  
      
        
      Rockwell
      
      Rockwell International was the ultimate incarnation of a series of 
      companies under the sphere of influence of Willard Rockwell, who had made 
      his fortune after the invention and successful launch of a new bearing 
      system for truck axles in 1919.  
       
      Primary among the constituents of the final company were the Rockwell 
      Spring and Axle Company (itself a merger of a number of automotive 
      suppliers), which formed into Rockwell-Standard, then merged with North 
      American Aviation to form North American Rockwell in 1967. They then 
      purchased or merged with Miehle-Goss-Dexter, the largest supplier of 
      printing presses, and Collins Radio. Finally they merged with Rockwell 
      Manufacturing, run by Willard Rockwell Jr., and formed Rockwell 
      International in 1973.  
       
      In this time the various companies in the empire list a huge number of 
      firsts. North American was responsible for the famous WWII P-51 Mustang 
      fighter and Korean War-era F-86 Sabre, as well as the Apollo spacecraft. 
      Once under the Rockwell banner they continued on to build the B-1 Lancer 
      bomber, the Space Shuttle, (started while they were still North American) 
      and most of the Navstar Global Positioning System satellites. It also took 
      over and manufactured the light business aircraft previously known as Aero 
      Commanders, then introduced their own new design as the Rockwell Commander 
      112 and 114.  
       
      Collins Radios were fitted to 80% of the free world's airliners. They 
      designed and built the radios that communicated the Apollo moon landings 
      and the high frequency radio network that allows worldwide communication 
      with US military aircraft. Rockwell designed and built the third stage of 
      the Minuteman Intercontinental ballistic missile, (ICBM) and the Inertial 
      Gyros that provided for their navigation. They also built inertial 
      navigation systems for the Fleet Ballistic Missile submarines.  
       
      Rockwell's manufacturing was likewise strong and built most of the heavy 
      duty truck axles in the U.S.  
       
      With the death of Willard Rockwell in 1978 and the stepping down of 
      Willard Rockwell Jr. in 1979, the company started a long series of 
      sell-offs. The company sold the most of its defence and all of its space 
      business to Boeing including its rocket engine testing facilities known as 
      Rocketdyne, located northwest of Los Angeles, California, in the Santa 
      Susana Mountain Range and Simi hills during December, 1996. The company 
      began to spin off its semiconductor manufacturing as Conexant, (CNXT), 
      additionally spinning-off the automotive and truck business as Meritor, 
      which then merged with Arvin Industries to form Arvin Meritor (ARM); the 
      remainder of the company finally split into two totally separate 
      companies: Rockwell Collins, (COL), and Rockwell Automation, (ROK). As 
      such, Rockwell International no longer exists.  
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