Blaw-Knox was purchased by
White Consolidated Industries (WCI) in May 1968. In March 1995,
Ingersoll-Rand offered $1.34 billion ($ billion today) in a hostile takeover bid for Clark Equipment Company. Clark cited its Blaw-Knox unit as a reason for the US Federal Court to stop the takeover, claiming that Ingersoll-Rand would violate Federal antitrust laws since Ingersoll-Rand already controlled a significant share of the paving equipment business, having purchased the
German paving equipment company ABG in 1990, while Blaw-Knox owned a major share of the US paving market (which would grow to 50% of all new pavers bearing the Blaw-Knox brand by 2006). A few days later, in April 1995, Clark accepted a higher $1.5 billion ($ billion today) offer from Ingersoll-Rand, who became owners of Blaw-Knox and all other Clark companies. Ingersoll-Rand soon sold the UK design and manufacturing division to
Babcock, while keeping the North American operations of Blaw-Knox as a stand-alone unit in its road construction equipment division. In February 2007, Ingersoll-Rand accepted an offer of $1.3 billion ($ billion today) from
Volvo for the road construction equipment division, including the Blaw-Knox brand and the ABG brand. In July 2020,
Volvo Construction Equipment sold Blaw-Knox pavers to Gencor Industries Inc. ==See also==