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From a tiny island in Norway to a worldwide institution
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the legacy of Sigurd Golten
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Born on
diminutive, picturesque Golten Island in western Norway on June 3,
1908, Goltens founder Sigurd Golten had three legitimate career
choices – farming potatoes, fishing or becoming a seaman. At the age
of 14 he went to sea. Eighteen years later, he set up his first
workshop in Brooklyn, New York. And, as the years passed – now 100
years since his birth – the one-man shop became the global entity we
know as Goltens today.
After Sigurd Golten became better known in the maritime community –
with the patents for his crankshaft regrinding process, a knighting
from the Norwegian government, and the establishment of Goltens
locations the world over – people would ask him where he got his
education from. Many assumed NTNU in Trondheim, thought of as the
MIT of Norway. His daughter Sylvia Strand remembers his usual
response. “He liked to say, ‘Well, I only had up to 7th grade... and
Sunday school.’” |
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The
education – along with his truly international focus – came during
his eighteen years at sea, in which he sailed the world. While many
other seamen whiled away their free time playing cards, Golten used
this time to develop his talents both in business and as a person.
Not only did he teach himself how to play the mandolin and
accordion, but he also continually took engineering correspondence
courses. This isn’t to say that Golten wasn’t social. Far from
it. This aspect was also important after establishing the Goltens
business. “He had a wonderful sense of humour, a love of life, and
truly cared about people,” says Sylvia. “People trusted him, and
knew that he cared. He was always on the phone worldwide, providing
the personal touch.” Indeed, one could say that he took the
one-to-one service ethic that one gets from growing up in a small
location and made it an integral part of his global company.
First New York,
then the world Golten eventually landed in New York, and started a
marine repair workshop in Brooklyn in 1940. Golten got a good amount
of work related to the war effort in the years that followed,
expanding his shop with other able-bodied and qualified Norwegians
stepping onto American soil. After World War II ended, Golten
travelled to Oslo, Norway to establish Atlantic Diesel with his
brothers Konrad and Knut. While the brothers stayed in the Norwegian
capital to further develop Atlantic, which later became the European
hub known as Goltens Oslo, Sigurd Golten returned to New York. |
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Oslo was just the start of the expansion – and Golten’s global vision of
a worldwide organization and network. “He not only became a global
citizen by sailing the world, but he also saw first-hand the
importance of top-quality machine shops and workshops. He wanted to
be able to service his clients wherever they may be,” Sylvia Strand
says, remembering the excitement her father had after establishing
an office in Hong Kong: “That was the first ‘peg’. He was thrilled
to become a true global entity and to be able to put into use the
slogan that is still on the wall at the Oslo office today – ‘Around
the clock, around the world’.”
Saving time by developing a process for grinding a crankshaft
in-situ is one of Golten’s true legacies, and for which he was
honoured with a patent in 1965. “The grinding was the simple part,”
says Sylvia’s husband Eivind Strand. “The difficult part was when
the shafts would heat up and bend. He figured out a very simple way
of straightening that crankshaft in the engine before he ground it.
It was revolutionary.”
A man of the world – but he left his heart at Golten Island
While Golten and his family – wife Aagot and children Sylvia,
Vivian, Norman and Carol – lived in New York, they made it back home
to Norway – and Golten Island – many summers. “He was a really hard
worker, but we always looked forward to coming back to Norway,
because that’s where his roots were,” says Sylvia Strand. “We spent
a lot of time on Golten Island, and therefore have very strong
feelings for it as well. We took over the cottage there.”
Even though the Strands now live in Massachusetts, and Sigurd Golten
passed away on January 4, 1986, the family still travels back to
Golten Island whenever the opportunity arises. “You look out your
window and you see sheep. The fishing and rock climbing are great.
It’s just a special, special place,” says Sylvia. “The last time we
were out there, one of our grandchildren said that it was his
favourite place on the planet.”
Local traditions tied to a global viewpoint – the belief lives on in
the Golten family to this very day. And the active involvement of
Sigurd’s daughters Sylvia, Vivian, and Carol on the Goltens board
ensures that Sigurd Golten’s legacy of global quality service is
both maintained and expanded upon.
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