Advertisement for The Golden State Fireworks Manufacturing Co., Inc., a subsidiary or sister company of Bermite Powder Co. in Saugus. Both were run by
Patrick Lizza, the president and general manager.
Published in the Los Angeles Times 75th Anniversary special section, Jan. 3, 1956.
Ad lists the address as Factory #1, Saugus, California | Phone NEWHALL 241, and claims it is "the largest fireworks manufacturing company in America."
Ad features a thank-you letter from an Army colonel for providing, under some strange and unexplained circumstance,
a number of devices to simulate a nuclear explosion. Letter reads:
Department of the Navy
Office of Naval Research
Special Devices Center
Port Washington, New York
14 March 1955
Mr. Patrick Lizza, President
Golden State Manufacturing Company
Saugus, California
Dear Mr. Lizza:
I wish to take this opportunity to express our thanks for your enthusiastic assistance in covercoming the very difficult
training situation we encountered concerning the delivery of Device 3-SA-1, Simulated Atomic Explosion.
Using your engineering development facilities and with an almost insurmoutable time handicap, you and your organization
at your expense developed and produced during a very short period of time sufficient simulated atomic explosion
devices to assure that a very important phase of military training could be properly accomplished during Army maneuvers.
Your cooperation and assistance in this instance is sincerely appreciated.
Sincerely yours,
/s/
L.W. ADAMS
Col GS
Associate Diredtor [sic] (Army)
Inset photo caption:
The above is a picture of Tiberio Lizza, son of Patrick Lizza. He is the fourth generation of the Lizza family
in the pyrotechnic field and helped his father, Patrick Lizza, to produce the atomic simulators.
The Bermite Powder Co., and Halafax Explosives Co. before it, manufactured explosives, flares and small munitions in Saugus, on a roughly 1,000-acre parcel just southeast of Bouquet Junction, from
1935 to 1987.
Apparently the first on the scene was Jim "The Boilermaker" Jeffries, undefeated heavyweight champion of the world from 1899-1905. Jeffries took the helm of the L.A. Powder Co.,
which incorporated in 1915, and in 1917 set up a Saugus plant on the future Bermite property to manfacture gunpowder, in hopes of supplying the allied forces in World War I.
By 1920 Jeffries was also drilling oil wells on the property; the success of either venture is unclear.
The week of April 22, 1935, Halafax opened a $250,000 plant financed by E.P. Halliburton, an Oklahoma oil tycoon whose eponymous company would grow into one of the biggest multinational
oilfield service providers.
According to the California Department of Toxic Substances Control (2004), in 1939,
Patrick Lizza established Golden State Fireworks on adjacent property, while Halafax manufactured
fireworks at its site from 1936 to
1942.
Halafax eventually defaulted on its property taxes, and Lizza's company, as Bermite Powder, acquired the ex-Halafax land from the county, apparently for the price of the unpaid taxes.
Per DTSC, "The Bermite Powder Company
produced detonators, fuzes, boosters,
coated magnesium, and stabilized red
phosphorus from 1942 to 1967. In
addition, between 1942 and 1953 they
produced flares, photoflash bombs for
battlefield illumination, and other
explosives."
Bermite and the Saugus property played an important role in the needs of the U.S. military during World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam conflict.
For example, the most widely used air-to-air missile in the West, Raytheon's AIM-9 Sidewinder, started production in 1953 at China Lake and used a Hercules/Bermite MK-36 solid-fuel rocket engine
that would have been tested and manufactured at the Saugus plant.
Bermite was a major employer and contributed to the development of Newhall in 1939 with a row of 50 2-bedroom bungalows along Walnut Street for factory workers.
During and after World War II it was also a major employer of women.
In the postwar period, Bermite's subsidiary, Golden State Fireworks, was testing and manufacturing fireworks on the property.
Whittaker Corp. purchased Bermite Powder Co. and took over the property in
1967, operating it through 1987 as a munitions
manufacturing, testing and storage
facility. Among Whittaker-Bermite's products were
ammunition rounds; detonators, fuzes and boosters;
flares and signal cartridges; glow plugs, tracers and pyrophoric
pellets;
igniters, ignition compositions and
explosive bolts;
power charges;
rocket motors and gas generators; and
missile main charges.
The munitions and fireworks operations left more than 275 known contaminants behind, some of which percolated into the groundwater below the property.
Starting in about 1986, the operations would be exposed to steadly harsher environmental scrutiny over the next several years.
"In 1987, the facility ceased all of its
manufacturing, testing and storage of
ordnance and explosive items," according to DTSC.
Within another two years, plans were made for the area to be developed into a 2,911-unit residential community to be called Porta Bella, which was approved by the City Council but didn't
come to fruition.
Whittaker sold the Saugus property to an Arizona investor group in 1999, just before Whittaker was acquired in a hostile takeover. The property spent the first decade
of the 21st Century tied up in litigation, one result of which is a long-term toxic chemical cleanup project managed by the Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency.