- Cooke Locomotive and Machine Works
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The Cooke Locomotive and Machine Works, located in Paterson, New Jersey, manufactured steam railroad locomotives from 1852 until it was merged with seven other manufacturers to form American Locomotive Company (ALCO) in 1901. ALCO continued building new locomotives at the Cooke plant until 1926.
Contents
History
Cooke opened in 1852 as Danforth-Cooke and produced nearly 3000 locomotives before ALCO closed the plant in February 1926.
In 1901, Cooke and several other locomotive manufacturers are merged to form the American Locomotive Company; Cooke's plant becomes the Alco-Cooke Works.
Exports
Cooke built two 0-8-2 tank locomotives for the Port Talbot Railway and Docks Company, South Wales, in 1899. They also built the neighbouring Barry Railway's five class K 0-6-2T locomotives the same year.
Preserved Cooke locomotives
Following is a list of preserved locomotives built by Cooke before the ALCO merger in 1901. They are listed here in serial number order.[1]
Serial number Wheel arrangement
(Whyte notation)Build date Operational owner(s) Disposition unknown 4-4-0 October 1856 Western and Atlantic Railroad #49 Texas static display in Grant Park, Atlanta, Georgia unknown 4-2-4T October 1863 Central Pacific Railroad #3 C. P. Huntington, Southern Pacific Railroad #1 California State Railroad Museum, Sacramento, California[2] 1555 2-6-0 February 1884 Colorado and Southern Railway #9 Georgetown Loop Railroad, Silver Plume, Colorado 1861 4-4-0 February 1888 Dardanelle and Russelville #8 Nevada State Railroad Museum, Carson City, Nevada 2053 4-6-0 October, 1890 Union Pacific Railroad #1242 Lion's Park, Cheyenne, Wyoming 2054 4-6-0 October, 1890 Union Pacific Railroad #1243 Durham Western Heritage Museum, Omaha, Nebraska 2197 4-6-0 April 1892 Texas and New Orleans Railroad #314 Center for Transportation and Commerce, Galveston, Texas 2202 4-6-0 April 1892 Texas and New Orleans Railroad #319 Riverdale, Georgia 2341 4-6-0 July 1896 Southern Pacific Railroad #2248 Grapevine Vintage Railroad, Grapevine, Texas 2360 4-6-0 March 1897 Southern Pacific Railroad #2252 Overlooking the Union Pacific classification yard, Roseville, California[3] 2408 4-6-0 October 1898 Missouri Pacific Railroad #2522 Paris City Park, Paris, Arkansas References
Notes
- ^ Sunshine Software. "Steam Locomotive Information". http://www.steamlocomotive.info/. Retrieved October 30 2005.
- ^ Diebert, Timothy S. and Strapac, Joseph A. (1987). Southern Pacific Company Steam Locomotive Conpendium. Shade Tree Books. ISBN 0-930742-12-5.
- ^ "Mighty 2252 Relocation Complete". Rocklin and Roseville Today. August 5, 2005. http://www.rocklintoday.com/news/templates/community_news.asp?articleid=2328&zoneid=4. Retrieved August 5 2005.
Locomotive manufacturing predecessors of American Locomotive Company 1901 merger Later acquisitions North American locomotive builders ALCO • Alco-GE • Altoona Works • Atlas • Baldwin • Bombardier • Brooks • Brookville • CLC • Climax • Cooke • Davenport • Dickson • EMD • Fairbanks-Morse • GE Transportation • GMD • Globe • Grant • Harlan and Hollingsworth • Hinkley • Ingalls • Jewett • Lima • Manchester • Mason • MLW • Mount Clare Shops • Mount Savage • NREC • Norris • Pittsburgh • Porter • Portland • Progress Rail Services • Railpower • Rhode Island • Richmond • Rogers • Schenectady • SLCC • Taunton • Tredegar • Vulcan • Wabtec • Westinghouse • Whitcomb • WillametteSee also: List of locomotive buildersCategories:- Locomotive manufacturers of the United States
- Cooke locomotives
- Paterson, New Jersey
- United States train and rolling stock stubs
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