Evaporator Company Histories: True & Blanchard – Monarch Evaporator

The beginnings of the True & Blanchard Company date back to 1844 when William W. True, at the young age of 22 opened a tin shop in Newport, Vermont. In time the small shop took on a wider range of business and services. With the addition of E.C. Blanchard in 1886 and the purchase of the stock and storefront of another existing hardware merchant in Newport, True & Blanchard Co. became a full-service hardware store.  In 1894 the firm added another partner in the arrival of J.R. Akin.

As a hardware concern, True & Blanchard carried and sold a variety of maple sugaring tools and equipment and as early as 1890 were advertising as agents for the sale of the Bellows Falls patent evaporator.

1891 advertisement from the North Troy Palladium newspaper showing True & Blanchard as sales agents for other evaporators including the Bellows Falls Pattern Evaporator

In 1893 they began to manufacture their own evaporator and arch under the label Monarch Evaporator designed by W.W. True. The Monarch name was adopted as their brand name for maple sugaring equipment.

1897 advertisement from the North Troy Palladium.

Under the Monarch name they also designed and sold their own hauling tank, storage tank, sap pails and pail covers, and carried the Eureka sap spout. In later years they expanded their evaporator line beyond the Monarch Evaporator to include the Imperial Evaporator and the Royal boiling rig.

Page from a True & Blanchard sale pamphlet ca. 1915, note the Imperial Evaporator, Royal Boiling Rig and Sugaring Off Outfit and the Monarch style Sugaring Off Outfit.

Although E.C. Blanchard left the business in 1906, the company kept “Blanchard” in the official company name. The True & Blanchard company continued to expand over the years, building new and larger facilities in Newport, both for maple sugaring equipment and other company ventures.  In 1909 demand for Monarch sugaring tools had grown to such a degree that the company needed more room for production of sugaring equipment and acquired an existing two-story building alongside the Canadian Pacific railroad in Newport. The building was referred to as the Monarch Sugar Tools Factory. Other changes in the company included selling-off the jewelry sales portion of the company and erecting a new brick fire-proof garage in 1913.

Early 1900s True & Blanchard Co. catalog for maple sugarmakers’ supplies.

W.W. True patented (US1096328 / CA156779) his own evaporator design in 1914 which featured a tapered flue pan that tilted on a hinge at the mid-point when the flue pan met the front pan. This design became known as their Imperial Evaporator.

W.W. True 1914 patent for hinged flue pan and evaporator, US1096328.

In August 1914 the leadership of True & Blanchard Co. formally incorporated the Monarch Evaporator Company in the state of Vermont as an independent subsidiary of the True & Blanchard Co. with W.W. True as president and J.R. Akin as vice president.

The True & Blanchard Company was doing so well in the hardware business through the teens that they chose to focus their efforts on the hardware and retail side of things and divest itself of its ancillary businesses like the maple sugaring supplies. As a result, in the spring of 1919 W.W. True and J.R. Akin sold the Monarch Evaporator Company to the Vermont Farm Machine Company of Bellows Falls, VT.

With this sale, the production equipment for the manufacture of the Monarch Evaporator, as well as the other maple sugaring supplies were moved to Bellows Falls. Everett Hunt, True & Blanchard’s production manager for the Monarch sugaring tools in Newport also moved with the production line to Bellows Falls.

Page from 1920 Vermont Farm Machine Company catalog describing the Monarch Evaporator in their product line.

The Vermont Farm Machine Company continued to manufacture and offer the Monarch Evaporator during the remainder of its years of operation before the business failed and ceased operation in 1926. The Monarch name and line of evaporators died with the closing of the doors at the Vermont Farm Machine Company. The history of the Vermont Farm Machine Company will be covered in a future post.