2009: Walter Industries announces rebranding and name change to Walter Energy, Inc.
2009: Walter Industries spins off Walter Investment Management Corp. (NYSE Amex: WAC) as an independent, publicly traded Real Estate Investment Trust
2009: Walter Industries closes Jim Walter Homes
2008: Walter Industries, Inc. restructures Jim Walter Homes, closing 36 branches.
2007: Acquired Tuscaloosa Resources, Inc. for $21.7 million
2007: Walter Mortgage Company Named to S&P's Select Servicer List; Financial Services business Receives RPS3 Servicer Rating
2006: Mike Tokarz named non-executive Chairman of the Board
2006: Walter Industries, Inc. spins off Mueller Water Products, including Walter Industries, Inc.’ U.S. Pipe business
2005: Company acquires Mueller Water Products, Inc., formerly a privately held leading supplier of flow control products, for an aggregate value of approximately $1.91 billion.
2005: Don DeFosset announces retirement; Gregory E. Hyland is named CEO.
2003: Financing segment launches program to buy seasoned loans that fit strict underwriting criteria. Walter Industries, Inc. agrees to sell AIMCOR to Oxbow Carbon & Minerals for $127.7 million, and agrees to sell JW Aluminum to Wellspring Capital Management LLC for $125 million.
2002: Company starts work on its first subdivisions, in Alabama and Louisiana, while also launching a program to build “spec” homes around the South.
2001: Company moves from “straight line” accounting method to more widely accepted “interest” method for mortgage operations.
2001: Company established a new mortgage lending operation, Walter Mortgage Company.
2001: Six Sigma, a program designed to reduce defects in a process is implemented.
2001: Company launched Commitment to Excellence, a program designed to create a corporate culture that emphasizes getting results in an environment where employees can build a rewarding, meaningful career.
2000: Mr. Walter dies at age 77.
2000: Ken Hyatt leaves CEO position; Don DeFosset is named CEO.
1997: Walter Industries, Inc. stock is once again traded on the New York Stock Exchange.
1997: Walter Industries, Inc. buys AIMCOR, which markets and distributes petroleum coke.
1996: Ken Hyatt succeeds Durham as CEO.
1995: Walter Industries, Inc., now fully protected from future asbestos litigation, emerges from bankruptcy protection.
1994: The Bankruptcy Court rules that the asbestos claimants cannot pierce the “corporate veil” separating Walter Industries, Inc. from its subsidiaries, so Walter Industries, Inc. is not liable for the asbestos claims. The plaintiffs appeal, and bankruptcy judge orders the two sides to reach a compromise. The case is settled with Walter Industries, Inc. putting $375 million into a trust fund for claimants.
1991: Joe Cordell becomes ill, and Robert “Bull” Durham is named CEO.
1988-1989: Walter Industries, Inc. sells Jim Walter Corporation and Celotex, Jim Walter Papers, The Georgia Marble Company and certain other subsidiaries as part of a strategy to de-leverage and de-conglomerate the Company.
1987: A group of investors led by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co, LP forms a new company, subsequently named Walter Industries, Inc., that takes Jim Walter Corporation private in a $2.4 billion leveraged buyout completed in January 1988.
1983: Jim Walter names Joe Cordell CEO, with Mr. Walter remaining as chairman.
1982: Jim Walter Homes sets a company record with 10,267 homes built.
1980: JW Aluminum begins operations in Mount Holly, S.C.
1972: The company starts development of what will eventually be four underground coal mines on the Blue Creek seam in Brookwood, Ala.
1969: Jim Walter Corporation ranks No. 287 in the Fortune 500, with sales of $623 million. By now, the company has grown into a conglomerate involved in everything from paper to marble to carpet manufacturing.
1969: Company acquires U.S. Pipe & Foundry Company, a Birmingham, Ala.-based company that manufactures ductile iron pipe.
1964: The company’s stock is listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
1962: Jim Walter Corporation more than doubles in size through acquisition of Celotex Corporation, a manufacturer of fiberboard.
1960: Mr. Walter’s success makes national news, as he is featured in Business Week, the Wall Street Journal, Time magazine and Barron’s.
1958: Mid-State Homes is created to handle mortgages.
1946: Jim Walter starts a homebuilding business in Tampa, Fla., by buying and selling a home for a $300 profit.