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Robert Gilmour LeTourneau | |
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Born | Richford, Vermont, U.S. | November 30, 1888
Died | June 1, 1969 Longview, Texas, U.S. | (aged 80)
Occupations | |
Known for | Inventing earthmoving, other heavy machinery technology |
Spouse |
Evelyn Peterson (m. 1917) |
Children | 5 |
Robert Gilmour "R. G." LeTourneau (/lətˈərnoʊ/; November 30, 1888 – June 1, 1969), born in Richford, Vermont, was a prolific inventor of technologies related to earthmoving machinery, and founder of LeTourneau Technologies and LeTourneau University.[1] His factories supplied machinery which represented nearly 75 percent of the earthmoving equipment used by the Allied forces during World War II, and more than half of the 1,500-mile (2,414 km) Alaska Highway in Canada, "Alcan", was built using LeTourneau equipment.[2] Over the course of his life he secured 299 patents,[2] relating to earthmoving equipment, manufacturing processes, and machine tools.[not verified in body]
LeTourneau sold most company assets in 1953 for US$ 31M,[2] but reentered the heavy equipment field as LeTourneau Technologies,[verification needed] the oversight of which was left to his son, Richard LeTourneau, on his retirement in 1966.[citation needed] Its manufacturing and offshore drilling assets were sold in 1970 to Marathon Manufacturing Co., to become Marathon LeTourneau Co.[citation needed] (the assets of which became and remain divded between various manufacturing and rig-technology companies).[3][4]
In his later life and retirement, the elder LeTourneau was invovlved in philanthropic pursuits, many related to his Christian faith.
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