Young Electric Sign Company

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Young Electric Sign Company (YESCO) is a privately owned manufacturer of electric signs based in Salt Lake City. The company was founded by Thomas Young in 1920 and today has divisions and branches in 10 western states, as well as in Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas. YESCO offers a comprehensive range of services for electronic signs, including design, fabrication, installation and ongoing maintenance.

Many of the world’s most recognized sign projects have been produced by YESCO. These include the NBC Experience globe in New York City, the historic El Capitan Theatre and Wax Museum marquees in Hollywood, and numerous icons in Las Vegas, such as Vegas Vic, the Fremont Street Experience, the Astrolabe in the Venetian Resort Hotel Casino and the recent Wynn Las Vegas resort sign.

Contents

[edit] History

The company was created by Thomas Young on March 20, 1920.[1] The young sign painter had left England just a decade earlier to immigrate with his family to Ogden, Utah.

In the beginning, his shop specialized in coffin plates, gold leaf window lettering, lighted signs and painted advertisements. As the science of lighting and sign-making advanced, so did TomYoung’s signs. His company, driven by the pioneering spirit he exemplified, maintained a leading-edge position in the industry, using neon and other new technologies as they became available to expand the frontiers of what could be done.[citation needed]

In 1933, YESCO opened a branch office in the Apache Hotel in Las Vegas. The company erected the first neon sign in Las Vegas for the Boulder Club.[2]

Young Electric Sign Company – which became known by its acronym “YESCO” – soon became recognized as a leader in the sign industry, tackling large and complex sign projects. For example, it erected the first neon spectacular sign in Las Vegas for the Boulder Club in the late ’30s, and in 1995 it completed the four-block-long Fremont Street Experience canopy in Las Vegas.

YESCO continues to design, build, install and maintain signs and interior displays in areas including the application of light-emitting diode (LED) technology to signs. In recent years, YESCO has built a substantial outdoor digital media (billboard) division of its business.[citation needed]

[edit] Film History

YESCO's Las Vegas Boneyard has been used in numerous movies, television shows and music videos.

[edit] Landmark Signs

[edit] The NBC Experience Store Globe

NBC ushered in the millennium with a new YESCO “message globe” in its NBC Experience store, located at Rockefeller Center in New York City. The electronic sign quickly became recognized as one of the most distinctive electronic displays in the world.

From the outside of the building, it looks like a brilliant illuminated globe. The 35’-diameter hemisphere is covered with thousands of full-color LEDs. Colorful video and special effects, along with animations provided by YESCO’s media services group, are displayed on the globe’s surface, telling the NBC story. When it was first turned on, it literally stopped traffic on West 49th Street.[citation needed]

[edit] Vegas Vic

Main article: Vegas Vic

Perhaps the world’s most recognized electronic sign, Vegas Vic was designed by and built by YESCO. Upon its installation in 1951 over the Pioneer Club on historical Fremont Street, the 75’-tall electronic cowboy immediately became Las Vegas’s unofficial greeter.

[edit] Wynn Las Vegas

The 135 foot tall marquee features a 100 foot high, 50 foot wide, concave, double-faced LED message center with a first-of-its-kind “moving eraser.” Conceived by Steve Wynn, the massive eraser glides silently and smoothly up and down over the LED message center, appearing to change the graphics as it goes. The eraser weighs 62,000 pounds, and is counterbalanced by a 62,000-pound weight inside the sign.[citation needed]

The sign uses 4,377,600 LEDs and the eraser is powered by a 300 horsepower motor at its base that runs a gear and cable system. The firm of FTSI engineered the 62,000-pound eraser’s movement, which is capable of speeds up to 10 feet per second.[citation needed]

[edit] YESCO's "Bone Yards"

YESCO "boneyard"
YESCO "boneyard"

More formally known as the Young Electric Sign Company's Neon Sign Graveyard,[3] or also as the Neon Boneyard, YESCO maintains a storage yard of retired signs in Las Vegas in a fenced lot behind its facility that is not open to the public. The company has been instrumental in supporting the Neon Museum, which is dedicated to preserving the neon signs and associated artifacts of Las Vegas[4]. The Neon Museum has now moved many of the signs from YESCO's lot to a new storage facility at the future home of the Neon Museum in Downtown Las Vegas, where they are awaiting restoration.

Some of the retired signs in the boneyard include the sign for the Silver Slipper casino and Aladdin's lamp from the first version of Aladdin Casino.

[edit] The Fremont Street Experience

YESCO installed the vaulted canopy arching 90 feet in the air above four blocks of the Fremont Street.

[edit] Services

[edit] Custom Signs

YESCO provides businesses of all sizes and types with custom signs and display systems. The company’s services in this area include design, fabrication, installation and ongoing maintenance.

[edit] Electronic Displays

YESCO is the only manufacturer in the United States that designs, assembles, sales/leases, installs, creates content for and services LED electronic displays. The company’s Media Services group creates content designed to optimize the advertising potential of the displays. YESCO’s service department keeps the displays working properly and looking fresh.[citation needed]

[edit] Resorts & Casinos

In 1932 YESCO expanded into the resort and casino industry – just a year after gaming was legalized in Las Vegas – and has played an important role in the resort and casino industry ever since, not only in Las Vegas but throughout regions of the United States and Canada where gaming is found.

The company maintains separate manufacturing facilities for interior signs, exterior signs and digital electronics, and prides itself on its innovative use of digital electronics, full-spectrum capabilities and responsive customer service.

[edit] Outdoor Media

YESCO offers high-impact billboards that have been proven to deliver memorable impressions to today’s highly mobile consumers. The company’s Outdoor MediaSM division operates approximately 1250 outdoor displays located strategically on major thoroughfares across 10 western states.

[edit] Repairs and Maintenance

Today, with a company footprint of 35 locations, YESCO offers maintenance agreements to keep signs and lighting looking fresh and working properly. The company is also available to repair all types of signs on a time-and-material basis.

[edit] Current states

Arizona

California

Colorado

Idaho

Louisiana

Montana

Mississippi

Nevada

New Mexico

Oregon

Texas

Utah

Washington

Wyoming

[edit] Key Individuals

[edit] Founder

Born in Sunderland, England, in 1895, Thomas Young was 15 years old when his family emigrated to Ogden, Utah. Hard-working and talented, the boy applied his passion to making signs, becoming a Master Sign Writer. He began by creating wall-lettering and gold-leaf window signs, working for the Electric Service Company and the Redfield-King Sign Company in Ogden.

Young married Elmina Carlisle in 1916. Four years later, in 1920, he founded his own sign company: Thomas Young Sign Company, which specialized in coffin plates, gold window lettering, lighted signs and painted advertisements.

In 1932 Young expanded his business to Las Vegas, and within two years purchased the Ogden Armory for $12,000 to expand production capacity. He also started a branch in Salt Lake City in that year.

Young was elected president of the National Sign Association in 1936, serving for two terms. A year later, in 1937, he moved his family and YESCO headquarters to Salt Lake City, Utah, and continued expanding the business, always staying on the leading edge of sign technology and innovation.

In 1969 Young turned over the reins of company leadership to his son. He died two years later.

[edit] Designers

Some of YESCO's most prominent signage designers have included:

[edit] External links

[edit] References