- Stock car (rail)
In
railroad terminology , a stock car is a type ofrolling stock used for carryinglivestock (notcarcass es) to market. A traditional stock car resembles aboxcar with slats missing in the car's side (and sometimes end) for the purpose of providing ventilation; stock cars can be single-level for large animals such ascattle orhorse s, or they can have two or three levels for smaller animals such assheep ,pig s, andpoultry . Specialized types of stock cars have been built to haul livefish andshellfish and circus animals such ascamel s andelephant s. Until the 1880s, when theMather Stock Car Company and others introduced "more humane" stock cars, loss rates could be quite high as the animals were hauled over long distances. Improved technology and faster shipping times have greatly reduced losses.Initial use and development
Rail cars have been used to transport livestock since the 1830s. The first shipments in the United States were made via the B&O Railroad in general purpose, open-topped cars with semi-open sides. [White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 172.] Thereafter, and until 1860, the majority of shipments were made in conventional
boxcar s that had been fitted with open-structured iron-barred doors for ventilation. Some railroads constructed "combination" cars that could be utilized for carrying both live animals as well as conventional freight loads. [White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 173]Getting food animals to market required herds to be driven hundreds of miles to
railhead s in theMidwest , where they were loaded into stock cars and transported eastward to regional processing centers. Driving cattle across the plains led to tremendous weight loss, and a number of animals were typically lost along the way. Upon arrival at the local processing plant, livestock were either slaughtered by wholesalers and delivered fresh to nearby butcher shops for retail sale, smoked, or packed for shipment in barrels of salt.The suffering of animals in transit as a result of hunger, thirst, and injury, was considered by many to be inherent to the shipping process, as was the loss in weight during shipment. A certain percentage of animal deaths on the way to market was even considered normal (6% for cattle and 9% for sheep on average, according to a congressional inquiry [White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 257; Lews H. Haney (1908), "A Congressional History of Railways in the United States", New York: vol 2, p 260] ), and carcasses of dead animals were often disposed of along the tracks to be devoured by scavengers, though some were sold to glue factories or unscrupulous butchers. Increased train speeds reduced overall transit times, though not enough to offset the deleterious conditions the animals were forced to endure.
Some of the early railroad companies attempted to alleviate the problems by adding passenger cars to the trains that hauled early stock cars. The
New Jersey Railroad and Transportation Company followed this practice as early as 1839, and theErie Railroad advertised that livestock handlers could ride with their herds in specialcaboose s. These early passenger accommodations were the predecessors of the later "drovers caboose" designs that were used until the mid-20th century. [White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 175] Railroad operating rules for livestock and handlers that rode the trains were very limited, as the handlers were private contractors or employees of the shippers, not employed by the railroads. A 1948 rulebook for the Santa Fe Railroad, for example, lists only one rule regarding livestock:However, even with livestock handlers and faster schedules, many stock cars were still listed on company rosters with open roofs and very little in the way of improved conditions for the livestock themselves. [White, "American Railroad Freight Car", pp 173-175] Most railroads resisted the call for as long as possible from shippers for improvements to cars specifically designed to carry livestock. The railroads generally preferred to use standard
boxcar s because that type of car proved much more versatile in the number of different types of loads it could carry. [White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 123]When the railroads and cattle industry failed to act quickly enough to correct these perceived deficiencies, the government and even the general public went into action. Claims were made that the meat of neglected animals was unfit for human consumption.White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 257] In 1869,
Illinois passed the first laws to limit the animals' time on board, and required them to be given 5 hours' rest for every 28 in transit. Some railroads stepped in with their own new designs at this time, such as thePennsylvania Railroad 's class KA stock car, a design first published in 1869 which featured a removable second deck for transporting pigs or sheep. [White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 176] However, double-deck stock cars had been experimented with as early as the 1830s on theLiverpool and Manchester Railway in England. [White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 248] Other states such asOhio andMassachusetts soon followed with similar legislation, though effective federal laws were not enacted until the passing of the FederalMeat Inspection Act of 1906.The first patented stock car designs that actually saw use on American railroads were created by Zadok Street. Street's designs (US patent|106887 and US patent|106888, both issued on
August 30 ,1870 ) were first used in 1870 on shipments betweenChicago andNew York City . They were designed for trips to take 90 hours between the two cities and included water troughs feed from tanks under the floor, and food troughs fed from hoppers in the roof. Street's design proved impractical as each car could carry only 6 steers.White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 258] Alonzo Mather, a Chicago clothing merchant who founded theMather Stock Car Company , designed a new stock car in 1880 that was among the first practical designs to include amenities for feeding and watering the animals while en route. [cite web| url=http://www.michiganrailroads.com/RRHX/Timeline/1880s/TimeLine1880.htm| title=Railroad History Time Line - 1880| accessdate=2007-01-08 ] Mather was awarded a gold medal in 1883 by theAmerican Humane Association for the humane treatment afforded to animals in his stock cars. [cite web| url=http://www.rootsweb.com/~nyherkim/fairfield/matherfamily.html| title=The Mather Family of Fairfield, NY| accessdate=2007-01-08| last=Dieffenbacher| first=Jane| date=2002-06-07 | work=This Green and Pleasant Land, Fairfield, NY ]Minneapolis ' Henry C. Hicks patented a convertible boxcar/stock car in 1881, which was improved in 1890 with features that included a removable double deck. George D. Burton ofBoston introduced his version of the humane stock car in 1882, which was placed into service the following year. The Burton Stock Car Company's design provided sufficient space so as to allow the animals to lie down in transit on a bed of straw.In 1880, American railroads rostered around 28,600 stock cars. With the innovations developed by Mather, Hicks and others, this number nearly doubled in 1890 to 57,300, and was nearly tripled in 1910 to 78,800. [White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 121. White notes the original source for these numbers as statistics from the
Interstate Commerce Commission .] During this period, the cars' capacities also increased. In the 1870s few stock cars were built longer than 28 ft (8.5 m), and could carry about 10 tons of stock. Car lengths increased to an average of 34 ft (10.4 m) in the 1880s and stock cars of this period regularly carried 20 tons of stock. [White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 247]Certain costly inefficiencies were inherent in the process of transporting live animals by rail, particularly due to the fact that some sixty percent of the animal's mass is composed of inedible matter. Even after the humane advances cited above were put into common practice, many animals weakened by the long drive died in transit, further increasing the per-unit shipping cost. The ultimate solution to these problems was to devise a method to ship dressed meats from regional packing plants to the East Coast markets in the form of a
refrigerated boxcar .Refrigerated cars
A number of attempts were made during the mid-1800s to ship agricultural products via rail car. In 1857, the first consignment of "dressed" beef was carried in ordinary
boxcar s retrofitted with bins filled with ice.Detroit 's William Davis patented a refrigerator car that employed metal racks to suspend the carcasses above a frozen mixture of ice and salt. He sold the design in 1868 to George Hammond, a Chicago meat-packer, who built a set of cars to transport his products to Boston.In 1878, meat packer Gustavus Swift hired engineer Andrew Chase to design a ventilated car, one that proved to be a practical solution to providing temperature-controlled carriage of dressed meats, and allowed Swift & Company to ship their products all over the
United States , and even internationally. The refrigerator car radically altered the meat business. Swift's attempts to sell Chase's design to the major railroads were unanimously rebuffed, as the companies feared that they would jeopardize their considerable investments in stock cars, animal pens, and feedlots if refrigerated meat transport gained wide acceptance.In response, Swift financed the initial production run on his own, then—when the American roads refused his business—he contracted with the
Grand Trunk Railway (who derived little income from transporting live cattle) to haul the cars intoMichigan and then eastward throughCanada . In 1880 the Peninsular Car Company (subsequently purchased by ACF) delivered to Swift the first of these units, and theSwift Refrigerator Line (SRL) was created. Within a year the Line's roster had risen to nearly 200 units, and Swift was transporting an average of 3,000 carcasses a week to Boston. Competing firms such asArmour and Company quickly followed suit.Live cattle and dressed beef deliveries to New York (
tons ): ["Railway Review",January 29 ,1887 , p. 62.]The subject cars travelled on the Erie, Lackawanna, New York Central, and Pennsylvania railroads.
pecialized applications
Horse cars
For many decades, racehorse owners regarded the railway as the quickest, cheapest, safest, and most efficient medium of equine transport. The horse express car allowed the animals (in some instances) to leave home the morning of a race, theoretically reducing stress and fatigue.
As early as 1833 in
England , specially-padded boxcars equipped with feeding and water apparatus were constructed specifically for transporting draft and sport horses. In theUnited States , however, horses generally traveled in conventional stock cars or ventilated boxcars. Early on, the need for improved methods for tethering horses in boxcars, while at the same time allowing a horse enough room to maintain its balance while in transit, was recognized. [White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 265]Racehorses, and those kept as breeding stock, were highly-valued animals that required special handling. In 1885 a
livery andstable operator fromToledo, Ohio by the name ofHarrison Arms formed the Arms Palace Horse Car Company to service this market niche. Arms' cars resembled the passenger cars of the day; they featuredclerestory roofs and end platforms and came equipped with passenger car trucks (as they were intended for passenger train service). The units were segregated into two separate compartments, each containing eight individual stalls. By the late 1880s Arms had acquired two competing firms, Burton and Keystone. While the cars operated by George D. Burton closely resembled the Arms design, the Keystone Company's cars were much more utilitaran in design as they were intended for transporting animals of lesser value and inclusion in standard freight train consists. The Keystone fleet eventually grew to more than 1,000 cars. [White, "American Railroad Freight Car", pp 266-267]Many of the cars finished out their days in
maintenance of way (MOW) service.Circus use
Many circuses, especially those in the
United States in the late-19th and early-20th centuries, featured animals in their performances. Since the primary method of transportation for circuses was by rail, stock cars were employed to carry the animals to the show locations.The
Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus , which still travels America by rail, uses special stock cars to haul its animals. When a Ringling Brothers train is made up, these cars are placed directly behind the train's locomotives, to give the animals a smoother ride.cite web| url=http://www.trainweb.org/carl/CircusTrains/CircusTrainFacts.htm| title=Circus Train Facts| accessdate=2007-01-08| last=Morrison| first=Carl ] The cars that Ringling Brothers use to haul elephants are custom-built with extra amenities for the animals, including fresh water and food supply storage, heaters, roof-mounted fans and water misting systems for climate control, treated, non-slip flooring for safety and easy cleaning, floor drains that operate whether the train is moving or not, backup generators for when the cars are uncoupled from the locomotives, and specially designed ramps for easy and safe loading and unloading. Some of the cars also have built-in accommodation for animal handlers so they can ride with and tend to the animals.Fish cars
In the 1870s the railroads of America were called upon to transport a new commodity, live fish. The fish were transported from hatcheries in the
Midwest to locations along the Pacific coast, to stock the rivers and lakes for sportfishing. The first such trip was made in 1874, when Dr. Livingston Stone of the U.S. Fisheries Commission (which later became theUnited States Fish and Wildlife Service ) "chaperoned" a shipment of 35,000shad fry to stock theSacramento River inCalifornia . [cite web
url = http://dcbooth.fws.gov/fishcars.htm
title = Booth National Historic Fish Hatchery
accessdate = 2007-01-08
date =2002-08-21
language = English] The fish were carried in open milk cans stowed within a conventional passenger car. Stone was required to change the water in the cans every two hours when fresh water was available. [cite web| url=http://www.catskillarchive.com/rrextra/fishcar.Html| title=The Fish Car Era of the National Fish Hatchery System| accessdate=2007-01-08| last=Leonard| first=John| year=1979 ] The majority of the fish made the trip successfully and the result was a new species of shad for western fishermen.In 1881, the Commission contracted and built specialized "fish cars" to transport live fish coast-to-coast. [cite web| url=http://www.wnrmag.com/stories/1998/jun98/hatch.htm| title=The Badger Fish Cars & Dr. Fish Commish| accessdate=2007-01-08| last=Gilbert| first=Stephen| year=1998| month=June| work=Wisconsin Natural Resources Magazine ] The technologies involved in hauling live fish improved through the 1880s as new fish cars were built with icing capabilities to keep the water cool, and aerators to reduce the need to change the water so frequently. Some of the aerators were designed to take air from the train's steam or air lines, but these systems were soon deprecated as they had the potential to reduce the train's safe transit; the air lines on a train were used in later years to power the air brakes on individual railroad cars.
Fish cars were built to passenger train standards so they could travel at higher speeds than the typical freight trains of the day. Also, by putting fish cars into passenger trains, the cars were held at terminals far less than if they were hauled in freight trains. Fish car services, throughout their use, required that the fish keepers ride along with the cargo; a typical fish car crew consisted of five men, including a "captain" who would coordinate the transportation and delivery, several "messengers" who would serve as freight handlers and deliverymen, and a cook to feed the crew. The cargo's need for speedy transportation and passenger amenities for the crew necessitated the cars' inclusion in passenger trains.
Fish car operations typically lasted only from April through November of each year, with the cars held for service over the winter months. The cars became a novelty among the public, and were exhibited at the 1885 New Orleans Exhibition, the 1893 Chicago World's Fair, and the 1901
Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York. As fish cars became more widely used by hatcheries, they were also used to transport regional species to non-native locations. For example, a fish car would be used to transport lobster fromMassachusetts toSan Francisco, California , or to transportdungeness crab back fromSan Francisco to theChesapeake Bay .The first all-steel fish car was built in 1916. Fish car technology improved again in the early 1920s as the milk cans that had been used were replaced by newer tanks, known as "Fearnow" pails. The new tanks were about 5 pounds (2.3 kg) lighter than the milk cans and included integrated containers for ice and aeration fittings. One 81-foot (26.7 m) long car, built in 1929, included its own electrical generator and could carry 500,000 young fish up to 1 inch (2.5 cm) long. Fish car use declined in the 1930s as fish transportation shifted to a speedier means of transport by air, and to trucks as vehicle technology advanced and road conditions improved. The US government operated only three fish cars in 1940; the last of the fleet was taken out of service in 1947.
In 1960, [http://www.midcontinent.org/collectn/woodpas/wfc2.html Wisconsin Fish Commission "Badger Car#2"] was sold to the Mid-Continent Railway Historical Society, where it is in the process of being restored as a part of the Society's collection of historic rolling stock.
Poultry cars
From about 1890 to 1960, shipping live chickens and other birds by rail in special "henhouses on wheels" was commonplace. The cars featured wire mesh sides (which were covered with cloth in the winter to protect the occupants) and a multi-level series of individual coops, each one fitted with feed and water troughs. A human attendant traveled on board in a central compartment to feed and water the animals. The cars were also equipped with a coal stove that provided heat for the center of the car.
The concept is thought to been the brainchild of William P. Jenkins, a freight agent for the
Erie Railroad . Jenkins collaborated with aMuncie, Indiana poultry dealer by the name of James L. Streeter on the design of a specialized car designed solely for transporting live fowl. The Live Poultry Transportation Company was formed about the same time that the first poultry car patent was issued (US patent|304005, issuedAugust 26 ,1884 ). By 1897, the company had 200 units in operation.White, "American Railroad Freight Car", p 270]The Continental Live Poultry Car Company, a rival concern, was founded in 1890. Continental thought to dominate the market by offering larger cars, capable of transporting as many as 7,000 chickens in 120 coops, but the oversized cars failed to gain wide acceptance, and the firm closed its doors after just a few years in business.
Modern conversions
In the 1960s, the Ortner Freight Car Company of
Cincinnati, Ohio developed a triple-deck hog carrier for theNorthern Pacific Railway based on the design of 86-foot long "hi-cube"boxcar called the "Big Pig Palace." They later brought out a double-deck version called the "Steer Palace" that hauled livestock betweenChicago and later Kansas City to slaughterhouses inPhiladelphia and northernNew Jersey until the early to mid 1980s onPenn Central andConrail intermodal trains.The
Union Pacific Railroad , in an effort to earn more business hauling hogs fromNebraska to Los Angeles for Farmer John Meats, converted a large number of 50-foot auto partsboxcar s into stock cars. Originally built by Gunderson Rail Cars inPortland, Oregon for theMissouri Pacific Railroad , the conversions were done by removing the boxcars' side panels and replacing them with panels that included vents that could be opened or closed. The tri-level cars featured built-in watering troughs.Strings of 5-10 of these "HOGX" cars were, until recently, hauled twice-weekly at the front of double-stack intermodal freight trains. In spite of the technological improvements in these new car designs, they were unable to overcome the advantages of highway transport of livestock. The units have since been scrapped.
References
Notes
Bibliography
*|
*
*External links
* [http://www.sdrm.org/roster/passenger/mw205993/index.html Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway#1997] — photo and short history of a horse/express car built by the Pullman Company in 1930; it was subsequently converted into a roadway machine parts car.
* [http://users.rcn.com/jimdu4/stockcar.htm Capsule History: Rutland Stock Cars] — how the stock car was developed, improved and used by one railroad inNew England .
* [http://www.trainweb.org/hotrail/rrbx.html Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus Train — Blue Unit] — photos and descriptions from November, 1998.
* [http://www.sacramentohistory.org/search.php?topic=801 Sacramento History Online — Transportation/Agriculture] — photos of livestock transportation subjects in northernCalifornia in the early part of the 20th century.
* [http://www.sdrm.org/roster/freight/stk43009/ Union Pacific Railroad#43009] — photo of a 3-level stock car built forUnion Pacific Railroad in 1964 and a short history of the hog hauling service toLos Angeles .
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.