Lincoln Foundry History on the walls of Modern Brake and Alignment

[July 11, 2025]    

Modern Brake and Alignment, right off Limit Street on the east end of Lincoln, is redoing the exterior of their building. When they recently pulled off the siding they found signs for the old Lincoln Foundry.

It appears that the building housed the Lincoln Foundry before Ivan and Elaine Ray bought the building and remodeled it. The Rays built Modern Brake and Alignment behind that building.

Leigh Henson on his Finding Lincoln, Illinois website shares information showing that in 1942, Ralph Weaver bought a building on Limit Street for the Lincoln Foundry. The brick portion of the building had been “the first floor of the two-story Lincoln Automobile Factory, built in 1907.”
 


Additionally, Henson found Howard Stewart had managed the Lincoln Foundry. This facility “had cast items like manhole covers, storm drains, and curb drains. The flow was covered with mold sand—sand mixed with oil and used in the casting process.”

Because “casting requires wooden patterns,” Henson said, “Ralph bought his from a woodworking shop in Pekin and had about 180 different styles and designs. Two overhead cranes held the big metal ladles used to pour the molten metal reclaimed from scrap iron that Ralph had purchased.”

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The centennial edition of the Lincoln Evening Courier provided Henson even more details about the Lincoln Foundry, which in 1953 “produced 150 tons of gray iron castings used to manufacture agricultural machinery, cast iron smoke pipe, drainage materials and airport equipment.”

An August 26, 1953, Courier article titled “Lincoln Foundry Began Operation Over 50 Years Ago” indicates those working in the foundry had years of specialized training. As the article said, “[u]nlike many highly mechanized industries where repetitive mechanical skills prevail, gray iron is essentially a craft industry. Four years of apprenticeship is normally required to develop journeyman molders, core makers and pattern makers, and anywhere from six months to several years to learn other foundry jobs.”

In June 2010, Henson received an email from Dave Armbrust, who had seen Henson’s information on the Lincoln Foundry. Armbrust remembered that he had a catalog of products made at the Foundry and sent Henson drawings of some of their products.

After seeing a drawing of a manhole cover made by Lincoln Foundry, Henson was curious whether any of these manhole covers were on the streets of Lincoln.

To find out, Armbrust spoke to Street Superintendent Tracy Jackson and City Engineer Mathon who told him there were several of these manhole covers in various parts of Lincoln. Armbrust was also told there were catch basins that were part of the curb drains around Lincoln made by Lincoln Foundry, so he and his wife began to look for them.

Something Henson said Armbrust found in looking for these drains is that “some of the curb drains in the first Lincoln namesake city feature a small (2- by 3-inch) bas-relief of Abraham Lincoln similar to that on the famous Lincoln penny, originally created in 1909. These curb drains do not have "Lincoln Foundry" on them, but it's logical that these "Little Iron Abe" drain curbs were manufactured by that company.”

It is not completely clear when Lincoln Foundry stopped production. However, by 1972, the building changed hands when Ivan Ray bought and remodeled the building.

Though the Lincoln Foundry is long gone, the business’s heritage lives on through the signs on the building and several manhole covers and catch basins around Lincoln.

[Angela Reiners | Photos by Nila Smith & Beverly Buhrmester]

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