The times have changed and so has the name. Bell Laboratory. Bell Additives. Bell Performance. Three names that have come to signify quality, value, problem-solving, and innovation to thousands of consumers around the world over the last 100+ (actually now 104) years. We invite you to sit back as we go through history decade-by-decade and also throw in a few tidbits about what we at Bell were doing while the world was changing around us all.
But as you get closer and closer to such a lofty goal, it still seems further and further away, because it was so hard to get there in the first place. On May 6, 1952, Roger Bannister was running in a big track meet that was being broadcast live on BBC Radio. They almost canceled the race because of wind gusts approaching 25 mph. But the winds died down and the race went off and the iconic picture was born of Bannister stretching at the finish line to snap the tap at 3:59.4. It won him a Knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II and Sports Illustrated even created a new award to bestow upon him - their first Sportsman of the Year award.
Bell’s Dee-Zol formulation capitalized on some of the revolutionary technology he developed to be included in the Mix-I-Go formula for gasoline. This provided diesel consumers with combustion improvement, a detergent to keep their engine clean, and surfactants to suspend the built-up water in the diesel fuel. A lubricant, dissolved in the fuel, provided the consumer with added lubrication for their injectors and fuel pumps, increasing the life of their engine and equipment. The death of Robert Bell in 1957 left his widow Mary Bell administering the company.
During the Swingin’ Sixties, how did Bell Laboratory manage after the founder Mr. Bell's death? Next week we’ll look at this decade and what it meant for the then 50-year-old company.
Did you know.... the picture to the right was taken of Robert Bell by the local newspaper, the Orlando Sentinel, in 1950. That's the same year that the new comic strip Peanuts debuted in 8 newspapers across the country. The new comic with Charlie Brown and Snoopy was actually named by other people for the peanut gallery of the popular Howdy Doody tv show. Charles Schultz didn't really like that but stuck with it.