
Steam powered Locomobile, from January, 1901 advertisement
'Locomobile' was a company that produced
automobiles in the
United States of America from
1899 to
1929.
History
The ''Locomobile Company of America'' was founded in 1899, the name coined from ''
locomotive'' and ''automobile''.
John B. Walker bought out
Francis and
Freelan Stanley's
steam car company for
US$250000 (with all of one car built, but 199 more ordered), promptly selling half to paving contractor
Amzi L. Barber. Their partnership lasted just a fortnight; Walker went on to found
Mobile Company of America at the Stanley works in
Tarrytown,
New York, while Walker moved house to
Bridgeport,
Connecticut, as Locomobile, the Stanley twins named General Managers.
[1]
Locomobile began by producing steam cars. The steam Locomobiles were unreliable, finicky to operate, prone to parafin fires, had small water tanks (getting only 20mi {32km} ''per'' tank
[2]), and took time to raise steam;
Rudyard Kipling described one example as a "nickle-plated fraud".
[2] Nevertheless, they were a curiosity and middle class Americans clamoured for the latest technology. Salesmen, doctors and people needing quick mobility found them useful. Over four thousand were built between 1899 and 1902 alone.
[2] Most had simple twin-
cylinder engines (3x4", 76.2x102mm; 57ci, 927cc) and wire wrapped 500 psi
flash boiler burning
naphtha. Typical of the product was the
1904 ''
Runabout'', which seated two passengers and sold for US$850. The
compound two-cylinder steam engine was situated amidships of the armored wood-framed car.
During the
Boer War, Locomobile did establish a new mark of sorts, becoming the first ever automobile to be used in war; it was a generator and
searchlight tractor and catering vehicle, with the useful ability (in British eyes, at least) of being able to brew a cup of tea by tapping the boiler.
[5]
This was, unfortunately, not a sure way to guarantee commercial success, even in Britain, and Locomobile started experimenting with
gasoline internal combustion engines in
1902, starting with a four-cylinder steel-chassis model designed by
A. J. Riker. This encouraged the firm to drop steam vehicles the following year, selling the Stanley brothers back their rights for US$20000.
[5]
The
1904 internal combustion ''Locomobile
Touring Car'' had a
tonneau, space for five passengers, and sold for US$4500, quite a change from the low-priced steam buggies. The front-mounted vertical water-cooled
straight-4 produced 16 hp (11.9 kW). A 3-speed sliding transmission was fitted, as on the ''
Système Panhard'' cars it competed with. The angle steel-framed car weighed 2200 lb (998 kg).

Locomobile 7 passenger Touring Car from 1920 magazine advertisement
Like other early marques, Locomobile entered
motor racing, contesting the
1905 Gordon Bennett Cup with a 17.7 liter (1080ci) racer; after suffering a transmission gear failure, and with no spare available (surely poor planning), driver
Joe Tracy only managed two circuits of
Auvergne before the transmission packed up entirely. Tracy did better for the comapny at the
Vanderbilt Cup, placing third.
[5] A 90hp (67kW) 16.2 liter (989ci) F-head was sabotaged by tire trouble, so Tracy failed again in the 1906 Vanderbilt, but in 1908,
George Robertson (wearing #16) took the win in this car, ahead of fellow Locomobile pilot
Joe Florida in third, becoming the first United States-built car to win in international competition. This would be the high water mark for Locomobile racing, and they soon faded from the scene, though
Orin Davis did score a win in the
Los Angeles-
Phoenix rally in 1913..
[8]
On the strength of this, Locomobile soon became known for well built and speedy luxury cars. The
1908 ''Locomobile 40 Runabout'' was a 60hp (44.7kW) two-seater and sold for US$4750.
In
1922 Locomobile was acquired by
Durant Motors, which continued using the Locomobile brand name for their top-of-the-line autos until 1929.
The word 'locomobile' in fiction
In
Robert Sobel's
alternate history book ''
For Want of a Nail'', where the
American Revolution failed, automobiles are known as ''locomobiles''. In the online
All Nails'' continuation, the word is abbreviated to "loke".
In
Ward Moore's alternate history novella ''
Bring the Jubilee'', automobiles are also referred to as ''locomobiles.'' In this world,
internal combustion was never discovered and automobiles are always powered by steam.
In Thomas Savage's Novel "The Power of the Dog" the Locomobile is estimated by protagonist Peter Johnson higher than the Pierce-Arrow: "...Those were the vehicles of the high and mighty, and he knew that only the Locomobile (fancied by old General Pershing, among others) rivaled the Pierce"
Notes
1. Wise, David B., "British Steam-Car Pioneers", in Northey, Tom, ed. ''World of Automobiles'' (London: Orbis Publishing, 1974), Volume 11, p.1207.
2. Wise, p.1207.
3. Wise, p.1207.
4. Wise, p.1207.
5. Wise, p.1208.
6. Wise, p.1208.
7. Wise, p.1208.
8. Wise, p.1209.
References
★ ''Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly'' (January, 1904)
★ David Burgess Wise, "Locomobile: British Steam-Car Pioneers", in Northey, Tom, ed. ''World of Automobiles''. London: Orbis Publishing Ltd, 1974. Volume 11, pp.1207-9.
Further reading
★ Ball, Donald L. ''The Genealogy of the Locomobile Steam Carriage, 1899-1904'', 1994
External links
★
1906 Locomobile The story of the 1908 Vanderbilt Cup win
★
Locomobile Catalog on DurantCars site 1920s Locomobiles
★
Locomobile items on Henry Ford Museum site
★
Locomobile Society Home Page