FROM 'OLD LUMBER' A.D.
MOYER BUILT A SOLID BUSINESS
By Anthony G. Noel
Special to The Mercury
Of the three A.D.
Moyer locations in the Pottstown area, one - in
Gilbertsville - is where it all started for the
family-owned lumber yard.
In 1939, Amandus D. Moyer purchased
the wooden roller coaster at the Sanatoga Amusement
Park, had it dismantled, and the parts shipped to
his home. That home stood on the site of the company's
present-day Gilbertsville location.
It didn't take long for the lumber
culled from the coaster to be used up by the local
tradesmen, so the late Mr. Moyer turned to Pennsylvania's
coal region for his next supply. He purchased a coal
cracker, which was similarly dismantled and hauled
back, and his reputation as a lumber supplier grew.
According to company literature, new
lumber came on line in 1940, and other building materials
soon followed.
Amandus' sons, Donald and Francis,
joined the company during the post-war boom years
of the 1950s. The Armand Hammer Boulevard store opened
in 1974.
Shortly after Donald's death in 1980,
his son, Scott, became an owner.
In 1982, the Gilbertsville, location
grew to 8,000 square feet. A year later, Moyer's
expanded into the Lehigh Valley, opening a store
about the same size in Bethlehem, and in 1985, the
Pottstown location doubled in size, to nearly 13,000
square feet.
Francis' son, Terry, joined the company
in 1993.
The latest store in the tri-county
area opened in 1995 in Birdsboro, better positioning
Moyer's to serve eastern Berks county.
Francis Moyer died in 1997.
Apart from the aggressive physical
growth both have overseen since joining the company,
Scott and Terry have also guided Moyer's into the
information age. Not only are all Moyer's locations
fully computerized, but the company has had an online
presence since 1997. |