December 30, 1954
PEOPLE AT WORK - "You've got to know what
you've got.... and where, in this business," Bert Carney, part owner of
an auto salvage yard says about his work. He and his brother, Jerry,
are part owners of an auto salvage yard in Ames that has more than 2,500
cars sitting in it in various stages of disrepair. Bert knows just
about where any part of any particular model or make of car can be found
on the 15 acres of his automobile graveyard.
Just because a car has been in a wreck and
is declared a total los or wreck doesn't mean the old buggy doesn't have
some life left. In this auto parts bank can be found parts from cars
made 20 years ago as well as some that rolled off the assembly line just
a couple of months ago.
The auto salvage business has become "big
time." His yard is connected by teletype to nine other salvage yards
covering a three state area. He explained he sells or gets parts
for his customers as far away as Detroit, Mich. Most cars are kept
in the yard until just about all parts have been stripped. This cannibalizing
is continued until nothing usable is left and then only are the cars cut
up and sent off as scrap metal.
Cars are "filed" in the lot according to
make and model so that any particular make can be found at a moments notice.
The yard employs five people with one driving a truck full time just hauling
in wrecked cars. Auto salvage operators are required to have a regular
auto dealers license and demand a title for every car brought in no matter
what condition it might be in, Bert explained. This prevents car
thieves from stealing cars, wrecking them and selling them for salvage
when they feel they might not be able to get rid of them in any other way.
Married, Bert lives at 1316 Marston Ave.
with his wife and two sons, Michael, two and one-half and Bryan, 10 months. |
Jerry Carney, 1974
Ames Daily Tribune, September
28, 1959
BUSINESS NEWS - Eighteen auto parts companies
in five Mid-western states now have their combined inventories readily
available to supply their individual customers. Jerry Carney, half
owner of Carney Bros. Auto Salvage, said today. The Ames firm has
its headquarters one half mile south on Hiway 69.
According to the company official, the 18
parts companies have leased a 1,146 mile private communicating line which
makes direct connection to a teletypewriter machine installed in each of
the company's office. The special service arrangement is being provided
by the Bell System's Long Lines Department. |
Ames Daily Tribune, March
31, 1960
HANDLE IT GENTLY - Jerry Carney, left, and
Bob Colt exchange several sticks of dynamite Tuesday while standing on
an ice jam 200 yards east of U.S. 69 on Squaw Creek. Carney is co-owner
of Carney Brothers Auto Salvage here. He used seven charges of explosives
in two days to break up ice blocking the flow of the rising river.
When these pictures were taken, Squaw Creek was near bank full and threatening
to flood Carney's car salvage lot seen in the rear. Over night, the
waters spilled over the banks and have flooded part of the lot. By
Tuesday noon, Carney and Colt, an employee of the salvage company, had
broken loose an ice jam one quarter mile long. Carney remarked, "We're
not experts at this dynamiting business, but you bet we're cautious."
Another employee, Larry Miller, helped the two explode the charges ranging
from four to six sticks of explosives each. The group moved back
50 yards and touched off the charges with electricity, then waited for
what looked like ice cubes to descend on them before returning to the river. |
Ames Daily Tribune, March
30, 1962
CARNEY BROTHERS SERVICE AREA WITH USED CAR,
TRUCK PARTS - A community and nation on wheels results in more wear and
tear on vehicles -- and the need ot handle and use more efficiently cars
and other vehicles when they have outlived their usefulness. Providing
this service is the Carney Bros. Auto Wrecking firm, located south of Ames
on Highway 69.
The firm was established in 1956 by brothers
and co-owners Jerry Carney of 2015 Friley Road and Bert Carney of 1316
Marston Ave. In six years of active expansion, the business has grown
from employing no persons to a present staff of eight to 10 employees that
resulted in a payroll last year of $34,000.
When begun, the plant included 2,000 square
feet of space on a two-acre tract. Present size has grown to 5,000
square feet on a 15-acre lot, with plans for future expansion, even after
just completing a new building.
The company provides late model used parts
for all passenger cars and trucks, and is one of the three largest firms
of this nature in the midwest. Added convenience to customers includes
an instant parts-finding service, via speed telephone service on a private
line that contacts 25 firms in a five-state area to locate "hard-to-find
parts." [Carney Bros. customers
from decades ago may remember this additional layer of conversation provided
by the "squawk-box," the amplified live phone line that replaced the teletype
communications machine used to secure parts from other salvage yards.]
About
20 per cent of its business is in the Ames area, with 30 per cent intra-state,
and 50 per cent sent elsewhere in Iowa. Future plans call for possibilities
of reaching international markets as well.
Persons using the Carney Bros. Auto Wrecking
service include the general public, body shops, new car dealers, used car
dealers, independent garages, other wrecking yards, engine and transmission
rebuilding firms, and foundries that reprocess iron and tin. The
auto and truck parts are distributed by delivery service, bus, truck, and
film outlets. |