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Morningstar Welding, LLC

Poolesville, MD 20837

5.0

Company Info

  • Annual Vol Undisclosed

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Our Story

Morningstar Welding has been a family owned business operating in the same location of Poolesville, Maryland for over 109 years. "The Shop", a family moniker, is the oldest continuously run business in the town of Poolesville. The Morningstar family, however, has been in the metalworking business for over 167 years with beginnings in Frederick County, Maryland circa 1850. Morningstar Welding credits their longevity to their commitment to craftsmanship, hard work, and business practices based on honesty and integrity. Morningstar Welding was formally known as Morningstar Blacksmith Shop.  Murrel "Mike" Morningstar opened his shop at 17612 Elgin Road in 1908. The original building was a weatherboard building later rebuilt in 1947 to a cinder block building which is still in use today. Murrel was the town smithy and mainly based his income on farrier services, wagon and wagon wheel building. Murrel had a 9 foot square forge with a hand blower that son, Dick, would operate for him. Dick recalls as a child having to stand on a box to crank it!  Murrel worked ten hour days six days a week in front of a forge and anvil. He rarely had to go off his property as the horses and wagons were brought to him. It was a hard life, but his home was located on the property, so he never was too far from his family. He died in his shop on July 22, 1954 of a heart attack at age 69. Murrel was well respected by all and an integral part of the Poolesville and surrounding areas community his entire life. His anvil still remains on the property as a symbol and testament to this man and his trade. Murrel discouraged Dick (Richard) from entering the blacksmithing business. Not only was it a hard life he instructed Dick, it was a dying industry becoming one for horse racing and pleasure riders mainly. Dick saw an opportunity in the welding business and his sister, Dorothy, bought him his first welder in 1952. This welder is also a surviving family relic on the shop property. Dick was self-taught and began primarily working on farm equipment when it was suggested he take his business on the road and enter the commercial construction business. With a name change to Morningstar Welding, in 1960 he bought his first portable welder and entered the lucrative world of erecting buildings and high-rises. He was known to travel as far as Ocean City, Maryland but mainly worked within a one hundred mile radius of Poolesville. Morningstar Welding participated in the building boom in the Maryland, DC, and Northern Virginia region. He subcontracted with the largest construction companies of the tri-state area. Dick, however never forgot the farmers and locals and always made time to fix and repair the odds and ends that came into the shop at all hours (undercharging many times, if at all). Dick's accounting practices were epically antiquated as he remembered the day and put down his jobs in a spiral notebook at 10:00 at night. Being a family business, his sister, Bet deciphered his notes and sent bills and then later his wife, Nancy, became the bookkeeper. He billed local farmers once a year with no interest. It was an "old school Poolesville" business practice, and it worked beautifully. Gerry, his brother, a Rockville city engineer, also participated in the business pricing jobs and reading blueprints. Morningstar Welding did experience growth, and Dick brought in employees, including his son Patrick, who taught the trade, fair business ethics, and the rewards of hard work to local and not so local boys. Dick, like his father, worked 10-12 hour days 6 days a week for well over half a century, Dick and wife Nancy enjoyed retirement in Florida until his death on April 1, 2014. In 2006, Dick handed the reins over to Patrick who continues the family business tradition today. Doubtful a day goes by that an old timer does not mention the integrity and work ethics of Murrel or Dick for which grandson/son Patrick carries this torch and continues this legacy. He has grown Morningstar Welding into a six truck and twelve employee operation with wife, Karri, as a full time office manager and son Kyle, as a welder. Their new 40 foot  x 80 foot building houses all the latest and greatest metal fabricating equipment. "The Shop" today does a lot of in-house fabrication and site installation, but Patrick also caters to the walk-in locals. He has expanded the business adding snow plow accessorizing and building and finds himself less behind the torch and more behind the desk. Patrick is the fifth in a line of generations who engaged in the business of iron and steel whether blacksmithing or welding. When asked how it feels to be part of a continuous 167 year family tradition he exclaims "Look how far we've come!"

 

What We Do

Commercial Experience

Misc Project Mixed Use Office Building
Airport Runway Animal Hospital / Kennel Apartments & Condominiums Arena / Stadium Assisted Living Athletic Field Auto Dealership / Service Bank Bridge Casinos Church / Synagogue City / Town Hall Civil & Site Development Club House / Community Center Court House Dams & Levies Data Centers - Mission Critical Design Build Education (K-12) Fire / Police Station Fitness Center Gas Station Golf Course Government Grocery Stores Historic Preservation Hospital / Nursing Home Hotel / Motel House Industrial Maintenance Jail / Prison Laboratory Library Lighting Retrofits Manufacturing Plant Marine Medical Office Military Museum Non-Residential Building Park / Playground Parking Garage Parking Lots Post Office Pre-Manufactured Structures Radio / Television Station Residential Building Restaurant Retail Store Road / Highway School / College / University Secure and Shielded Facilities Sewage / Water Treatment Plant Single Family Residential Storage Facility / Warehouse Swimming Pool Tennis Court Terminal - Airport / Bus / Railroad Theater Theme Park Tract Housing Tunnel Utilities

Regions & Counties Serviced

  • Washington D.C.

District Of Columbia All

Maryland All

Virginia All

Our CSI Codes

05 01 10 - Maintenance of Structural Metal Framing
05 01 50 - Maintenance of Metal Fabrications
05 06 10.13 - Steel Column Schedule
05 06 50 - Schedules for Metal Fabrications
05 06 70 - Schedules for Decorative Metal
05 12 16 - Fabricated Fireproofed Steel Columns
05 50 00.00.01 - Metal Fabrications
05 51 13 - Metal Pan Stairs
05 51 16 - Metal Floor Plate Stairs
05 51 23 - Metal Fire Escapes
05 51 36 - Catwalks
05 75 00.00.01 - Decorative Formed Metal
05 76 00.00.01 - Decorative Forged Metal
13 36 13.13 - Steel Towers
40 17 13 - Acetylene Welding and Cutting Piping
40 17 16 - Acetylene-Hydrogen Mix Welding and Cutting Piping
40 17 19 - Methylacetylene-Propadiene Welding and Cutting Piping
40 17 23 - Oxygen Welding and Cutting Piping
40 17 26 - Inert Gas Welding and Cutting Piping
41 36 23.23 - Plasma Cutting Equipment
41 65 19 - Mobile Welders

Gallery

Featured Image 1
Mixed Use
Featured Image 2
Commercial
Featured Image 3
Steel Delivery
Featured Image 4
Brambleton Pool house

Preferred Brands

Meyer Ice & Snowplow Equipment
Meyer Ice & Snowplow Equipment
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