work.
What a blast! It was in Rapid City that all of the
shooting, hunting and gun trading made me realize that I
wanted to run a gun shop, when my three year active duty
commissioning time was up and I got back to Missouri.
With the gun shop idea firmly in my mind, in the spring of
1976, I invited my younger brother Jerry to join the proposed
new venture. He agreed and the next fifteen months were full of
planning and anticipation. Brenda and I left Rapid City on May
13, 1977, with our two children Russell and Sara. Upon arriving
in Columbia, we viewed the building lot for the first time.
This was located on Old Highway 40, about a mile west off of
Interstate 70, at the Midway exit. The site preparation had
been completed, but no other building work had been done.
Thirty-five days later, on June 18, 1977, we opened the gun
shop for business under the trade name Ely Arms, Inc., named
after the community of Ely, Missouri, population 26, before we
left.
The Ely Arms, Inc., gun shop was a real gun shop, 1,632 square
feet of new and used long guns, handguns and shooting and
reloading supplies. Jerry and I had put our gun collections
into inventory as part of our equity, so we started with 50 or
60 used guns. We had worked hard to find Smith & Wesson
handguns and found three or four sympathetic wholesalers. It
was a great beginning. Sales for the period June 18 through
December 31, 1977 were $168,000. Most gun shops today are
"hunter" based rather than "shooter" based; that is, they cater
to hunters rather than shooters. Ely Arms, Inc., catered to
shooters, but also did a good business with hunters in the fall
of the year.
One of the used guns that Jerry put into our inventory for sale
was a Remington Model 8 semi-automatic rifle in 25 Remington.
As it turned out, this gun helped shape our future. At that
time, Hodgdon Powder Company also had a distribution business
for most brands of guns and supplies. In the fall of 1977, we
got a flyer from Hodgdon that listed some Remington ammunition
in caliber 30 Remington. This was surplus police ammunition
with a 170 grain full metal jacket bullet, in white boxes, for
use in Remington Model 8 rifles in 30 Remington. The offered
price of $2.00 per box of 20.
Always trying to find an angle, I remembered that 8mm Nambu
could be made from this brass and we still had the Remington
Model 8 in 25 Remington on the rack, asking about $250 for it,
with no ammo and no takers. I convinced Jerry that we should
buy some of this 30 Remington ammo and make some "good" 8mm
Nambu ammunition and some 25 Remington ammunition that we could
sell in a Shotgun News ad. We ordered in a couple of thousand
rounds of this ammo, 8mm Nambu forming and loading dies and 25
Remington loading dies. The 25 Remington ammo was a no-brainer.
We pulled the bullets, dumped the powder and worked up a load
using the same powder that would cycle the Remington Model 8
using Hornady 117 grain round nose bullets.
The 8mm Nambu was a real project. We needed to shorten the
cases, but didn't have a lathe. My brother Marion was an
engineer and he recommended a three-inch jewelers saw on an
arbor in our drill press. Jerry modified a Lyman mould block to
allow the lube groove of the mold to catch the extractor groove
on the 30 Remington case. He bolted one-half of the mould to
the indexing table on our drill press, and with the handles on,
clamped the case in the mould. We cut off of the several
thousand 8mm Nambu cases with this outfit. George loaned us his
Hensley & Gibbs four-cavity moulds that made a beautiful
100 grain cast lead bullet. Cousin Charlie loaned us his Nambu
pistol for load development. There was a company in Minnesota
that advertised ammunition boxes and the project was
rolling.
We got lots of calls for 8mm Nambu from our ad in Shotgun News
but there was a limited supply of the 30 Remington ammo. We
started looking for someone to make Nambu brass. We attended
the NSGA show in Chicago during early 1978, looking for someone
who would make 8mm Nambu cases for us. I inquired at the
Federal booth and they referred me to B.E.L.L. (Brass Extrusion
Labs, Ltd.) of Bensenville, IL. Both B.E.L.L. and Ely Arms were
naive enough to enter into a contract for production of 500,000
8mm Nambu cases, with delivery to begin about six months later.
Actual delivery of the 8mm Nambu brass began in February 1980,
about 18 months past due.
We did some advertising and a press release for 8mm Nambu in
the summer of 1978, as we expected delivery by that time. A
letter arrived from some attorneys in New York City, who
represented the Eley division of Kynoch Industries. They felt
that Ely in the ammunition business infringed on their Eley
trademark and asked us to cease and desist. At that time we
changed the name to Midway (named after the Midway community
that our shop was located in). We immediately trademarked the
Midway name so we wouldn't have to pay for the same ground
twice.
While the Nambu project was going together, we were referred to
Starline Brass (at that time in California) to do some part of
the project. They said "No!", but suggested that "Midway"
should buy and resell their newly made 357 Magnum brass.
Starline had been formed by some of the previous owners of
Sierra Bullets after the Leisure Group purchased Sierra in
1968. They had always wanted to make brass and now with time
and money on their hands could give it a try. Bob Hayden,
president of Starline, said they would put the Starline
headstamp on the brass, which was fine with us, but if we would
purchase 200,000 pieces they would put the Midway headstamp on
at no extra charge. We gave them a purchase order for 200,000
pieces and 357 Magnum brass became the first product to bear
the "Midway" name in 1979. We couldn't know it at the time, but
the 357 Magnum brass, which was a spin-off of the Nambu
project, would be the idea that really launched the Midway
Company. Midway sold millions of rounds of Starline-produced
Midway brand brass each year. It was Midway's offering of
Starline-produced brass that coaxed Winchester into the bulk
component market in 1984 and Remington to join in 1986. Midway,
with the help of others, is given credit with starting the bulk
component business, as we know it today.
We needed a box for the new production 8mm Nambu ammo and
didn't have much of an idea where to start. Somewhere along the
line brother Jerry plugged some sample ammo into a 38 Special
Styrofoam tray. It was a little tight, but it did work. We were
able to track down the manufacturer of Winchester 38 Special
Styrofoam trays. They sold us the "rejects" from the Winchester
production. These trays weren't dense enough (too light) to
meet Winchester's requirements, but suited ours just fine.
Hornady (who was making the 8mm Nambu bullets for us) gave us
the name of the company that they got their bullet boxes from
and we ordered the outside carton from them. We began shipping
8mm Nambu ammunition in April of 1980.
My brother Jerry longed to move back home and farm, so in March
of 1980, he sold his interest in Midway to Brenda and me, moved
back to northeast Missouri and bought a farm.
In the summer of 1980, remembering how much trouble we had in
boxing the 8mm Nambu, we had the idea that maybe Midway should
offer a line of empty ammunition boxes. We had a source of
Styrofoam and a source of outside cartons. In October of 1980,
Midway began offering boxes of 100 cartridge boxes in three
sizes: CB-01 for 9mm & 38 wadcutter, CB-02 for 38
semi-wadcutter and CB-03 for 357 Magnum. This was the third
product to bear the Midway name, which is still embossed on the
end flap of our plain white outside boxes.
We were selling a lot of 357 Magnum and other
new brass and we had a customer in Lancaster, California
that ran up about $1,500 in bad checks. We sued for
payment, but I had to make a court appearance in
Lancaster. As long as I was going to be in Lancaster, I
visited the Starline plant for the first time to see where
all of the Midway brass was made. Bob Hayden suggested
that I should visit Berry's Bullets, a few miles away in
Fountain Grove. They were a large producer of cast/swaged
bullets and Bob thought that perhaps Midway could be a
distributor. While there, Gilbert showed me a plastic
ammunition box for 357 Magnum. He had made up a one-cavity
mould for this box and sold about 5,000 to a nearby gun
shop. The gun shop had gone out of business and Gilbert
asked if Midway wanted to buy some of the plastic ammo
boxes. By this time we had a couple years of history on
the cardboard ammo boxes, so it was an easy decision to
buy some of these plastic boxes. Thus began Midway's
plastic ammo box line that has contributed greatly to the
success of the Company.
By 1987, we were doing about $5 million in business, selling
mostly to dealers. The product lines were bulk components and
cartridge boxes. The Volkmer-McClure law was enacted in October
1987, which removed the restriction of shipping brass and
bullets to FFL holders only. Midway immediately began selling
directly to consumers, in addition to selling to dealers.
Computerization has played a major role in the development of
Midway. I had one computer class in college, back in 1968. It
was a one credit hour class in Fortran. In 1982 I purchased the
Company's first computer, an Apple III. In 1986 we bought the
first IBM. In March of 1987 we began networking and have never
looked back.
So there you have it. The Air Force took me to George Spence,
who introduced me to 8mm Nambu. Brother Jerry put the Remington
Model 8 in 25 Remington into our inventory. Hodgdon offered the
30 Remington police ammunition. The Shotgun News provided the
customers. The spin-offs from the Nambu project were the bulk
component product line, the cardboard ammo box product line and
the plastic ammo box product line.
Larry W. Potterfield
May 25, 1998
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