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HISTORY OF MR. & MRS. KULAS
During World War I, "E.J." left NELA and became one of the founders of Cuyahoga Stamping & Machine Company, which made cartridge cases for the Allied Armies. In 1917, Burton G. Tremaine and Franklin S. Terry, the co-founders of NELA, joined others in purchasing the Peerless Automobile Company and soon thereafter engaged E. J. Kulas as Sales Manager for that company. In March 1923, "E.J." left Peerless and formed the Midland Steel Products Company by merging the Parish & Bingham Company of Cleveland with the Detroit Pressed Steel Co. and the Parish Manufacturing Company of Detroit. Years later and after "E.J.'s" death, Midland Steel Products Co. became the core of Midland-Ross Corp. "E.J." remained President of Midland Steel Products Co. from its founding until his death in 1952. But in a highly unusual step, in 1925, he took on the additional responsibility of being President of Otis Steel Co., a position he held until 1942 when Otis Steel was bought by Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation. During 1928, "E.J." permitted Margaret Bourke-White to photograph steelmaking in the Otis Steel plant. Later he became so enthusiastic about her work that he published and distributed a small booklet of 16 of her pictures to the stockholders of Otis Steel Company. That booklet and those photographs caught the eye of Henry Luce, who engaged her for his new magazine, "Fortune." Several years later, when forming Life Magazine, Henry Luce asked Margaret Bourke-White to become one of the four original staff photographers. "E.J.'s" other business interests included directorship in the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railroad, the Pittsburgh & West Virginia Railroad and the North American Coal Company. In addition to his business career, "E.J." was very interested in music and served as a vice-president of the Musical Arts Association as well as a trustee of both the Northern Ohio Opera Association and the Cleveland Chamber Music Society. He had a particular fondness for Baldwin-Wallace College, where he was a trustee for many years. The first major grant of the Kulas Foundation was $50,000 to Baldwin-Wallace for its Conservatory of Music. Elroy J. Kulas died in his home in Cleveland on May 12, 1952.
Fynette Kulas died in the Women's Hospital in Cleveland on September 25, 1957. Mr. and Mrs. Kulas were members of the Church of Christ Scientist, as was their admired friend, Almeda Adams, the blind founder of the C.M.S.S. Possibly it was that fond acquaintanceship that stimulated their interest in supporting the blind, but their interest in C.M.S.S. came directly from their love for music, which was far ranging. As an example, in the 1950's and under Mrs. Kulas' guidance, the foundation became a very early supporter of music therapy and, in the mid 1960's, helped establish the Department of Music Therapy at the C.M.S.S. Also, while Mrs. Kulas was active, the foundation sponsored programs for young conductors and composers, which brought to the Cleveland Orchestra such future major conductors as James Levine and Louis Lane. The Kulas' love for music extended directly into their personal residences. In their beautiful home in Gates Mills they installed both a magnificent pipe organ, which Mrs. Kulas loved to play, and several stained glass windows depicting musical themes. In 1941, they bought the estate of Edward K. Bok near the famous Bok Singing Tower at Mountain Lake, Winter Haven, Florida. FOUNDATION
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