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MotorVehicleChronicle-2

Last week I mentioned that the French  Berliet was built under licence in the United States by the American Locomotive Co. from 1906 to 1908. From 1909 to 1913 they built the Alco automobile from their own design.

 

13alcoa logo

They were manufactured in Alco’s Rhode Island Locomotive Works plant.
The Alcos were a quality and durable automobiles and trucks, but they never got their manufacturing cost under control and they never learned how to market automobiles.
An interesting note was that Walter P Chrysler cut his teeth in the automobile business while Alco’s automobile manufacturing General Manager. He left for Buick in 1911 and helped with their success. Biick was the cornerstone of General Motors.
Alco had some success with racing, winning the Vanderbilt Cup in 1909 and 1910.

 

1913 Alco

1913 Alco Touring car

 

 

alco-black-beast-8

Alco Black Beast Racer
Winner of the 1909 and 1910 Vanderbilt Cup

 

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Ad for an Alco touring car.

I don’t know of any 1/43 models of Alco automobiles,

CLICK HERE for last week's post

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Originally Posted by Ed2023:

This thread is one of my favorites, keep it going.  Here are pictures from the ATHS convention in 2010 at the Alameda County Fairgrounds in Pleasanton, CA.  The stud in the first picture is my son, there are lots of old truck photos in the album, and toy train picts and vids in the other albums.









Just think of the alternate history and timeline scenarios if Alco had succeeded in the auto and truck industry and eventually began producing heavy trucks to compete with the railroads.

Numbers of makes of trucks, like number of makes of cars, made in America, were once many and varied.  Some survived later than a variety of cars, after WWII, and were once familiar names like White and Reo. I think there are still some small specialty truck builders such as FWD that are under the radar.  I don't know the current status of Mack, a very long truck maker that once had Otto Mears, Colorado's

famous narrow gauge RR pioneer, in its company management.  (he had a Mack rail vehicle built, but apparently it never made it into service on any of his railroads)  From my library I  pulled out three books on vintage trucks, with one listing over 300 American trucks,  from Ace to Yellow Truck. I  found that there was a Baldwin truck. 

I was aware of Alco automobiles but have never heard of a Baldwin vehicle.  Wonder if this came from the Baldwin Locomotive Works?   Trucks included the three P's, Packard, Peerless, and Pierce-Arrow, Stanley (steam), and Stutz, known

for fire engines.  Pre-war truck models, like pre-war car models, of interesting, often

defunct makes, are of interest here.

 

Great stuff, Richard and all.  I look forward to this link every week.  I had heard of Alco automobiles, was not aware of trucks, although it makes perfect sense, considering the companies heavy duty RR products. 

 

Interestingly, (to me, anyway) is that neither an Alco nor the '53 Eldo would be a candidate for my layout.  I stick, pretty seriously to 1950, and fairly common stuff that you would have seen around you in 1950.  IF you would have seen an Alco car around, by that time, it certainly would have been in a museum.  And, of course, the 1953 model was just in somebody's imagination in 1950.

 

Paul Fischer

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