1820 - Construction began for a new factory located in Savannah Georgia near a beach. At the time of construction, the company wasn't given a name.
1828 - Construction was completed, and the business was called Mandus Processing Company. A factory founded by wealthy industrialist Delbert "Luis" Mandus. A company known for mass producing cotton for clothing.
1849 - Delbert had his two sons, Henry and Oswald.
1865 - Delbert was shot to death on June 15, at age 67. Henry would take over the business on June 21. Turning it into a facility that mass produces kerosene.
1866 - Oswald opened his own butcher shop business.
1868 - Oswald would collaborate with Henry, expanding the business and adding a seperate processing plant for butchered farm animals to mass produce meat products.
1894 - Mandus Processing Company was becoming poorly managed, resulting in several fatalities among workers and children. Employees would get their clothes caught in fast moving machinery, tearing them apart. With hired children working in the air ducts inhaling large doses of steam and dust, clogging their lungs. A downward spirale into several lawsuits and boycotts against the company.
1900 - Oswald would commit suicide on January 1, and had murdered his wife and two sons with an axe in there own home on December 31, 1899 at 11PM.
1902 - Mandus Processing Company was on the verge of total bankruptcy for unsafe work environments, resulting in 28 fatalities from an mass explosion erupting the building, with 30 injured from collapsing debris. The cause of the explosion is uncertain, though, the source of the explosion was unidentified.
1914 - Henry would make a last ditch attempt to save the company by profiting off of the great war, mass producing guns, ammunition, and gernades for Britian during their time in battle, making shipments from the United States to Britian starting on November 29.
1915 - Henry Mandus had passed away at age 65 on July 3 due to alcohol poisoning, leading to Mandus Processing Company to shut down.
1968 - The building was renovated by an entrepreneur named Jarith "Anderson" Kentler on December 14, along with renaming the facility to Xenochronic Company, a company that would mass produce chemical compounds and cleaning supplies.
1969 - A chemical called Vitæ was formulated by Kentler to help kill critters and bateria among crops in farmers' fields, giving life to the crops, hense the name vitæ.
1970 - A new mixture was produce called Compound X, a chemical made for cleaning homes and other businesses of dirty floors. It is also safe to use when cleaning dirty dishes and functions as detergent for clothing, hense the name compound x.
1972 -














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