About Us

Three generations. Sixty-five years. One valley.

The Three generations.
Sixty-five years.
One valley.

Mull Group started in 1961 as a single machine shop on North River Road in Wheeling, West Virginia. Today we are eleven companies — all within eight miles of where we started.

From one shop to
eleven companies.

The Foundation
1877

Nail City Bronze begins pouring metal.

The Wheeling-area foundry that would later become a Mull Group company opens its doors. Nail City Bronze becomes one of the longest-operating brass and bronze foundries in the Ohio Valley — a heritage that continues today, casting bronze for mill equipment all over the country.

First Generation
1961

Bill Mull starts Mull Machine

In 1961, Bill Mull opens Mull Machine on North River Road in Wheeling, West Virginia — a single machine shop serving the steel mills of the Ohio Valley. He puts in years of work that turn a small operation into a name local mills know they can trust. The company is built one part, one customer, one shift at a time.

Second Generation
1983

W. Quay Mull II purchases Mull Machine.

In 1983, W. Quay Mull II buys Mull Machine from his parents and begins building on what they started. Over the next forty years, he grows the company from a single shop into a family of eleven operations — machine shops, foundry, galvanized steel production, commercial real estate, and more. He sees opportunities his parents never could have, and he has the courage to take them.

A Loss in the Family
December 28, 2023

W. Quay Mull II passes away.

After four decades of leadership, W. Quay Mull II passes away on December 28, 2023, leaving behind a company transformed and a legacy that runs through every part of Mull Group's operations. He is remembered every day by the people he hired, mentored, and built this company alongside.

Third Generation
2024

The next chapter begins.

The third generation of the Mull family steps in to lead the company forward — committed to honoring what was built, growing what is possible, and keeping American manufacturing rooted in the Ohio Valley. The mission has not changed in 65 years. The scope of what comes next is just beginning to take shape.

THE NEXT SIXTY-FIVE starts now.

01 / GROWTH

Diversifying Beyond the Mills

Steel mills built Mull Group, and they always will be at our core. The future demands we do more. We are actively expanding into aerospace, energy, defense, and other industries where our precision machining, foundry capability, and engineering depth bring clear advantages.
02 / WORKFORCE

Apprenticeship Program

Skilled machinists are the rarest resource in American manufacturing today. We are not waiting for someone else to solve that problem. We are standing up an apprenticeship program to train the next generation of Mull machinists the way our team was trained — on the floor, with mentors, learning the trade by doing it.
03 / COMMUNITY

Committed to the Ohio Valley

Every Mull Group facility sits within eight miles of where Bill Mull started. That is not a coincidence — it is a commitment. We believe in this community, in its workforce, and in keeping American manufacturing right here in West Virginia. The Ohio Valley built America. We're not leaving.

A note from James B. Mull.

When I think about Mull Group, I think first about the people who got us here — and then I think about how much further we can go.

In 1961, my grandfather, Bill Mull, started Mull Machine on North River Road in Wheeling, West Virginia. One shop. A handful of machinists. A reputation built one part at a time. In 1983, my father, W. Quay Mull II, bought the company and spent the next forty years growing it into eleven companies — machine shops, a foundry that’s been pouring bronze since 1877, galvanized steel, commercial real estate. He passed away on December 28, 2023. I think of him every day I walk through these buildings — and I measure my work by a simple standard: would what we’re doing today make him proud?

I’m the third generation to lead this company. I came up through the work, not around it. And I can tell you this: I have never been more optimistic about American manufacturing than I am right now.

The next sixty-five years

The country is relearning something the Ohio Valley never forgot — that you cannot have a strong nation without people who make things. Reshoring is real. Aerospace, energy, and defense need precision manufacturers who can engineer, machine, cast, and assemble under one roof, and there are fewer of us every year. Mull Group intends to be one of the companies that answers that call.

Steel mills built us, and they will always be at our core. But the same capabilities that keep a hot strip mill running — heavy machining, in-house bronze, real engineering, assembly we stand behind — are exactly what the next generation of American industry needs. We are investing in new equipment, new technology, and new ways of working that most shops our size won’t touch. We’re not chasing the future. We’re building it in the same buildings where we built the last sixty-five years. 

Why here, and nowhere else
Every Mull Group facility sits within eight miles of where my grandfather started. That is not nostalgia — it is a bet, and I’m making it with my eyes open. The Ohio Valley shipped the steel, the bronze, and the people that made this country run. Plenty of companies left when it got hard. We didn’t, and we won’t. Because the thing this valley never lost is the thing that can’t be bought or relocated: people who take pride in skilled work. When we hire a machinist, we’re often hiring the third generation of a trade family — the same way I’m the third generation of mine. That’s why we’re standing up apprenticeship programs instead of waiting for someone else to train the workforce. The machinists, foundry workers, and engineers of 2050 will be made here, on our floor, by our people. My grandfather bet on this valley in 1961. My father doubled down in 1983. I’m going all in.
To everyone who built this — and everyone who will

Mull Group was never built by one name on a sign. It was built by three generations of my family, yes — but just as much by the machinists who ran the lathes on second shift, the foundry workers who poured bronze in July heat, the welders, the engineers, the office staff who kept it all moving, and the customers who trusted us with the work that couldn’t fail. Some of those people spent forty years on our floor. Some of their names I’ll never know. Every one of them is part of why we’re still here.

To everyone who has ever punched a clock at a Mull company, past and present: this legacy is yours as much as it is mine. And to every apprentice walking through our doors for the first time — you’re not joining a company. You’re joining a line of people who took pride in the work, and the best chapter hasn’t been written yet. We’re going to write it together, right here.

 

Sixty-five years in, Mull Group is just getting started.  

James B. Mull
President & CEO · Mull Group, Inc.

Want to be part of what's next?

Whether you have a project, a question, or interest in our apprenticeship program — we'd like to hear from you.