1889 ~ 1908 ~ 1943 H.K. Porter Locomotive Catalogs
Three complete catalogs - the 1889 and the 1908 H.K. Porter Light Locomotives
catalog. The 1889 catalog is loaded with wonderful woodcut illustrations, while the 1908
catalog features real photos of railroad locomotives.
Also included the 1943 catalog, loaded with company history, the manufacturing
process, and specs on a wide variety of motive power.
All in all, over 520 pages loaded with illustrations, specifications, company history
and more.
From the catalog: Our exclusive specialty is the manufacture of Light Locomotives, steam
and compressed air, in every variety of size and design, and for any practicable gauge
of track, wide or narrow. Our locomotives are used for a wide range of service. and are
well adapted to severe requirements and difficult conditions for which ordinary
locomotives are unsuitable or are too expensive.
"The designs illustrated and described in this catalogue comprise only our leading
styles and sizes. We have many modifications of these, besides special designs for
unusual requirements, and we are also prepared to make new designs for peculiar cases,
or to build to customers' specifications. Our standard designs and features of
construction are the result of over thirty years' experience in our exclusive specialty.
Our shop force is well drilled, most of the workmen having been educated in our employ,
and all of them take pride in sustaining the reputation of the shop for good work. Our
location in the city of Pittsburgh, the great coal, steel and iron center of America,
affords us a market where we can purchase, at the lowest price and of the very best
quality, the various materials that are required for the manufacture and construction of
locomotives. At different times during the past 30 years we have been compelled to
enlarge our facilities, and have now just completed practically new shops in all
departments, equipped with the most modern tools and processes, and of more than double
the former capacity. The annual capacity of our first shops; built in 1866 and destroyed
by fire in 1871, was 15 to 25 locomotives; of our early shops on the present site, 1872
to 1880, about 75 locomotives; of our enlarged shops, 1881 to 1893, about 125
locomotives; and of our present new shops, 300 locomotives."
ANIMALS VS. LIGHT LOCOMOTIVES:
". . . on an average where three animals and three drivers, or animals and drivers in
different proportion but at about the same daily expense, are used, it is cheaper to
operate a light locomotive. From $5 to $6 per day, or $1,500 to $1,800 per year, is a
reasonable allowance for the cost of operating a light locomotive to take the place of
ten to 40 animals. It is not unusual for an engine to save its cost in less than a year.
When through strikes or dullness of trade an engine is idle it saves money as well as
when it is busy; only a few cents' worth of white lead and tallow are needed for it,
while mules, whether idle or not, must be fed."
Catalogs Include:
:: 1889 H.K. Porter Catalog. 217 pages.
:: 1908 H.K. Porter Catalog. 232 pages.
:: 1943 H.K. Porter Catalog. 72 pages.
1889 Catalog
Sample thumbnails taken from the collection.
(Low resolution thumbnails - CD/DVD images are scanned at 300 DPI)
1908 Catalog
Sample thumbnails taken from the collection.
(Low resolution thumbnails - CD/DVD images are scanned at 300 DPI)
1943 Catalog
Sample thumbnails taken from the collection.
(Low resolution thumbnails - CD/DVD images are scanned at 300 DPI)
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