In preparation for its 200th birthday, Mason & Hanger, the longest continually operating engineering firm in the U.S., is tracing its roots, gathering artifacts and information in an effort to tell the company’s story and preserve its history.
“We hired an archivist,” Ben Lilly, the company’s president, said. “We have a book called ‘First You Take a Pick & Shovel: The Story of the Mason Companies,’ which took our history through the 60s.
“We felt that it was probably healthy to have an outsider come in and do independent research of the materials that we have in various storage facilities.”
“Our history fuels the commitment and passion we have for our mission and our customers. Tracing the trail lets today’s team draw energy—and lessons—from nearly 200 years of nation-building feats.”
The effort has led to uncovering new information about the company and spurred its leadership to take a trip to see some places where the company’s history happened.
That’s how Lilly, along with Holly Holt, vice president of marketing and communications for the company, ended up in Washington on the Columbia River in the Pacific Northwest.
The team’s research uncovered new information and connected the company to local experts in Grand Coulee that showed a clearer picture of the role the Silas Mason Company, a precursor to Mason & Hanger, played in the construction of the Grand Coulee Dam.
“We knew that we had a significant piece of it, but we really didn’t know exactly what we did,” Lilly said.
The specs of the dam are massive.
It is 450 to 500 feet thick at its base and tapers to 30 feet at the top of the structure. It’s made from 11,975,521 cubic yards of concrete, triple what’s found in the Hoover Dam.
The dam was the largest concrete structure ever built until 2009, when the Three Gorges Dam in China was completed. Three Gorges is about three times the size of Grand Coulee.
However, according to some historians, the project was also a key component of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal.
In 1934, the Public Works Administration, which funded and oversaw large-scale New Deal construction projects, awarded a $29 million contract for the dam's construction to a consortium led by Silas Mason II, known as MWAK.
In today’s money, the contract would be worth about $ 695 -$698 million.
To build a dam, the company also had to build a city.
On the east side of the river, MWAK built Mason City, using lessons learned during World War I when Mason built the town of Old Hickory to support the development of the Old Hickory Powder Plant in Tennessee.
Mason City featured three types of houses – one, two or three-room structures with baths and kitchens or kitchenettes – along with 60 cabin-like dormitories to house 1,360 men. It also had two dorms for women employed by the company, a hospital, hotel, two schoolhouses, storage yards, shops, office buildings, warehouses and a mess hall that could seat more than 1,300 people.
Just like Old Hickory, Mason City was built in eight months.
The dam wasn’t the only highlight on Mason & Hanger’s resume.
Mason & Hanger’s highlights from the past 200 years:
Present Day
Mason & Hanger is currently working various agencies at Redstone, including Range Training and Land Program (RTLP) AE Services, two Energy Resilience and Conservation Investment Programs (ERCIP), and supporting the Army Corps of Engineers on microgrids, which are self-sustaining electrical infrastructures that can operate as part of a larger power grid or independently, depending on the need.
“That’s been one of the best decisions we ever made strategically,” Lilly said.
“We have a long history in Huntsville, dating back to NASA contracts in the 1960’s, to our long-term relationship at Redstone. Fast-forward to today and the same “design/engineering- DNA now shows up in secure embassies, micro-grids, NASA test facilities and government installations and training facilities on five continents.”
"The common thread is our purpose—Building a More Secure World®—which still guides every A/E discipline on our team. Mason & Hanger’s legacy remains etched in the steel and concrete of America’s early infrastructure triumphs. As we celebrate past achievements, we’re focused on tomorrow’s challenges — from resilient infrastructure to climate-smart design — continuing a Mason & Hanger tradition: engineering that serves the nation’s most critical missions. We are truly excited for our next chapter — proving that big ideas, backed by solid engineering, can move America forward.”