- Carl Gerlinger
Carl Gerlinger, Sr. was an American
businessperson in theU.S. state ofOregon in the early 20th century.The nephew of notable lumberman
George T. Gerlinger , Carl was born in on March 28, 1878 to George and Matline Gerlinger inNeuwiller ,Alsace-Lorraine Germany . He was raised inFrance . In 1901, Carl came to the US as an engineer aboard aHamburg-American Line ship. When it docked inTacoma, Washington , Carl was taken to the Tacoma Hospital suffering from malaria.Louis Gerlinger, Sr. , Carl's uncle, persuaded Carl to make his home inPortland, Oregon . There he worked for the Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Co. (OWR&N). In 1902, Carl moved toDallas, Oregon to work for theSalem, Falls City & Western Railway Company (SFC&W) owned by his uncle Louis.Starner, D Earl. "A Pictorial History of the Straddle Carrier". Lowell, Oregon: Vidagraph Publications. 1988. 48p.] Baldwin, Cathrine A. "Making the Most of the Best: Willamette Industries' Seventy-Five Years". Portland, Oregon: Willamette Industries. 1982. 172p.OCLC 8734832]In 1908, while working on in the roundhouse on a steam boiler, it exploded. His brother August Gerlinger was killed and several others were injured. Carl lost his right arm. He also temporarily lost his sight. He was laid up for over a year until he regained his sight. He decided to concentrated on inventing. Among his inventions are the oil distributor, oil retort and spark arrestors for locomotives.
Working for the
Southern Pacific Railroad (which had purchased the SFC&W once owned by Carl's uncle), he was quickly promoted and was the general foreman of the shops at Dallas).In 1918, Gerlinger, a gifted
machinist and business leader, invested his savings into Ed Biddlle's Dallas Iron Works. A year later it became Dallas Machine & Locomotive Works which employed a dozen men. Business expanded quickly from manufacturing logging and railroad equipment. In 1920 they rebuilt nine locomotives and twelve in 1923.Next came the Gerlinger Carrier, a machine that could load and unload lumber. This business led to the Gerlinger Carrier Company, a manufacturer of both
straddle carrier s andforklift truck s. The company eventually merged withTowmotor and Caterpillar Tractor in the 1950s. [http://www.gerlingercarrier.com/history.htm History of the Gerlinger Carrier Company] ]In the 1970s, the business returned to family control. Today, the carriers are manufactured in nearby Salem, by G.C.C., Inc., which is controlled by one of Carl's descendants, and run by Mark Lyman and Ron Lyman. [ [http://egov.sos.state.or.us/br/pkg_web_name_srch_inq.show_detl?p_be_rsn=135930&p_srce=BR_INQ&p_print=FALSE GCC Business Entity Data] - at Oregon Secretary of State - Corporation Division]
References
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