11/24/2025
Remembering the "Win Cities"...during WWII the Twin Cities renamed themselves the "Win Cities" as the community came together on the Home Front to support the men and women serving in the armed forces. In November of 1943, the Tonawandas were recognized as leading the state in wartime work and unity. The "Win Cities" had raised 111% of their assigned quota from the United War Fund which helped organizations such as the USO. Scrap drives in the Tonawandas were always successful in collecting vitally needed resources. The Tonawanda NEWS promoted the Tonawandas as "the Twin Cities of Industry on the Niagara Frontier," while reminding people of tin can salvage collections and paper drives led by volunteers from the Red Cross, Boy Scouts, and local basketball leagues. On November 26, 1943, the employees of the Buffalo Bolt Company in North Tonawanda were honored with the coveted "Army-Navy E Award" for excellence in war production. While hundreds of Buffalo Bolt workers joined the military, with many losing their lives in battle, thousands of Buffalo Bolt employees continued to produce the products that literally allowed the US to produce the machines that won the war. Tanks, ambulances, jeeps, hospital ships, and twin-engine transports were truly kept together through the work and patriotism of the women and men of the Buffalo Bolt Company.