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Photo - Railroad Museum

Started by jay, October 25, 2008, 06:44:05 AM

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Rick Rowlands

That is actually a Columbus and Ohio Southern fireless locomotive.  Its sister is in front of Three by the River in Sharon.  The YS&T Whitcomb is the orange colored unit.

The hot metal car sitting out front I obtained for the group in the early 1990s.

ForumManager

WOW!
I think you answered Jay's question!

Mike

Quote from: jay on October 25, 2008, 06:44:05 AM
This is a photo of a locomotive which has been added to the collection of the Mahoning Valley Railroad Heritage Museum on Poland Avenue in Youngstown.

Does anyone know the history of this unit?

Sheet & Tube 0-4-0 Whitcomb Engine

Whitcomb Locomotive Works
George Dexter Whitcomb (1834-1914), of Chicago, Illinois, started a modest machine shop in 1878, and began the manufacture of coal mining machinery, laying the foundation for the concern that became known as The Whitcomb Locomotive Company. Mr. Whitcomb designed and marketed the first successful coal mining machine. In 1892, this firm, then located at Orleans and Ohio Streets in Chicago, Illinois was incorporated under the laws of Illinois as George D. Whitcomb Company. This industrialist, inventor and family man also founded Glendora, California, in 1887. Glendora is a suburb of Los Angeles, California.

Mules had long been used exclusively as the motive power in moving coal from the mines, but this method was expensive and unsatisfactory. Because of the insistent demand for a more economical method, experiments were conducted using for power—electricity, compressed air and rope drive. Gasoline engines were definitely a novelty in those early days, nevertheless Whitcomb decided the principle could be successfully applied to a small mine locomotive. In April, 1906 the first successful gasoline locomotive was built and installed in a large Central Illinois coal mine. A barren of mules. ... Gasoline or petrol is a petroleum-derived liquid mixture consisting mostly of hydrocarbons and enhanced with benzene or iso-octane to increase octane ratings, used as fuel in internal combustion engines. ...


The year 1907 saw the company move to Rochelle, in Northern Illinois, where it continued to build quantities of gasoline powered locomotives for mine operation, both coal and metal. The reputation of the Whitcomb gasoline locomotive spread at such a rapid rate that, before long, greater production facilities were needed and in 1912 the plant was again moved to enlarged facilities elsewhere in Rochelle.


World War I saw the output of the Whitcomb plant almost entirely devoted to government orders. Hundreds of armor-plated locomotives were built for overseas service in France. These small 6-ton and 9-ton, narrow gauge locomotives proved highly efficient in trench warfare and they were used extensively in hauling needed supplies up to the front lines. In appreciation of their excellent contributions to the war effort, the Whitcomb Company was awarded a "Certificate of Merit" by the War

Many new innovations in the locomotive field were being introduced during this period. The first explosion-proof electric mine locomotive was designed and built by Whitcomb in 1914 and after exhaustive tests the U. S. Bureau of Mines issued its "Permissibility Plate." Whitcomb was the first builder of locomotives for underground work to receive such an endorsement. The first Whitcomb electric trolley locomotive was produced in 1921, and in 1929 Whitcomb designed and built the largest gasoline-electric locomotive that had then been offered our American railroads. This development was closely followed by the diesel-electrics which revolutionized the American transportation system.


In 1929 the company was purchased by The Baldwin Locomotive Works, and the new owners, under George Houston sought a greater base of diversified holdings. From 1931 until 1940 the company was operated as the Whitcomb Locomotive Works, a subsidiary of The Baldwin Locomotive Works. During 1940, Baldwin completely took over the company and after that time it was operated as a division of Baldwin known as The Whitcomb Locomotive Company. On July 19, 1932 Whitcomb Locomotive Company acquired the Milwaukee Locomotive Manufacturing Company. Baldwin Locomotive Works builders plate, 1922 The Baldwin Locomotive Works was an American builder of railroad locomotives. ...


Whitcomb continued to expand and progress after the war and the increased volume of business made it essential to expand storage and shipping facilities. A warehouse complete with the latest in material handling equipment was erected in 1947. A ten-ton overhead yard crane was installed to facilitate handling and storage of steel slabs and sheets. During 1948, a combination loading dock and locomotive test building was erected.


In February of 1952 locomotive production was shifted from Rochelle, Illinois to Baldwin's Eddystone, Pennsylvania Works. Industrial locomotives continued to be built under the Whitcomb name at Eddystone through the end of December 1952, when the name was dropped. Any Whitcomb locomotives built after that time carried the B-L-H identification.


The last Whitcomb locomotive manufactured at Rochelle was shipped on January 4, 1952 (construction number 61189). It was a 25-ton diesel-electric locomotive delivered to the Central Procurement Agency of the Transportation Corps. This locomotive was lettered and numbered USN No. 65-00330. Production of the Whitcomb locomotive line came to an end in March, 1956. Whitcomb was a large manufacturer of train locomotives in Rochelle and built around 5,000 units. The company also manufactured an automobile known as the Partin and Palmer. A restored model is now displayed in the Flagg Township Historical Museum, in Rochelle.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Under the Whyte notation for the classification of steam locomotives, 0-4-0 represents one of the simplest possible types, that with two axles and four wheels, all of which are driven. Generally speaking, those two axles are linked with side rods and form a single driven set. Richard Trevithick's 1804 pioneering locomotive, fittingly, was of the simple 0-4-0 type. In the U.S., the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's 0-4-0 "Atlantic" #2 was built in 1832 by Phineas Davis and Israel Gartner.

Other equivalent classifications are:
UIC classification: B (also known as German classification and Italian classification)
French classification: 020
Turkish classification: 22
Swiss classification: 2/2

In the UIC classification used in Europe and in more recent years in simplified form in the United States, an 0-4-0 is classified as B (German/Italian) (if the axles are connected by side rods or gearing) and 020 (French) (independent of axle motoring). (UIC's Bo classification indicates the axles are independently motored, which would be 0-2-2-0 in Whyte notation.)

Arrangements where all the wheels are driving wheels are generally used for switchers (UK: shunters) since they use all the locomotive's weight for traction, but have no leading or trailing trucks for stability at speed. 0-4-0 locomotives could either be tank locomotives or tender locomotives, with the former more common in Europe and the latter in the United States, except in the tightest of situations such as that of a shop switcher, where overall length was a concern. The notation "0-4-0T" is often used to indicate a tank engine.

By 1900 or thereabouts, the 0-4-0 had been superseded worldwide as the standard small switcher type by the 0-6-0, since the possible tractive effort of an 0-4-0 within normal axle load limits was not enough to move more than a couple of cars. The type continued in production, though, for use where a larger 0-6-0 was not suitable. An 0-4-0 could always negotiate tighter radius curves than the larger locomotive, and its shorter length was sometimes also an advantage, so it was commonly employed in dockyard work, switching industrial street trackage, as shop switchers, and in industry.
In the United States, the Pennsylvania Railroad kept producing 0-4-0s long after all other major railroads had abandoned development of the type, building their final A5s class into the 1920s. The A5s was a monster among 0-4-0s, larger than many 0-6-0 designs, with modern features found on few others of its type: superheating, power reverse, piston valves, and many others. The Pennsy built it because it had a large number of confined and tight industrial branches, more than most other railroads.

There are 0-4-0 diesel locomotives too, though small in number. The very smallest diesel switchers, such as the EMD Model 40, were of this arrangement.

jay

This is a photo of a locomotive which has been added to the collection of the Mahoning Valley Railroad Heritage Museum on Poland Avenue in Youngstown.

Does anyone know the history of this unit?