- Hinkley Locomotive Works
Hinkley Locomotive Works was one of a number of
railroad steam locomotive manufacturers of theUnited States in the 19th century.History
The company that was to become known as Hinkley Locomotive Works got its start in
Boston, Massachusetts , in 1831.Holmes Hinkley and his partnerDaniel F. Child founded the Boston Machine Works and soon built the third stationary steam engine that was constructed inMassachusetts . The company's first locomotive was a4-2-0 built in 1840 that followed the roughly standard designs of the 1830s. Hinkley's early locomotives closely resembled those designed byJohn Souther .The company gained a reputation as a reliable and respectable locomotive builder and grew to become the largest manufacturer in
New England within a decade. In 1848 the company reorganized as the Boston Locomotive Works and operated under that name until foreclosure due to the financial panic in 1859.After reorganization under Jarvis Williams, the company became Hinkley, Williams and Company. Hinkley, who had been forced out in the foreclosure, returned to the company in another reorganization in 1864 as the Hinkley and Williams Locomotive Works. The company produced locomotives for the railroads of the
American Civil War and regained some of the earlier profitability that they had enjoyed earlier in the century.In 1872 the company was renamed to Hinkley Locomotive Works but soon fell into bankruptcy again by the end of the decade. This bankruptcy led to the 1880 reorganization as the Hinkley Locomotive Company. Unfortunately, orders fell off and the company was permanently closed in 1889. The only Hinkley locomotive known to be preserved is a 9-ton 0-4-0 built in 1846 as the "Lion" for the Machiasport Railroad of eastern
Maine . It is preserved at the Maine State Museum inAugusta, Maine . [Rivard, 1987]References
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*External links
* [http://www.catskillarchive.com/rrextra/plepa075.Html "Shaw's four cylinder balanced engine"] describing a unique Hinkley product of 1881.
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