- H. K. Porter, Inc
H. K. Porter, Inc. (Porter) manufactured light-duty
railroad locomotive s in the USA, starting in 1866. The company became the largest producer of industrial locomotives, and built almost eight thousand of them. The last locomotive was built in 1950, but the company continues to produce industrial equipment to this day.Porter was known for building locomotives that were much smaller than those normally used by the larger
Class I railroad s. The company's locomotives were small enough that they were often operated by only one person. Porter built mostly steam locomotives, but they also built some powered by gasoline and diesel engines, and some that ran on compressed air.The largest collection of Porter photographs and information is currently housed in the Kentlein Porter Collection at the [http://www.nmra.org/library/ A. C. Kalmbach Memorial Library] (a service of the
National Model Railroad Association ) in Chattanooga, TN. Many of the 780 builder's photos, blueprints and other locomotive data were republished in "Porter Steam Locomotives", published by the library.Timeline
. They specialized in four wheeled, saddle tank locomotives for small industrial railroads.
1871: Fire breaks out in the shop on
7 February , destroying twelve locomotives under construction, the shop, and 23 adjacent structures. Total losses were estimated at $200,000, and the partnership was dissolved. Smith went on to form Smith & Dawson Locomotives, which becameNational Locomotive Works . Porter formed a new partnership withArthur W. Bell , called Porter, Bell & Co. and they built their first locomotive for the Jackson Furnace Co. of Michigan. They expanded their range to include light passenger engines and small freight engines, primarily for narrow gauge railroads. They would go on to build 223 locomotives together, until Arthur Bell died in May 1878.1878: Henry K. Porter continues the business on his own, as H. K. Porter & Co. By this time, he has established a reputation as a builder of rugged and very specialized locomotives. He can custom build a locomotive quickly and efficiently, because he has developed a system of interchangeable parts...pistons, wheels and boilers in various sizes that can be combined in several configurations to suit a customer's requirements. Some of the most basic designs are kept in stock, and can be ordered quite literally "off the shelf".
1890: Porter builds their first compressed air locomotive, to work in a coalmine in Pennsylvania. Compressed air was stored in two cylindrical tanks, and used to drive the pistons instead of steam. This allowed locomotive haulage inside mine tunnels without the fumes from burning coal in a boiler, or the dangers of high pressure steam. Porter went on to build over 400 compressed air locomotives for use in mines, plants, and even the street railways of New Orleans. Other builders were making compressed air locomotives, but by 1900, Porter had 90% of the market.
1899: Henry Porter incorporates the company, as the H. K. Porter Co., Inc. He builds a new and expanded plant at 49th and Harrison Street in Pittsburgh. Production peaked in 1906 with almost 400 locomotives built that year.
1911: Porter built their first gasoline powered locomotive, and in 1915 they built their first "fireless" locomotive, using a large pressure vessel to hold steam and hot water in place of a boiler. These proved to be even more useful than the compressed air locomotives, and soon Porter dominated this new niche market.
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1939: After a long decline, the H. K. Porter Co. declared bankruptcy.
Thomas Mellon Evans purchased the company, determined to turn it around. He began buying other manufacturing companies and adding them to his collection. Locomotive production increased again duringWorld War II , and the company was recognized for its service to the country in 1942, but soon after the end of the war, demand for steam locomotives dwindled, and H. K. Porter became primarily a holding company for the many subsidiaries Evans had acquired.1950: The company built its last locomotive for an industry in
Brazil . The parts business and all the required patterns were sold to theDavenport Locomotive Works in Iowa.External links
* [http://www.steamlocomotive.info/locobrowse.cfm?bn=H.K.%20Porter Preserved H.K. Porter locomotive list]
* [http://www.over-land.com/rrporter.html Links to many Porter pages]
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