HR Execs on the Move

Wmh Fluidpower

www.wmh.com

 
Wmh Fluidpower is a Portage, MI-based company in the Retail sector.
  • Number of Employees: 100-250
  • Annual Revenue: $10-50 Million
  • www.wmh.com
  • 862 Lenox Ave
    Portage, MI USA 49024
  • Phone: 269.327.7011

Executives

Name Title Contact Details

Similar Companies

Harry Rinker

Harry Rinker is a Winter Park, FL-based company in the Retail sector.

Harley Davidson/Buell of Annapolis

Harley Davidson/Buell of Annapolis is a Annapolis, MD-based company in the Retail sector.

N Glantz

Your sign and graphics supply company is more than a phone number on a catalog or a return address on a box. It`s the engine behind your success. It`s the company that helps you stand out from your competitors in terms of quality, appearance, technology and cost. That`s especially the case for N. Glantz & Son, which has served our customers for four generations on a single promise: deliver the products you need with the personal service you deserve. That`s why customers have continued to choose N. Glantz & Son month after month, year after year, for more than 100 years.

Image Concepts Inc

Image Concepts Inc is a Seattle, WA-based company in the Retail sector.

Honolulu Museum of Art

The Honolulu Academy of Arts was founded in 1927 by Anna Rice Cooke, a woman born into a prominent missionary family on O`ahu in 1853. Growing up in a home that appreciated the arts, she went on to marry Charles Montague Cooke, also of a prominent missionary family, and the two settled in Honolulu. In 1882, they built a home on Beretania Street, on the site that would become home to the museum. As Charles Cooke prospered, he and his wife began to assemble an art collection, starting with “parlor pieces” from the shop of furniture maker Yeun Kwock Fong Inn who had ceramics and textile pieces sent from his brother in China. Fong Inn eventually became one of Honolulu`s leading art importers. When the Cookes` art collection outgrew their home, Anna Rice Cooke decided to create Hawai`i`s first visual arts museum, which would reflect the islands` multicultural make-up, for the children of Hawai`i. In 1920, she and her daughter Alice (Mrs. Phillip Spalding), her daughter-in-law Dagmar (Mrs. Richard Cooke), and Mrs. Isaac Cox, an art and drama teacher, began to catalogue and research the collection as a first step. With little formal training, these women obtained a charter for the museum from the Territory of Hawai`i in 1922. The Cookes donated their Beretania Street land for the museum, along with an endowment of $25,000, and the family home was torn down to make way for the new institution. They hired New York architect Bertram Goodhue to design the plans. Goodhue died before the project was completed, and his colleague Hardie Phillip finished the job. Over the years, the museum`s revival mission style has been imitated in many buildings throughout the state. Since it opened, the museum has grown steadily, both in acquisitions and in stature, to become one of the finest museums in the United States. Additions to the original building include a library (1956), an education wing (1960), a gift shop (1965), a cafe (1969), a contemporary gallery, administrative offices and 280-seat theater (1977), and an art center for studio classes and expanded educational programming (1989). The museum`s permanent collection has grown from 500 works to more than 50,000 pieces spanning 5,000 years, with significant holdings in Asian art, American and European painting and decorative arts, 19th- and 20th-century art, an extensive collection of works on paper, Asian textiles, and traditional works from Africa, Oceania, and the Americas.