In the spring of 1956, the construction of the St. Lawrence Seaway
inspired a new business venture. James and Margaret Sandburg owned
6 acres of land on the river not far from several of the construction
sites. A friend suggested it would be a great spot for a trailer park.
Workers for some of the worlds greatest construction firms would be
moving in and staying for the years it would take to complete the
waterway, and afterward the great economic growth that the new
Seaway was expected to stimulate in the area would keep the park
full.
Morning Star Mobile Village opened in the spring of 1956. There
were spaces for 80 of the mobile living units people called trailers,
which were then 8 feet wide and up to 50 feet long. The trailer life style was becoming so popular that it caught Hollywoods imagination, and
The Long, Long Trailer, starring Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz was one
result. The park did fill quickly, and stayed full until the Seaway was
completed.
As the construction families moved on to other projects, it became
clear that something would have to be done to find new residents for
the park. There were some trailer dealers in the vicinity, and they sent
some of their customers. Trailer manufacturers began contacting the
Sandburgs, suggesting they become dealers. They consulted their good friend, business advisor, and banker, Jack Ward, of the Ogdensburg
Trust Company about the idea. After getting the answers to the usual
bankerly questions, Jack got the bank's board to lend the money for
the beginning inventory: one home. Along with the go ahead, Jack
offered some advice: "make sure the quality you sell is good, and give
customers more than they expect for their money, and you'll do OK."
Forty years later, manufactured homes have entered the
mainstream of American housing. Millions of Americans have chosen
this housing form, and today about 1 in 10 housing starts is a
manufactured home. A typical house now contains around 2,000 square feet and meets the most stringent building code in the U.S. That's a
long haul from the 8-wides that inspired that 1950s movie in which
Lucy and Desi played a newly married couple setting out with their new home hitched to their car.
The banker's advice became the Morning Star Homes operating
philosophy and the secret of the company's success. It's included in
every advertisement in the motto and promise: "More house for the
money."
Morning Star Homes has installed nearly 4,000 manufactured
homes throughout northern New York. In the beginning, Jim Sandburg
and a helper could deliver a home with a pickup truck and set it up in a
few hours. Today, Morning Star Homes employs 16 people to sell,
deliver, install, and service approximately 100 new and used homes
each year.
Morning Star Mobile Village is still the area's premier mobile home
park. As homes grew in size from 8-wide to 10-wide, 12-wide, 14-wide
and doublewide, the lots changed in size and shape, too. Today, the
park accomodates a total of 55 homes.
As on-site construction costs continue to escalate faster than
inflation and as standards continue to improve, the manufactured home is becoming a more accepted form of permanent housing. This greater
acceptance is bringing a more sophisticated buyer into the market-a
buyer who seeks out a well established, respected company to do
business with. Morning Star's longevity and professionalism appeals to
that buyer as well as the younger, less experienced buyer.
Morning Star enters its 5th decade with a renewed commitment to
seek better, more effective and efficient ways to perform its major
responsibility: providing the best possible housing value at the lowest
cost-More House For The Money.