Glendale Tool Company: Difference between revisions
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Unofficially, the Glendale Tool Company is a co-op of Traditions Mages, one of the leading such organizations in Los Angeles. It is the center of power for Adepts/Elites and Etherites in the city. | Unofficially, the Glendale Tool Company is a co-op of Traditions Mages, one of the leading such organizations in Los Angeles. It is the center of power for Adepts/Elites and Etherites in the city. | ||
The company is collectively run according to a [[/Charter|charter]] granted the group by a Council-led arbitration after the death of founder Nash Smith, and the disappearance into space of patron Harold Montague. | The company is collectively run according to a [[Glendale Tool Company/Charter|charter]] granted the group by a Council-led arbitration after the death of founder Nash Smith, and the disappearance into space of patron Harold Montague. | ||
''Pictured: The Company Hangar in the 1940s'' | ''Pictured: The Company Hangar in the 1940s'' |
Revision as of 02:43, 15 April 2023
The Glendale Tool Company
Welcome to Glendale: The Jewel City!
Officially, the Glendale Tool Company is a small 501(c)3 educational non-profit corporation in Glendale, California. Shrouded by trees, and established in a Cold War-era aerospace hangar, the company used to be known for such things as tutoring youth in math and science, and as producing amazing fireworks shows.
Previously to being the home of the GTC, the building was the home of Montague Helicopters before that company's demise by buyout in the 1980s. Its history in the Montague family goes back to Harold Montague's earliest days as aerospace magnate in the Verdugos.
Pictured: Downtown Glendale
Unofficially, the Glendale Tool Company is a co-op of Traditions Mages, one of the leading such organizations in Los Angeles. It is the center of power for Adepts/Elites and Etherites in the city.
The company is collectively run according to a charter granted the group by a Council-led arbitration after the death of founder Nash Smith, and the disappearance into space of patron Harold Montague.
Pictured: The Company Hangar in the 1940s