Winton Motor Carriage Company
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The Winton Motor Carriage Company was a pioneer
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automobile A car or automobile is a motor vehicle with wheels. Most definitions of ''cars'' say that they run primarily on roads, seat one to eight people, have four wheels, and mainly transport people instead of goods. The year 1886 is regarded ...
manufacturer based in Cleveland, Ohio. Winton was one of the first American companies to sell a motor car. In 1912 Winton became one of the first American manufacturers of diesel engines.


History


1896–1903

In 1896, Scottish immigrant Alexander Winton, owner of the Winton Bicycle Company, turned from bicycle production to an experimental single-cylinder automobile before starting his car company. The company was incorporated on March 15, 1897. Its first automobiles were built by hand. Each vehicle had painted sides, padded seats, a leather roof, and gas lamps. B.F. Goodrich made the tires. By this time, Winton had already produced two fully operational prototype automobiles. In May of that year, the 10 hp (7.5 kW) model achieved the astonishing speed of on a test around a Cleveland horse track. However, the new invention was still subject to much skepticism , so to prove his automobile's durability and usefulness, Alexander Winton had his car undergo an endurance run from Cleveland to
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. On March 24, 1898, Robert Allison of Port Carbon,
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, became the first person to buy a Winton automobile after seeing the first automobile advertisement in ''
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''. Later that year the Winton Motor Carriage Company sold 21 more vehicles, including one to James Ward Packard, who later founded the Packard automobile company after Winton challenged a very dissatisfied Packard to do better. This is the same mistake that Enzo Ferrari would make with Ferruccio Lamborghini. Winton sold his first manufactured semi-truck in 1899. More than one hundred Winton vehicles were sold that year, making the company the largest manufacturer of gasoline-powered automobiles in the United States. This success led to the opening of the first automobile dealership by Mr. H. W. Koler in
Reading, Pennsylvania Reading ( ; Pennsylvania Dutch: ''Reddin'') is a city in and the county seat of Berks County, Pennsylvania, United States. The city had a population of 95,112 as of the 2020 census and is the fourth-largest city in Pennsylvania after Phila ...
. To deliver the vehicles, in 1899, Winton built the first automobile hauler in America. One of these 1899 Wintons was purchased by Larz Anderson and his new wife, Isabel Weld Perkins. Publicity generated sales. In 1901, the news that both Reginald Vanderbilt and
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had purchased Winton automobiles boosted the company's image substantially. Models at the time were a two-passenger Runabout with a one-cylinder engine (8 hp) and a four-passenger Touring and Mail Delivery Van, also with a one-cylinder engine (9 hp). That year, Winton lost a race at
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to
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. Winton vowed a comeback and win. He produced the 1902 Winton Bullet, which set an unofficial land speed record of in Cleveland that year. The Bullet was defeated by another Ford by famed driver Barney Oldfield, but two more Bullet race cars were built. In 1903, Dr. Horatio Nelson Jackson made the first successful automobile drive across the United States. On a $50 bet, he purchased a slightly used two-cylinder, Winton touring car and hired a mechanic to accompany him. Starting in
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,
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, ending in
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,
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, New York. The trip lasted 63 days, 12 hours, and 30 minutes, including breakdowns and delays while waiting for parts to arrive (especially in Cleveland.) The two men often drove miles out of the way to find a passable road, repeatedly hoisted the Winton up and over rocky terrain and mud holes with a
block and tackle A block and tackle or only tackle is a system of two or more pulleys with a rope or cable threaded between them, usually used to lift heavy loads. The pulleys are assembled to form blocks and then blocks are paired so that one is fixed and ...
, or were pulled out of soft sand by horse teams. In 1903, there were only 150 miles of paved road in the entire country, all inside city limits. There were no road signs or maps. They once paid the exorbitant price of $5 for five gallons of gasoline. Jackson and his partner followed rivers and streams, transcontinental railroad tracks, sheep trails, and dirt back roads. File:Winton auto ad car-1898.jpg, 1898 Winton Motor Carriage Company's first automobile ad Image:1899Winton.jpg, 1899 Winton Stanhope Image:1903 Gordon Bennett Trophy. Athy, Ireland. Alexander Winton in the Winton Bullet 2.jpg,
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,
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; Alexander Winton in the ''Winton Bullet 2'' Image:HoratioJacksonNelson.jpg, 1903 Horatio Nelson Jackson in his two-seat Winton tourer, "The Vermont", drives across America


1904–1924

The 1904 Winton was a five-passenger tonneau-equipped tourer which sold for US$2,500. By contrast, the Enger 40 was US$2,000, the FAL US$1,750, an Oakland 40 US$1,600, the
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and Colt Runabout US$1,500, while the (1913) Lozier Light Six Metropolitan started at US$3,250, American's lowest-priced model was US$4,250, and Lozier's Big Six were US$5,000 and up. ::Models (1904) :: Winton's flat-mounted water-cooled straight-twin engine, situated amidships of the car, produced . The channel and angle steel-framed car weighed . ::Models (1914) :: Winton continued to successfully market automobiles to upscale consumers through the 1910s, but sales began to fall in the early 1920s. This was due to the very conservative nature of the company, both in terms of technical development and styling. Only one sporting model was offered — the Sport Touring, with the majority of Wintons featuring tourer, sedan, limousine and town car styling. The Winton Motor Carriage Company ceased automobile production on February 11, 1924. ::Models (1922) :: Image:WintonTouringCar1908.jpg, 1908 Winton touring car Image:Winton-auto 1910-0514.jpg, Winton advertisement in ''Des Moines Capital'', May 14, 1910 File:Winton_Six_advertisement.jpg, Winton Motor Company advertisement, 1911 Image:1910Winton.jpg, 1910 Winton Six File:111-SC-18384 - NARA - 55196832 (cropped).jpg, 1918 Winton Six Model 33
Limousine A limousine ( or ), or limo () for short, is a large, chauffeur-driven luxury vehicle with a partition between the driver compartment and the passenger compartment. A very long wheelbase luxury sedan (with more than four doors) driven by a pro ...
File:Winton at Cleveland Classic Cars (34719672554).jpg, 1922 Winton Six Model 40 seven-passenger touring


Winton Engine Company

In 1912, Winton started producing diesel engines for stationary and marine use, and gasoline engines for heavy vehicles, independent of Winton's automobile production. The subsidiary Winton Engine Company remained successful while Winton's automotive sales went into decline, and would outlive the Winton Motor Carriage Company. Winton became the main supplier of engines for internal combustion-electric powered railcars in the 1920s.


Sale to General Motors

On June 20, 1930, Winton Engine Company was sold to General Motors and on June 30 was reorganized as the Winton Engine Corporation subsidiary of GM. It produced the first practical two-stroke diesel engines in the 400-to-1,200 hp (300 to 900 kW) range, which powered the early
diesel locomotive A diesel locomotive is a type of railway locomotive in which the prime mover is a diesel engine. Several types of diesel locomotives have been developed, differing mainly in the means by which mechanical power is conveyed to the driving whe ...
s of
Electro-Motive Corporation Progress Rail Locomotives, doing business as Electro-Motive Diesel (EMD), is an American manufacturer of diesel-electric locomotives, locomotive products and diesel engines for the rail industry. The company is owned by Caterpillar through its sub ...
(another GM subsidiary), as well as
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submarines. In 1934, a Winton eight-cylinder, 8-201-A diesel engine powered the revolutionary streamlined passenger train the Burlington ''Zephyr'', the first American diesel-powered mainline train. The Winton Engine Corporation provided 201 Series engines for rail use until late 1938, when it was reorganized as the General Motors Cleveland Diesel Engine Division, which produced the GM 567 series locomotive engines, and other large diesels for marine and stationary use. In 1941, locomotive engine production became part of GM's Electro-Motive Division (EMD). In 1962, Cleveland Diesel was absorbed by EMD, which remains in business today as a subsidiary of Progress Rail.


Marine engines

Winton and Cleveland engines were used widely by the US Navy in the Second World War, powering submarines, destroyer escorts, and numerous auxiliaries. The Winton engines were systematically replaced with the more reliable Cleveland engines during refittings during the war.


In popular culture

A purpose-built "Winton Flyer" features prominently in
William Faulkner William Cuthbert Faulkner (; September 25, 1897 â€“ July 6, 1962) was an American writer known for his novels and short stories set in the fictional Yoknapatawpha County, based on Lafayette County, Mississippi, where Faulkner spent most ...
's Pulitzer Prize–winning 1962 novel ''
The Reivers ''The Reivers: A Reminiscence'', published in 1962, is the last novel by the American author William Faulkner. The bestselling novel was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1963. Faulkner previously won this award for his book ''A Fable'', ...
''. In fact, the 1969
film version A film adaptation is the transfer of a work or story, in whole or in part, to a feature film. Although often considered a type of derivative work, film adaptation has been conceptualized recently by academic scholars such as Robert Stam as a dial ...
of the novel starring Steve McQueen was known as ''The Yellow Winton Flyer'' in the UK.


See also

* List of defunct United States automobile manufacturers


Notes


References


External links


Winton sales literature for models A, B, C and Limousine
€”The description at the site explains the format: "Designed to be folded in various combinations so that the text can be displayed under the corresponding image. In this digital edition each photo is displayed with the corresponding text folded to appear under the photo. The two sides of the complete, unfolded strip are also included as an application/pdf file as the final image."
A collection of Winton magazine advertisements
(1902–1917)
A collection of sales literature for the Winton Six 1911, 1912, 1913, and 33Secondhandgarage.com: History of the Winton Motor Carriage Company
* *{{HAER , survey=OH-11-A , id=oh0118 , title=Winton Motor Carriage Company, Berea Road & Madison Avenue, Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, OH , photos=11 , data=15 , cap=2 , link=no 1890s cars 1900s cars 1910s cars 1920s cars Brass Era vehicles Defunct companies based in Cleveland Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of the United States Historic American Engineering Record in Ohio History of Cleveland Luxury motor vehicle manufacturers Manufacturing companies based in Cleveland Motor vehicle manufacturers based in Ohio Vehicle manufacturing companies disestablished in 1962 Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1897 Vehicles introduced in 1898