One of the legacies
of the old Trade Extension Bureau that remains alive today was its effort to
standardize industry vocabulary. For instance, ever since it was formed in
1883, the industry’s largest trade association had been called the National
Association of Master Plumbers. However, few people outside the industry
understood the difference between a “master plumber” and a “journeyman
plumber.”
The industry’s other major trade group, the Mechanical
Contractors Association of America, dates back to 1889, when it was born as the
National Association of Master Steam and Hot Water Fitters. Likewise, the
“master fitter” identity was confused with “steamfitter,” the term applied to
the journeymen who worked in the field.
As part of the trade extension
merchandising movement, TEB searched for terms that would connote the fact that
these firms sold plumbing and heating materials. In 1922, it formed a committee
from all branches of the industry, which agreed upon the following trade
designations.
Heating
contractor was
the term picked to replace the cumbersome “master steam and hot water fitter”
terminology. TEB’s definition was “a person or firm engaged in the sale and
installation of heating materials and appliances.”
Plumbing
dealer was
to be the description for master plumbers. TEB got swept up in a gust of
rhetoric defining it as: “Any person, firm or corporation equipped to render
plumbing services to the public, and who buys, stocks, sells at retail,
installs and contracts to furnish and install, plumbing appliances, fixtures,
accessories or other materials used in plumbing installations.”
The TEB committee also moved to change
the term jobber, replacing it with wholesaler.
It recommended that “jobber” be used instead to apply to a journeyman who does
repair work.
Results
The term
contractor was readily endorsed by
the heating side. In fact, MCAA’s forerunner went right out and changed its
name in 1920 to the Heating and Piping Contractors National
Association.
However, dealer never
caught on with plumbing firms. Many felt that it emphasized sales too much over
the mechanical side of the business. Some NAMP members picked up on the
“contractor” term assigned to the heating side and began describing themselves
as “plumbing contractors.” Others continued to refer to themselves as “master
plumbers.”
It wasn’t
until 1953 that the organization as a whole opted for the contractor
terminology by changing its name to National Association of Plumbing
Contractors. Yet the term master plumber
is still in common use throughout the industry.
The term wholesaler
ended up gaining widespread acceptance, though a few old-timers still can
be heard describing themselves as “jobbers.” The industry at-large disregarded
TEB’s recommendation to call repair journeymen “jobbers.”
Language
continuously evolves. But not by committee decree.
Invention Of The Term ‘Hydronics’
Hydronics/hydronic heating
is a modern term coined in 1957 by the Institute of Boiler and Radiator
Manufacturers (I=B=R), now The Hydronics institute. The effort began in 1956
when the group’s Marketing Research Committee decided to find a better name for
what was then commonly known as the
wet heat industry.
Almost everyone agreed that sounded too
“clammy.” It was associated with ugly radiators and unpleasant sounding
boilers. The marketing men wanted to create a modern image associated with
pleasure, comfort, cleanliness and prestige.
Among terms considered by the committee
were Fluid Heat, Sahara
Heat, Hydrosol, Liquidmatic,
Hydrosolar, Hydroradiant,
Hydrothermics, Thermodynamics,
True Perimeter, Liquid
Heating, Hydro-Way, Aquaradiant,
Coiled Comfort, and others. The most
popular name submitted in a poll of I=B=R members was “Fluid Heat.”
In the end, a new entry, combining the
familiar Latin root of hydro, pertaining to
water, with the modem science of electronics gained favor with the committee. Hydronics
sounded scientific and accurately described what was defined as “the science of
heating and cooling with water.”
Before adopting the term, I=B=R sought the
opinion of two Northwestern University English language authorities, including
Dr. Bergen Evans, author of the Dictionary on American Usage
and consultant to the then popular TV quiz show, “The $64,000 Question.” He
commented that, “the word hydronics is not an unpleasant word,” and emphasized
that, “a word is what you make it.”
After finding no legal obstacles to using
the term, I=B=R formally approved it at its meeting of June 5, 1957. Then they
began a campaign encouraging both trade and general interest publications to
use the term “hydronics” at every opportunity, and also wrote to all major dictionary
publishers asking them to include it. In 1960 the term was adopted by
Webster’s New World Dictionary of the American Language, and
I=B=R changed its name to The Hydronics Institute.