Car 21

Home ← Railfanning ← Ohio Railway Museum ← Car 21 ← Description

Car 21 Description Continued

Origins of Interurban Combine Number 21

        The Niles Car and Manufacturing Co. was a manufacturer of railroad equipment, including many street and interurban cars. It was founded in 1901 in Niles, Ohio, and ceased producing railroad cars in 1917, the peak year for U.S. electric interurban railway usage. Its sales offices were in Cleveland. Niles specialized in building wooden-bodied cars in the heyday of interurban building. It had a reputation of building durable and stylish cars. In its advertising, Niles called its wooden interurban cars "Electric Pullmans" since their design, construction and finish was very much like that employed by Pullman in its wooden sleeping cars of the period. After 1917, Niles built motor trucks for which demand was higher than for trolley cars.
        Car 21 was one of a pair of cars - the other was number 20 - built by Niles for The Toledo, Port Clinton and Lakeside Railway (TPC&LR) in 1905. Niles listed it as car style 201 in its catalog. It is a fine example of early wooden interurban car construction. It is 51 feet 10 inches long and weighs 60,500 pounds (30 tons). The car is a combination passenger-baggage car, or "combine." It was a twin of car number 20 built at the same time. Car 21 Drawings, slide 1 shows a 1908 Niles catalog of an almost identical car built for neighboring Toledo, Fostoria & Findlay Railway. Its interior arrangement was slightly different from 21's which had a smaller smoking section but more coach or "ladies" seats. Car 21 Drawings, slide 2 shows floor plans of it and of TPC&L coaches 5 and 6.
        The car is single-ended and is operated from the front of the baggage room. A crossbar between two poles behind the motorman's position prevents baggage and freight from falling forward which could cause crew injury. The motorman either stood or sat on a tall wooden stool to operate the car - crew safety was not a primary concern in those days. And there was no safety glass then, either. The baggage space includes a telephone for communication with the dispatcher. It was used by plugging leads into a phone line connection trackside.
        TPC&LR also bought two all-coach interurban cars numbered 5 and 6 - Niles style 198 - built to the same overall dimensions. Originally, 20, 21, 5 and 6 were equipped with Peckham 40 trucks, Bullock R-50 motors, and Bullock controllers. Later, 20 and 21 were refitted with General Electric 263A 65hp (48 kW) motors, a GE K-34-D2 controller and a Westinghouse 3817 air compressor. The cars operated on 600 volts DC, drawn from an overhead wire through a trolley pole with a rolling grooved wheel from Ohio Brass Co. Car 21 had a baggage compartment at the front, a smoking section seating 12, and a main passenger section seating 34, for a total capacity of 46 seated persons. An open hopper toilet closet is located in the right rear of the passenger compartment. Car 21 Drawings, slide 3 is an elevation drawing of car 21 as it appeared at ORM in 1970.
        The car was built with a cast iron heating stove in the right rear of the baggage compartment but later the cars received electric heaters. The interior of the car is finished in inlaid, quartered oak. It had leather seats in the smoking room and plush seats in the passenger section. Arched Pullman style windows over each pair of side windows and clerestory vents were fitted originally with opalescent stained glass. 21 and its siblings were equipped with collapsible "basket-weave" strap steel streetcar fenders on the front for street running. In theory, a pedestrian would be scooped up by the basket with little or no injury

21's Original Owners and Operators

Click to enlarge
Car 21 on the Ohio Public service at Port Clinton. Alex Campbell Collection
        The TPC&LR was an electric interurban railway system serving northwestern Ohio's Marblehead Peninsula. It was incorporated in 1902 in Ottawa County, Ohio, to link the village of Genoa, east of Toledo, with the resort town of Port Clinton, a distance of 23 miles. This line was completed in 1904, and was extended another 12 miles to Marblehead in 1905. Originally, cars entered Toledo over the Lake Shore Electric Railway's tracks from a connection at Genoa, but in 1906, the TPC&LR constructed its own line connecting with Toledo's city streetcar line. In 1911, a further three-mile extension was built to the pier at Bay Point which gave TPC&LR a ferry connection to Sandusky. Click here for a map of the line.
        In 1912, TPC&L became the Northwestern Ohio Railway & Power Company. Twelve years later, in 1924, it was purchased by the Ohio Public Service Co. (OPS). Several cut-backs took place in 1925, but the line ran passenger service until July 11, 1939. At least two special railfan trips occurred in 1939 using car 21. OPS continued operating freight service from 1939-1945. In 1945, OPS sold the property to the Toledo & Eastern Railway (T&E) after the route east of Clay Center was abandoned. This left 11 miles of railway hauling dolomite from Clay Center to the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railroad and coal to a Toledo Edison power plant. When coal shipment moved from rail to water in 1958, T&E was abandoned.

21's Acquisition by Central Ohio Railfan's Association

Click to enlarge
OPS 21 at the Ohio State Fair Grounds in 1947.  21 was vandalize by the neighborhood kids prompting the move to Worthington.  George Silcott (left) and BJ Kern (right) are on the back platform.  Photo from the Edward H. Miller Collection)
        Combine 21 operated on its home rails along with coach 6 until OPS ended passenger service in 1939. After retirement, 21 was bought by the Eastern Ohio chapter of the National Railway Historical Society for $300 and stored at Oak Harbor, easternmost end-of-track of OPS. It became isolated there when track was cut back to Clay Center by OPS in 1945 and scrapping seemed imminent. In 1947, CORA was able to get 21 donated by the NHRS and it was moved to the Ohio State Fair Grounds in Columbus where it was used as a meeting room. Some initial restoration work was done, replacing some rotting wood.
        Car 21 did not fare well at the fairgrounds (pun intended). Weather and vandalism took a heavy toll and CORA decided to renovate it and move it to Worthington for restoration and eventual operation. Initial work on 21 was done by the Pennsylvania Railroad's Columbus shops. It was trucked to Worthington in 1948, becoming the first unit of railway equipment acquired for CORA's Ohio Railway Museum (ORM). The ORM leased about a mile of right-of-way once belonging to the Columbus Delaware & Marion Electric Railway (CD&M) as its "Worthington Cutoff," completed in 1923.

Rebuilding and Changes to 21 at ORM

Click to enlarge
21 after the move to Worthington and initial restoration becoming the beginnings of the Ohio Railway Museum.  Proprietor's Road is in the background.  (Alex Campbell Collection)
        21 had been so thoroughly damaged during its time at the fairgrounds, it was almost scrapped. Virtually all of the windows had been smashed. The roof canvas was slashed in several places, all of the seats were slashed and vandals had tried to set the car afire on more than one occasion. In addition, time and weather had damaged much of the exterior siding, the wooden roof, and some of the body structural members. CORA wisely decided to attempt to restore the classic wooden car. Once at the ORM site, extensive rebuilding and refurbishing began (fig. 11).
        New wood side posts and siding were installed. The roof was completely rebuilt with new boards and canvas. New windows were made as needed and all of the glass was replaced. The cost to replace the arched side and clerestory window art glass was prohibitive at the time. The clerestory windows were re-glazed with plain window glass and the arched "Pullman" windows were covered by plywood or sheet metal and painted green. The exterior of the car was thoroughly repainted in its last in-service OPS colors: traction orange on the letterboards and below the belt rail with pale yellow on the window panels. Doors and window frames were painted red. The roof was painted a reddish-brown color and the trolley poles, trucks, underbody and other hardware were black.
        Inside, a new ceiling was installed. The original quartered and inlaid golden oak paneling was mostly intact and it was refinished, stained and several coats of varnish were applied. The seats were replaced but were not original. They had been irreparably damaged by time and vandals. ORM installed "walkover" streetcar seats upholstered in green leather-like material.
        The original streetcar fender was either missing or badly damaged so an interurban-type pilot was built of lumber and attached the front end. Since the car was single-ended and ORM had no way to turn it around at either end of its point-to-point railway, a second trolley pole was added to the front end for backup moves. The car always faced south at ORM. The reversible streetcar seats were easily flipped for backup moves whenever the car traveled north on its new, i.e., restored CD&M track.
        Although 21 never saw service on the CD&M, ORM members added CD&M's "Through the Heart of Ohio" logos or heralds centered on each side. The destination sign on the front of the car was labeled "COLUMBUS". A train sign advertising CD&M's The Capitol Limited (operated by one of CD&M's 1926 "Red Bird" parlor cars) was also attached to the front end at one point.
        It would still be three years before Car 21 would operate at the ORM, since the museum had no electric power source required to activate the electric motors. During 1949, 1950 and 1951, track was laid and poles were installed to hang overhead trolley wire. 1951 was also a year of negation with the Erie railroad for a retired gasoline-electric "doodlebug" railcar which generated its own 600-volt DC current. This would be ORM's first source of power to run 21 and other trolley equipment.
Click to enlarge
21 facing Erie gas-electric 5012,which provided electric power for the trolleys.  Photo taken next to the Worthington Foods Plant on Proprietors Road.  James Osborn is the motorman in this Dave Bunge photo)
        Erie car 5012, built in 1931 by Electromotive Corp., arrived at ORM in 1951 and its two 300-hp Winton gasoline engines were overhauled. 5012 was fired up in June, 1952, and was the first piece of equipment to run on ORM tracks under its own power. Now work began to allow 5012 to transfer 600-volts of electricity to the track and overhead trolley wire to power 21 and the other electric cars. Bonds were welded across all rail joints and the means to connect 5012's generator to the overhead wire were completed.
        September 1952 saw OPS Car 21 come alive again for the first time since 1939. With 5012 as the power plant, 21 began "regular" weekend operation on ORM track. A huge milestone had been achieved!