Weldbend Corp.’s founder and CEO, James J. Coulas Sr., died peacefully at home on July 4, apparently of heart failure, at age 92. He founded the industrial fittings company, originally called Viking Valve and Fitting Co., in 1950 and continued to play an active part in running it, along with son and President James Coulas Jr., all the way until the end.
His entrepreneurial zest was apparent early on as Coulas’ first business venture was purchasing produce from a market near his Chicago home, loading it into a wagon and selling it door-to-door. As a high school student, he put together dances, an experience that led him to start a ballroom in 1932, in the heart of the Great Depression. The Viking Ballroom attracted some of the biggest names of the big band era, and remained in operation until 1953, when interest in the music had waned. Other long-ago business ventures included selling coal and working as a secretary for the cotton registrar at the Chicago Board of Trade.
Coulas had a divergent range of interests that included flying his own airplane, and was a history buff with a particularly keen interest in Winston Churchill. He was a forceful advocate of domestic manufacturing and took special pride in helping to design new machinery installed at the Weldbend plant in the Chicago suburb of Bedford Park, IL.
Son Jim Coulas Jr. said there would be “absolutely no changes” in Weldbend’s business following his father’s passing. He told Supply House Times that his father’s legacy included an abiding sense of fairness and “a two-way street of loyalty.” Coulas Jr. added, “He never let anything go to his head.”
Go to the Editorial, under the Columns section for publisher Scott Franz’s remembrance of his good friend, Jim Coulas Sr.