The museum's collection also contains a number of experimental cars, a number of cars that were produced in relatively small numbers, and some brands that gained favor for a brief period and then failed. There were hundreds of auto manufacturers in the early twentieth century, and although you might never have heard of Franklin, Kelsey and Tilney, Riker, Balzer, or Winton, these “unsuccessful” automobiles can help us understand American history in all its richness and complexity.
The first car the Smithsonian Institution collected was an experimental gasoline-powered automobile. Designed and produced by Stephen M. Balzer, this 1894 Balzer automobile was technologically interesting—it had a rotary engine—but Balzer never mass produced motor cars, and the Balzer Motor Company was not a commercial success.
1894 Balzer Automobile
1894 Balzer Automobile
Balzer's patent, numbered 573,174, December 15, 1896
Balzer's patent, numbered 573,174, December 15, 1896
Balzer-Manly Aeroplane Engine
Balzer-Manly Aeroplane Engine
Elwood Haynes in the Haynes Automobile
Elwood Haynes in the Haynes Automobile
In 1910, Elwood Haynes donated a car to the Smithsonian. The Haynes “Pioneer” was test driven on July 4, 1894. This car, although not the first American-made automobile, is one of the earliest made cars in the museum's collection, and is also gasoline powered.
In contrast to Stephen Balzer, who got out of the car business in 1902, Elwood Haynes stayed active in the business until his death in the 1920s. The Haynes Company did relatively well in the early twentieth century, but like many auto companies of the time, it failed during the 1920s.
Different Fuels, Different Futures
Building a gasoline car didn't guarentee sales and a future in the automaking business, some of the car companies that failed in the early twentieth century backed the wrong horse when it came to fuel type. Inventors and manufacturers built steam, gasoline, and electric cars. Gasoline has its problems as a fuel—it is inflammable and emits pollutants, to name but two of them—but gasoline-powered vehicles became the norm within a generation.
1904 Columbia Electric
1904 Columbia Electric
Columbia Motor Car Ad, from Town and Country, 1911
Columbia Motor Car Ad, from Town and Country, 1911
Electricity was a new technology in the late nineteenth century, and its modernity may have made it appeal to urbane city residents. City dwellers were the largest market for electrically powered vehicles, since such cars operated best on smooth roads and over short distances. Electric cars were quiet and easy to drive, and they were often seen as a replacement for a carriage for the wealthy: many early electric vehicles look like carriages. But electric cars had disadvantages: they couldn’t go very far between charges, batteries needed maintenance and wore out, and you couldn't carry a spare can of electricity in your car. Bad roads also limited electrics' usefulness.
Riker Electric Automobile, built about 1900
Riker Electric Automobile, built about 1900
1914 Rauch and Lang Automobile
1914 Rauch and Lang Automobile
Steam-powered Locomobile in about 1906, outside the home of Mrs. H. H. Smith. Smith's twins are seated in the car.
Steam-powered Locomobile in about 1906, outside the home of Mrs. H. H. Smith. Smith's twins are seated in the car.
W. E. Todd's receipt for purchase of the Locomobile, dated July 4, 1901.
W. E. Todd's receipt for purchase of the Locomobile, dated July 4, 1901.
Steam power had been harnessed for factories and for railroads in the nineteenth century. Of the three main fuels for automobiles, it was the most tried and true. But steam didn't work as well for small personal transportation as it did to fuel large locomotives. Steam cars took time to warm up and be ready to drive, and the boiler that made the steam could explode. Steam cars were initially popular but they faded from the market.
...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......
The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.
STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS
White steam automobile Catalog #: 309,497, Accession #: 101,849 In collection From the Smithsonian Collection Thomas H. White founded the White Sewing Machine Company in Massachussets in 1858, but he moved it to Cleveland, Ohio, in 1866. The company produced a lot more than sewing machines and cars: in 1901, it also made bicycles, roller skates, phonographs, screw machines, and kerosene lamps, among other things. Thomas's sons Rollin, Windsor, and Walter were all auto enthusiasts, and they helped get the company into the automobile manufacturing. The company began making steam-powered automobiles in 1900. White Steamers were a popular brand of steam car, and Cleveland became a center of early American automobile production. Other manufacturers in the city included the Winton Motor Car Company, the Cleveland Motor Car Company, and the Peerless Motor Car Company.
In November 1906, the automaking part of the business split off into a separate company, named the White Company. After 1911, the company stopped making Steamers and focused on producing gasoline-driven engines. Over the course of their steam-making career, the company produced 9,122 White Steamers. In 1918, the company stopped making cars (except if they were specially ordered) and concentrated on making trucks. It still makes trucks and buses.
Physical Description
This open-bodied automobile has one seat for two people and a hinged body top. There is a two-cylinder steam engine beneath the seat. A nameplate on the rear of the body is marked “White Sewing Machine Co., Cleveland, Ohio, [numerous patent dates] No. 260"
Details
Date Made: 1901 Locations: Ohio Note: Cleveland Credit: Gift of the White Company, Cleveland, Ohio
...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......
The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.
STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS
those who control transportation control the trade those who control trade control the masses those who control the fiat control the trade those who control the fiat control the masses
...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......
The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.
STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS
those who control transportation control the trade those who control trade control the masses those who control the fiat control the trade those who control the fiat control the masses
EVERYTHING is a 'system'. School, government, religion, driving, banking, cooking, purchasing, selling, farming... etc.......even your home is run by a system. EVERYTHING is a 'system' w/ 'directions'.....EVERY SINGLE THING IN LIFE.........including humans! Our body is the most unique system of all........and the ONLY one man didn't create or design....YET!
When the INSANE are running the ASYLUM In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule. -- Friedrich Nietzsche
“How fortunate for those in power that people never think.” Adolph Hitler