American Car and Foundry Company


American Car and Foundry is an American manufacturer of railroad rolling stock. One of its subsidiaries was once a manufacturer of motor coaches and trolley coaches under the brand names of ACF and ACF-Brill. Today, ACF is known as ACF Industries LLC and is based in St. Charles, Missouri. It is owned by investor Carl Icahn.

History

American Car and Foundry was formed and incorporated in New Jersey in 1899 as the result of the merger of thirteen smaller railroad car manufacturers. The company was made up of:

CompanyFoundedLocation
Buffalo Car Manufacturing Company1872Buffalo, New York
Ensign Manufacturing Company1872Huntington, West Virginia
Jackson and Woodin Manufacturing Company1861Berwick, Pennsylvania
Michigan-Peninsular Car Company1892Detroit, Michigan
Minerva Car Works1882Minerva, Ohio
Missouri Car and Foundry Company1865St. Louis, Missouri
Murray, Dougal and Company1864Milton, Pennsylvania
Niagara Car Wheel CompanyBuffalo, New York
Ohio Falls Car Company1876Jeffersonville, Indiana
St. Charles Car Company1873St. Charles, Missouri
Terre Haute Car and Manufacturing CompanyTerre Haute, Indiana
Union Car CompanyDepew, New York
Wells and French Company1869Chicago, Illinois


Later in 1899 ACF acquired Bloomsburg Car Manufacturing Company. Two years later, ACF acquired Jackson and Sharp Company, and the Common Sense Bolster Company. The unified company made a great investment in the former Jackson & Woodin plant in Pennsylvania, spending about $3 million. It was at this plant that ACF built the first all-steel passenger car in the world in 1904. The car was built for the Interborough Rapid Transit system of New York City, the first of 300 such cars ordered by that system.
In 1903 the Company was operating overseas in Trafford Park Manchester UK and was featured on a Triumphal Arch built for the Royal Visit of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandrain 1903. The factory buildings were later used by Ford cars who began manufacturing in Trafford Park in 1911.
1904 and 1905 saw ACF build several motor cars and trailers for the London Underground. In those two years, ACF also acquired Southern Car and Foundry, Indianapolis Car and Foundry and Indianapolis Car Company.
During World War I ACF produced artillery gun mounts and ammunition, submarine chasers and other boats, railway cars, and other equipment to support the Allies. ACF ranked 36th among United States corporations in the value of World War II production contracts.

Timeline

In the past ACF built passenger and freight cars, including covered hopper cars for hauling such cargo as corn and other grains. One of the largest customers was the Union Pacific Railroad, whose armour-yellow carbon-steel lightweight passenger rolling stock was mostly built by ACF. The famous dome-observation car Native Son was an ACF product.
Another important ACF railroad production were the passenger cars of the Missouri River "Eagle", a Missouri Pacific streamliner put in service on march 1940. This train, in its original shape, consisted of six cars including one baggage, one baggage-mail, two coaches one food and beverage car and finally the observation lounge-parlor car. All the passenger equipment was styled by industrial designer Raymond Loewy.
Today the U.S. passenger car market is erratic in production and is mostly handled by specialty manufacturers and foreign corporations. Competitors Budd, Pullman-Standard, Rohr Industries, and the St. Louis Car Company have all either left the market or gone out of business.
at Willits Jct., CA in 1970
The manufacturing facility in Milton, Pennsylvania, is served by the Norfolk Southern Railway and is capable of manufacturing railcars and all related railcar components. The plant is capable of producing pressure vessels in sizes 18,000–61,000 gwc, including propane tanks, compressed gas storage, LPG storage, and all related components, including heads. The plant, covering 48 acres, provides 500,000 square feet of covered work area and seven miles of storage tracks. The Huntington, West Virginia, production site ceased production in late 2009. The site continues only as a repair facility.