
3
rd
Generation
Family-owned Business
Learn About Us
Driving Excellence since 1927

As a third-generation, family-owned business, we retain the values
Henry F. Owens, Jr. in everything we do. Our success is made possible by staying true to our core values - integrity, trust, accountability, commitment, collaboration, respect, and passion.
We have operated through multiple business cycles and continue to build a strong track record through reliable service, cost effective strategies, and a customer-centric approach.
We have been a Teamsters Local 25 Member for 50+ Years
Since our founding, we have employed over 380 people, contributed millions annually in payroll and benefits to the
City of Boston.
We are proud to support the communities we serve and to provide employment opportunities to a diverse workforce base.

Moving What Matters For Nearly 100 Years
Our Story
Henry F. Owens, Jr. broke through racial barriers with an industrious spirit, drive for success, and commitment to excellence to become one of Cambridge, Massachusetts first and most successful black entrepreneurs. Henry F. Owens was born and raised in Cambridge, where he operated his moving company. He graduated from Rindge Technical Highschool in Cambridge, where he was a star athlete. Henry was a perennial all scholastic member of the football team. He was also a heavyweight boxer. Henry was chosen as Rindge Man of the Year in 1972 and later inducted into the Rindge Hall of Fame (class of 1928). After high school he become the New England Golden Glove Champion and was also the Diamond Belt Champion of boxing. Henry had the opportunity to fight Joe Lewis, with whom he later became friends. Henry F. Owens, Jr was punctuated with many obstacles. After receiving the highest score on the police exam for the City of Cambridge two years in a row, he was denied an appointment to the police force. Many feel to this day that the best thing that happened to Henry was that he never become a police officer. Looking to help support his seventeen brothers and sisters, Henry F. Owens, Jr. asked his father, a blacksmith, to borrow $50.00 to buy a horse and buggy, “because I can help make you some money.” Henry would haul ice before and after school in order to assist his parents financially. Henry F. Owens eventually expanded from hauling ice and bulk items to household goods and moving pianos for many of Boston’s famous visiting artists. For years, Henry concentrated on rigging and moving the world’s finest pianos for many of Boston’s famous visiting artists. Henry hoisted pianos for the former Senator Edward Brooke, Johnny Mathis, Arthur Fiedler, Baldwin Piano Company, Boston Symphony, and Leonard Bernstein. Henry F. Owens Inc moved Raytheon’s first microwave oven. In the early days, most of the loads were pianos. Pianos were something for which movers were hard to come by. When people needed a piano moved they would say call Henry. Henry gained the reputation that if you had something difficult to move, especially a piano, the only person to call was Henry F. Owens Inc Movers. With the money he had saved and the help of his father, Henry managed to purchase his first truck, a Model T Ford and established Henry F. Owens movers in 1927. Henry F. Owens Movers had become a familiar name in Cambridge by the 1950s, and business had become fairly steady. Owens opened a small warehouse with his 20 employees and over the next several decades slowly built his business. During the winter months, which was traditionally the slow period in the household goods moving business Henry saw opportunity in exporting trucking and construction equipment to the U.S. Virigin Islands. He sold trucks and equipment. Eventually, Henry F. Owens, Jr become involved in construction where he and his youngest son, Eddie, built houses and rental units. The bulk of business in the 70s came from affiliations with Global Van Lines and Atlas Van Lines, which ranked top 10 among major carriers for shipments. Henry F. Owens Movers was one of eighteen minority companies in the nation and the only one on the East Coast with Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) authority to transport goods interstate. Owens Movers was one of a handful of minority movers affiliated with a major carriers. In 1975, Henry’s son, Eddie, took over the business and decided to abandon pianos and make a bid for some of the increasing volume of commercial business. The company concentrated its operations on commercial and industrial moving and began to watch its list of corporate clients grow slowly but steadily. Through the years, Owens Movers would go on to perform hundreds of moves for some of the largest institutions in Massachusetts, including Bank of America, Blue Cross, Fidelity, Gillette, Harvard University, John Hancock, , Northeastern University, Prudential Insurance, Raytheon, among many others. Today, the company continues to expand into commercial and industrial real estate investment, warehousing and storage, and distribution. Owens Companies is currently working on two large scale real estate development projects in Boston with The Fallon Company.

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