Skip to main content
Sponsored Content

Maze Nails: A 175th anniversary E-book

History meets innovation for the nation’s largest producer of specialty nails.
8/30/2023

Just 30 years after Illinois became a state, Samuel Maze started his lumber company along the Illinois River.

The business eventually grew to include the production of the nation’s largest selection of specialty nails.

To this day, Maze’s company is still going strong.

[Read the Maze Nails E-book here.]

Maze Lumber is not only the state’s oldest lumberyard, but Samuel’s great-great-grandson, Roelif Loveland is president of Maze Nails, and Maze Company is proudly celebrating its 175th anniversary this year.

“We have been blessed with many generations of great associates — both non-family and family employees,” Loveland said. “A huge part of longevity is having quality people — and the other part is having quality products that are continually demanded in the marketplace.”

“As my brother, Jim, said on the anniversary of his 150-year-old home in Spring Valley, Illinois, we are all simply caretakers of old businesses and old houses,” Loveland added. “It is our job to nurture them and make certain that they survive for the next generation.I am very proud to be spending my years doing exactly that.”

Loveland also said he is impressed by his ancestors’ ingenuity, which set up Maze Nails for longevity.

“It seems like entrepreneurship was the rule rather than the exception back in those days,” Loveland said. “Family-owned and operated storefronts and small businesses sprang up everywhere. The Maze boys were pretty clever fellows and built a very strong business for future generations.”

Over the years, Loveland said there have been steady changes to the family business.

For example, nails were once entirely made of zinc purchased from Illinois Zinc and M&H Zinc, but in 1916 nails began being produced with steel and dipped in zinc.

That was done by hand at first, but in 1955, Loveland said brothers, James and Hamilton Maze, designed a dipping machine to do the work.

“The only thing that has stayed the same is that both types of nails were highly dependable and became demanded by contractors nationwide,” Loveland said.

X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds