Early history: 1898–1926 The first Goodyear factory opened in Akron, Ohio, in 1898. The company originally manufactured
bicycle and
carriage tires, rubber
horseshoe pads, and
poker chips, and grew with the advent of the automobile. In 1901, Goodyear founder
Frank Seiberling provided
Henry Ford with racing tires. In 1903, Goodyear president, chairman and CEO
Paul Weeks Litchfield was granted a patent for the first tubeless automobile tire. In 1910, the company purchased an existing rubber factory in
Bowmanville, Ontario, in Canada, which expanded their manufacturing outside of the United States for the first time. In 1916, Litchfield found land in the
Phoenix area suitable for growing long-staple cotton, which was needed to reinforce its rubber in tires. The 36,000 acres purchased were controlled by the Southwest Cotton Company, formed with Litchfield as president. (This included land that would develop into the towns of
Goodyear and
Litchfield Park.) In late 1919, the United States, influenced by the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, organised the creation of a "coal and steel state" under international protection which included the
Upper Silesian Industrial Circle and the
Ostrava–
Karviná basin in the former
Austrian Silesia. Because of opposition from
France, the United States withdrew from supporting a Silesian state. This period was marked by tensions leading up to the
1921 Upper Silesia plebiscite. In 1924, Litchfield forged a joint venture with the German
Luftschiffbau Zeppelin Company to form the Goodyear-Zeppelin Corporation. From the late 1920s to 1940, the company worked with Goodyear to build two Zeppelins in the United States. The partnership continued even when Zeppelin was under Nazi control and only ended after
World War II began.
Expansion: 1926–1970 fighter plane. On August 5, 1927, Goodyear had its
initial public offering and was listed on the
New York Stock Exchange. By 1930, Goodyear had pioneered what would later become known as "
tundra tires" for smaller aircraft—their so-called low inflation pressure "airwheel" aviation wheel-rim/tire sets were initially available in sizes up to 46 inches (117 cm) in diameter. Over the next few decades, Goodyear grew to become a multinational corporation. It acquired their rival Kelly-Springfield Tire in 1935. During
World War II Goodyear manufactured
F4U Corsair fighter planes for the U.S. Military. Goodyear ranked 30th among United States corporations in the value of wartime production contracts. WWII forced the dissolution of the Goodyear-Zeppelin partnership in December 1940. By 1956 they owned and operated a nuclear processing plant in Ohio. In 1944, Goodyear created a subsidiary in Mexico in a joint venture with Compañía Hulera,
S.A. de C.V., Compañía Hulera Goodyear-Oxo, S.A. de C.V. or Goodyear-Oxo. Goodyear opened a factory in
Lurgan,
Northern Ireland in 1967 to manufacture
hoses,
fan belts,
conveyor belts, and other rubber products. It was immediately lauded as "Craigavon's industrial revolution" for providing critical employment in the area. A football team known as
Goodyear F.C. is still currently active in the
Mid-Ulster Football League despite the factory closing down in 1983. It was established by laborers of the Goodyear factory. They play in Goodyear's classic blue and yellow colours, and their badge is the Goodyear logo.
Radial tire transition Goodyear is the only one of the five biggest tire firms among US tire manufacturers in 1970 to remain independent into the 21st century. Goodyear's success was partly due to the challenge posed by
radial tire technology, and the varied responses. At the time, the entire US tire industry produced the older
bias-ply technology. Estimates to fit factories with new machinery and tools for making the new product were between $600 million and $900 million. This was a substantial amount in a low margin business with sales revenue in the low billions. The US market was slowly shifting towards the radial tire, as had already been the case in Europe and Asia. In 1968,
Consumer Reports, an influential American magazine, acknowledged the superiority of radial construction, which had been developed in 1946 by
Michelin. When
Charles J. Pilliod Jr. became CEO in 1974, he faced a major investment decision regarding the radial tire, which today has a market share of nearly 100%. Despite heavy criticism at the time, Pilliod invested heavily in new factories and tooling to build the radial tire. Sam Gibara, who headed Goodyear from 1996 to 2003, has noted that without the action of Pilliod, Goodyear "wouldn't be around today."
Diversification and Goldsmith affair 1986 In the 1980s, incoming Goodyear CEO Robert E. Mercer argued that the tire and automobile-related businesses that formed the core of Goodyear to that date were slow growing and a handicap. He set a strategy "to get away from the cyclical nature of the automobile business through mergers or purchase of businesses unrelated to tires or vehicles." In 1983, Goodyear acquired the natural gas company
Celeron Corporation in exchange for stock valued at more than $740 million. but ultimately cost almost $1 billion. In October 1986 British financier
James Goldsmith in conjunction with the investment group
Hanson purchased 11.5% of Goodyear's outstanding common stock. This was viewed as a
greenmail attack by some, and as shareholder activism by Goldsmith, who viewed the company's move into areas far removed from tire development production and sale as commercially ill-advised and wanted the company to divest, especially, its oil interests which he viewed as depressing the value of the company. On November 20, 1986, Goodyear acquired all of the stock held by Goldsmith's group (12,549,400 shares) at an above-market price of $49.50 per share. Goodyear also made a tender offer for up to 40 million shares of its stock from other shareholders at $50 per share. The tender offer resulted in Goodyear buying 40,435,764 shares of stock in February 1987. As a result of the stock buyback, Goodyear took a charge of $224.6 million associated with a massive restructuring plan. It sold its Goodyear Aerospace business to Loral Corporation for $588 million and its motor wheel business to Lemmerz Inc. for $175 million. Two subsidiaries involved in agricultural products, real estate development, and a resort hotel in Arizona were sold for $220.1 million. The company also sold the Celeron gas and oil corporation. In 1998, the All American Pipeline, Celeron Gathering, and Celeron Trading and Transportation were sold, largely completing what Goldsmith's hostile takeover had suggested good management should do. In the years following 1987, the company invested in its tire business. President Tom Barrett succeeded Chairman Robert Mercer in 1989, and began a process of modernizing and expanding Goodyear plants in cities like
Lawton, Oklahoma, Napanee, Canada,
Point Pleasant, West Virginia, and
Scottsboro, Alabama.), resulted in plants across North America being shuttered, for instance
Cumberland, Maryland;
New Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and
Windsor, Vermont were closed.
1990 to present The last major restructuring of the company took place in 1991. Goodyear hired
Stanley Gault, former CEO of
Rubbermaid, to expand the company into new markets. The moves resulted in 12,000 employees being laid off. In 2005,
Titan Tire purchased the farm tire business of Goodyear, and manufactures Goodyear agricultural tires under license. This acquisition included the plant in
Freeport, Illinois. Goodyear announced plans to sell the assets of its Latin American off-road tire business to Titan Tire for $98.6 million, including the plant in
São Paulo, Brazil and a licensing agreement that allows Titan to continue manufacturing under the Goodyear brand. This deal is similar to Titan's 2005 purchase of Goodyear's US farm tire assets. In 2011, more than 70 years after the dissolution of the Goodyear-Zeppelin Corporation, it is announced that Goodyear would partner with Zeppelin again (the legacy company Zeppelin Luftschifftechnik) to build more zeppelins together. In 2018, Goodyear and
Bridgestone announced the creation of
TireHub, a joint wholesale distribution network across the United States. At the same time, Goodyear also announced that it was ending its distribution relationship with
American Tire Distributors, which is the largest tire wholesaler in the US. In 2018, Goodyear was ordered to pay $40.1 million to J. Walter Twidwell, who claimed he developed
mesothelioma because of exposure to
asbestos. After the trial, Goodyear asked the
New York Supreme Court for a new trial. Goodyear attorney James Lynch said Goodyear did not receive proper consideration from the jury. Lynch said that the other side's attorneys engaged in character assassinations against
expert witnesses. During closing remarks, the attorneys for Twidwell put up a slide with the heads of Goodyear's expert witnesses pasted onto "insulting caricatures." In December 2018, Goodyear ceased operations in Venezuela due a lack of materials and rising costs resulting from hyperinflation. In February 2021, Goodyear announced that it would acquire the
Cooper Tire & Rubber Company for $2.5 billion. The transaction closed in the second half of 2021. In July 2024, Goodyear announced the sale of its off-the-road tire business to
Yokohama Rubber Company for $905 million. In January 2025, the firm announced the sale of the
Dunlop brand to
Sumitomo Rubber Industries for $701 million.
Timeline Source: • 1935: Acquired Kelly-Springfield Tire • 1937: First American-made synthetic rubber tire • 1940: In December, Goodyear-Zeppelin Corporation dissolved with WWII straining partnership • 1958: Production of foam-padded instrument panels begun for 1959 model cars • 1962: Goodyear racing tires used on more winning stock and sports cars than any other brand • 1963: Goodyear produces its one billionth tire • 1965: Radial-ply tires made available in a full range of sizes to auto manufacturers • 1967: Goodyear introduces the
Polyglas tire, one of the first wide-tread bias-belted fiberglass tires, which along with similar tires from competitors such as the Firestone
Wide-Oval would become regular equipment on 1970 to 1974 models, which would be superseded by radial tires beginning in 1975. • 1969: Sales reach $3 billion • 1970: First tires on the moon (Apollo 14) • 1974: Sales reach $5 billion • 1975: All tires used in Indianapolis 500 supplied by Goodyear • 1976: Chemical Division shipped first shatterproof polyester resin bottles • 1977: Industry's first all-season tire
(Tiempo) introduced • 1978: Akron plant converted into Technical Center for R&D • 1983: Three billionth tire produced • 1984: Worldwide sales exceed $10 billion • 1986:
James Goldsmith takeover attempt and resulting restructuring • 1987: Completion of the California–Texas "All American" oil pipeline • 1991:
Aquatred tire introduced • 1992: Began selling tires at Sears stores • 1993: Opened first tire store in Beijing, China • 1993: Inauguration of Dalian plant, China • 1994: "electronic store" opened on
CompuServe • 1995: Worldwide sales exceed $13 billion • 1995: Bought Polish Tire Company Dębica • 1998: Sold the All American Pipeline and Celeron businesses • 1999: Announced $1 billion global alliance with Japan's Sumitomo Rubber Industries, which had rights to the
Dunlop Tires brand in much of the world, to establish six joint ventures in North America, Europe and Japan • 2000: Formed an Internet-based purchasing alliance with five other rubber companies called RubberNetwork.com • 2003: Quarterly dividend to shareholders eliminated • 2004: Assurance
TripleTred and
ComforTred tires introduced • 2005: North American farm tire operations sold to Titan Tire Corporation • 2006: Goodyear blimp made maiden voyage in China • 2007: Engineered Products Division sold to Carlyle Group; EPD is renamed Veyance Technologies • 2008: Voluntary Employees' Beneficiary Association trust (VEBA) approved by U.S. District Court, funded with $1 billion • 2009: Goodyear Assurance Fuel Max tire introduced in North America • 2010: Plans announced to sell European and Latin American farm tire businesses • 2011: After being dissolved during WWII, Goodyear and Zeppelin's legacy company partner again to build more airships together • 2015: Goodyear and Sumitomo announced that they would dissolve their worldwide partnership. • 2018: The company ranked 187th on the
Fortune 500 list of the largest United States companies by revenue marking its 24th year on the list ==Corporate structure and leadership==