Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Olney, IL: AMF bicycles and other wheeled toys

(Satellite)

Lost Illinois Manufacturing posted nine photos with the comment:
In 1962, AMF (the American Machine and Foundry Company) employed 755 Illinois residents, 450 of whom worked at their bicycle factory in Olney, Illinois making their famous 'Roadmaster' line of bikes and tricycles, part of their Wheel Goods Division.
80 workers made bowling alley equipment at their AMF Pinsetters, Incorporated factory located at 6500 North Lincoln Avenue, Lincolnwood.
150 employees made dispensing equipment at 3232 North Kilpatrick Avenue, Chicago where the A. Dalkin Company Division of AMF was located.
75 workers made screw assemblies, lock washers and terminals at the Thompson-Bremer & Company division factory located at 1640 West Hubbard Street, Chicago (office was at 228 North La Salle street).
In 1962 AMF would boast of employing 13,427 world-wide with corporate headquarters in New York, NY.
Bicycle History
The AMF line of bicycles marketed as Roadmasters trace their history back to the line of bicycles produced by The Cleveland Welding Company beginning in 1936. The Cleveland Welding Company was founded in 1910 to produce various products formed through proprietary electric welding, rolling and forming techniques. CWC entered the bicycle arena in the mid thirties with the introduction of their line of Roadmaster bicycles in 1936. By the second full year of production the line was expanded to include a full line of models ranging from the deluxe limited production Supreme models to junior 20” wheeled models.
Conceived to keep the factory busy during the tail end of the great depression, the bicycle line proved popular to the point that when the company returned to civilian production after WW2, bicycles had become the company’s single largest product.
Cleveland Welding was purchased by AMF in 1951, both for their Roadmaster bicycle line and for the production facilities and expertise the company had in other manufacturing areas.
After purchasing the Cleveland Welding Company, AMF entered the bicycle manufacturing business with its newly-formed AMF Wheel Goods Division and continued to produce the Roadmaster line of bicycles at the Cleveland plant. The Junior Toy Company, of Hammond, Indiana, another AMF acquisition, became connected with Cleveland Welding at this time when both companies were forcibly joined by AMF. In 1953 AMF added the remains of the Shelby Cycle Company to their holding through a hostile takeover after that firm had already been sold to one of its largest customers, the Gambles Department store chain.
In an effort to avoid the cost of doing business with the labor unions in Cleveland, AMF moved all of their wheel goods production to Little Rock Arkansas in 1956 and attempted to refocus the Cleveland factory and operation on the production of larger industrial products such as jet engine components. The new Little Rock plant was purpose built for bicycle and wheel goods production and was heavily automated and featured more than a mile of part conveyor belts in six separate systems, including an electrostatic induction painting operation…..”
Taking advantage of the increase in its target markets in the aftermath of the baby boom, AMF was able to diversify its product line, adding exercise equipment under the brand name Vitamaster in 1950. As demand for bicycles continued to expand, the company found the need for a new manufacturing facility to keep up with demand. In 1962, the company moved its operations to Olney, Illinois, where it built a new factory on a 122-acre site that would remain the company’s principal bicycle manufacturing location into the 1990s.
After two decades of consistent growth, the AMF Wheel Goods Division stalled under the long-distance management of a parent company bogged down in layers of corporate management and marginally profitable product lines. Manufacturing quality as well as the technical standard of the Roadmaster bicycle line – once the pride of the company – had fallen to an all-time low. Bicycles made at the Olney plant were manufactured so poorly that some Midwestern bike shops refused to repair them, claiming that the bikes would not stay fixed no matter how much labor and effort was put into them. The division’s problems with quality and outside competition were neatly summed up in a 1979 American film, Breaking Away, in which identical secondhand AMF Roadmaster track bicycles were used by competitors in the Little 500 bicycle race. Despite this product placement, the film’s protagonist expressed a decided preference for his lightweight Italian Masi road racing bike, deriding the elderly Roadmaster as a ‘piece of junk.’
In 1983 AMF sold the assets to George Nebel, the General Manager and Bob Zinnen. In 1987 the company was sold to entrepreneur and merger and acquisition expert Thomas W Itin. Itin brought in two other investors Equitex and Enercorp, both Business Development Companies, under the 40 Act "BDCs" run by Henry Fong. It changed its name to Roadmaster Industries, Inc. and positioned itself as the leader in the fitness equipment and junior toy industries. Itin and Fong took the company public through an IPO in the end of 1987. Itin and Fong acquired over 20 companies in the sporting goods field. Roadmaster grew from $40,000,00 in unprofitable sales to over $800,000,000 of highly profitable sales. Under the symbol of RDMI it went from small cap on NASDQ to large cap on NMS to the American Stock Exchange and then to the New York Stock Exchange and became a Fortune 1000 company.
Helped by the increasing popularity of Mountain Bikes, Roadmaster experienced a 72% increase in bicycle sales in 1993. A new bicycle production plant was built in Effingham, Illinois to keep pace with the growing demand. Roadmaster acquired Flexible Flyer Company, whose history dates back to 1889.
In 1997 the Roadmaster bicycle division was sold to the Brunswick Corporation. However, it had already become evident that production of low-cost, mass-market bicycles in the United States was no longer viable in the face of intense foreign competition, and in 1999, all U.S. production of Roadmaster bicycles ceased. Brunswick sold its bicycle division and the Roadmaster brand to Pacific Cycle, which began distributing a new Roadmaster line of bicycles imported from Taiwan and the People's Republic of China. Pacific Cycle still uses the Olney facility for corporate offices and as a product inventory and distribution center.
Today the Roadmaster brand has been reactivated and is basically a low-end to middle-end bike sold through big box stores.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Machine_and_Foundry

https://oldbike.wordpress.com/1949-roadmaster-cycle-americ…/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMF_Bowling_Center

[A couple more long comments have been added.

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AMF ad from 1970.
Lyman Klopman You could get a Evel Knievel bike from AMF. They owned Harley Davidson who made Evel's motorcycle at the time.

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Photograph of the AMF Roadmaster factory in Olney, Illinois.
Image courtesy of Olney Library and their helpful staff. Thanks Shelley!

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Photograph of the AMF Roadmaster factory in Olney, Illinois.
Image courtesy of Olney Library and their helpful staff. Thanks Shelley!

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AMF ad from April 1961 American Bicyclist Magazine.

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1944 ad.

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1945 ad.

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Photographs of the AMF Roadmaster factory in Olney, Illinois.
Image courtesy of Olney Library and their helpful staff. Thanks Shelley!

Bob Brann commented on the first photo.
I had the Murray F5 Eliminator.


I see this plant built the Murray brand. My 26" bicycle was a Murray. So it was probably one of the earlier bikes made in this plant.

When we moved into our house in 1976, I found this pedal racer in a storage area under the front porch. My three daughters put a few more miles on it.
20200609 2145c
 I was able to find replacement wheels for the front. But the left rear wheel is an issue. The "differential" for this vehicle is that only the left wheel is fixed to the axle. The right wheel doesn't help with traction.



Lost Illinois Manufacturing posted nine photos with the comment:
A visitor posted a photo of their Flintstones pedal car (minus the pedals - it is foot powered like the cartoon one). Does anyone know what year(s) these were made by AMF in Olney, Illinois?
Martin O'Connor It's an odd composite of both Rubble and Flintstone vehicles, though.
Jeff Madden AMF in Olney is now a warehouse for Pacific Cycle. They also have customer service offices. No manufacturing at all.
Jake Marino Everything I'm seeing online says 1970s. One listing on Worthpoint stated 1975.
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Another indication of my age is that I remember watching Fred Flintstone when it first aired on TV.

One of the links returned from the Google search was: https://www.ebay.com/bhp/amf-pedal-car
As a sampling of their "wheeled toys," this is what was returned on April 3, 2019 with the omission of parts for sale.

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Monday, June 8, 2020

Flagg, IL: CGB Grain Elevator

(Satellite)

UP/C&NW goes right by the elevator, but it does not appear to be rail served.

Wesley Peters posted
Flagg, Ogle County, IL
Flagg Station Elevator Co. Built in 1939, George Saathoff. 12,000-bushel capacity.
Photographed on 10/27/2024.
Photo courtesy of Wesley Peters.

Jerry Krug posted
Found this view at Flagg, IL today.
Dennis DeBruler I was surprised that Consolidated Grain and Barge owns an elevator that is not rail served. The UP/C&NW mainline runs right past it. The two CGB elevators that I'm familiar with are in Olney and near Mt. Vernon, IN. In Olney, CGB loads unit trains even though it appears that CSX has to help them and the entire town is filled with hoppers while a train is being loaded.
http://industrialscenery.blogspot.com/.../cgb-shortline...
In Mt. Vernon, they obviously load barges.
https://www.google.com/.../data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4...
But when I looked some more, I did see that CGB operates some truck-only elevators.

Note the container train passing through town in the background.
Street View, Jul 2023



Sunday, June 7, 2020

Ficklin, IL: Wood plus concrete stave grain elevator

(Satellite)

The railroad is CSX/B&O/Cincinnati, Indianapolis & Western

Street View

Bob Kalal posted six images with the comment: "Ficklin Illinois, West of Tuscola, Grain Elevators." [I wrote this post with the new blogger, and I see the bug of reversing the images is back. The order is not important enough to fix it. And it looks like the new blogger also screws up the spacing between the images by leaving some of the blank lines out. Such joy. I shrunk all of the images so that they would fit on a screenshot in a trouble report. If you click on an image, you will get a bigger one.]
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Saturday, June 6, 2020

Buffalo, NY: Tesla/Lost/Republic Steel

(3D Satellite)

It appears that Buffalo has done a better job of reusing their river front than Chicago has done along the Calumet River. I'm not surprised that Tesla doesn't use water-based transportation. But I am a little surprised that the plant has no rail service.

Steel Plant Museum of Western New York posted
Today we are sharing an aerial photo of Republic Steel. Near the bend in the Buffalo River you will notice both the Basic Oxygen Furnace (BOF) shop in operation as well as the new ore bridge, both added in the early 1970's. The Donner-Hanna Coke Plant is at the upper right corner. This site is now home to the Tesla/Solar City complex.
Carl Jacobson I was in this plant in 1989 to inspect and match mark two overhead traveling cranes for removal. To the best of my memory; they were 15 ton Alliance Machine Cranes from a bar mill building, pretty long bridge span, probably 70 feet. They were taken to what is still the Republic Steel, Eighth Street Mill in Canton, Ohio and put into a bar conditioning building.
The Buffalo plant was partially demolished when we were there. I remember the Basic Oxygen Furnace building still standing with a pile of rubble around it. A sad sight.

Randy Wolfe shared

James Cavanaugh Photography posted
From My Archives. A 1983 view of the long gone Republic Steel Plant in Buffalo, NY.
Jim Conlin: And DONNER HANNA COKE. I was the Fire Marshal there in a previous life, so long ago.
Bubba Dubs: This was the coke plant of Donner Steel (Original name of Republic) and Hanna Furnace company, a joint venture. The Union slip was the iron making facility and this was the coke plant. This also supplied Republic once they purchased it.
The Republic facility was originally New York State steel, then became Donner steel, finally Republic.
Jim Conlin: Hanna Furnace was near Bethlehem Steel. They were owned by National Steel. Donner Hanna Coke was a joint venture owned by Republic Steel and National Steel. They were located on Abby and Mystic Streets right near Republic Steel.
Bubba Dubs shared
Another Jim Cavanaugh photograph. 1983 photo of Donner Hanna Coke and Republic Steel Buffalo NY.
Tom Schifferli: The top of the hot metal mixer at Republic was just below the cast house floor and the molten iron flowed via the sand trough. Then the crane on the charging floor lowered a ladle into a pit next to the mixer (which rotated) to get the iron to be charged into the open hearths via a spout placed into an open door of the OH.
Michael Maitland: Wow - thanks for this great photo (more if you have them) The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western's passenger main line cuts right through the Republic plant, crosses the black bridge to their downtown station. Route of the crack passenger train the "Phoebe Snow" Buffalo to Hoboken (Ferry to NYC).
James Torgeson: Michael Maitland Right! In this view, Republic has removed the City Branch embankment that once divided the plant. It purchased the ROW from Conrail.
 
Deborah Brown posted
Good Morning 🐦  Aerial view of Republic Steel Plant South Buffalo NY 1973 👷‍♂️
Bud Rindfleisch: Donner-Hanna Coke at the very top
Jim Myers shared
Michael Neffke posted
Aerial view of republic steel 1973 buffalo ny

I've read that the steel mills themselves don't pollute the ground too badly. But coke plants are heavy polluters. It looks like the the ground close to the plant has been sealed off and some other ground has just been fenced off with police enforcement of no trespassing. It is interesting that they are not willing to put on the No Trespassing sign the information that the land is dangerous. I think for teenagers that "Contaminated Land" would be a better deterrent than "Police Enforced."
Satellite
Street View



Steel Plant Museum of Western New York posted
An image of a blast furnace transfer car at the Republic Steel Buffalo Plant.

Steel Plant Museum of Western New York posted
An image of the blast furnaces at the Republic Steel Buffalo Plant in 1978.

Steel Plant Museum of Western New York posted
The 4000 H.P. motor in the 38" Blooming Mill at Republic Steel

Steel Plant Museum of Western New York posted
The Blooming Mill reheating pits from Republic Steel.
Jan Olejnik: THE CLAW!

Steel Plant Museum of Western New York posted, cropped
The #2 open hearth, teeming aisle, at the Bethlehem Lackawanna plant. photo: circa 1937.
Will Jamison: Great picture, especially since it's showing two boxcars right on the pouring floor. The furnace to the right is being rebuilt and piles of brick are waiting to be used.   Our plant still has a brick house complete with rail siding and loading dock.

Steel Plant Museum of Western New York posted, cropped
The tapping of an open hearth. Dated 1962.

James Torgeson posted
Note the Donner-Hanna Coke hoppers in the background behind the transfer car. Donner-Hanna was jointly owned by National Steel (Hanna Furnace) and Republic Steel. It closed in 1982 upon the closure of the Buffalo plants of its two owners.

Steel Plant Museum of Western New York posted
Today we are sharing an image of the Steamer Frontenac unloading ore pellets at the Republic Steel Buffalo Plant. She met her demise after a grounding in Silver Bay, MN in late 1979, and would never visit Buffalo again.
Steel Plant Museum of Western New York shared
Comments on the above post


James Cavanaugh Photography posted
From my Archive. A 2015 view of construction of the massive 1,200,000 square foot Tesla Gigafactory 2 along the Buffalo River. It is on the site of the former Republic Steel facility.
Jan Olejnik: Wonder what kinda “juice” they unearthed…
Corey Zko: Jan Olejnik they unearthed a huge turbine and a bucket of if I remember correctly while digging the foundation.
Brian R. Wroblewski: Jan Olejnik all kinds of radioactive materials. They buried them under the parking lot there. No I'm not kidding.
Jim Cavanaugh shared
Carl Mottern: Wonder how soon it gets closed and shuttered?
Jim Cavanaugh: Carl Mottern Current info I found said it is currently producing solar panels and home power systems (Batteries, inverters, etc.)


Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Farm (Capels), WV: N&W Coaling Tower

(Satellite)

Norfolk Southern Corp posted
Happy Birthday, Norfolk Southern!
Thirty-eight years ago today—on June 1, 1982—Norfolk Southern was created with the consolidation of the Southern Railway and the Norfolk & Western Railway. On June 1, 1999, Norfolk Southern acquired a large portion of Conrail, increasing market reach and returning rail competition to the Northeast for the first time since the 1970s.
We’re celebrating with this photograph taken in Farm, West Virginia, near Welch. Casey Thomason captured a Norfolk & Western heritage unit leading an eastbound coal train, working aside a Southern heritage unit moving west under an old coaling station. Once in position, the Southern unit attached to the rear of the NS train and helped push it up the mountain into Bluefield.
Thank you to the women and men of Norfolk Southern who keep the steel wheels rolling. You are appreciated.
Dennis DeBruler Most people see locomotives, I see a coaling tower.
https://www.google.com/.../@37.4489802,-81.../data=!3m1!1e3
 
Robert Slavy posted
The westbound 611 at Farm in McDowell county. 1983.

Jim Kelling shared
Farm WV

Christopher Esposito shared an Eastern Rails Photography photo
NS ET44AC 3618 leads a westbound light helper set under the old N&W coal tower at FARM on the Pokey- 7/26/17 in Capels, West Virginia. On the famed N&W Pocahontas District in Capels, WV
Aaron Thompson: That’s Farm, WV, as soon as the train passes the Cantelever signal bridge then your at Caples. [But Google Map doesn't know about Farm, WV]

Zander Estep posted
A true feat of human engineering, located in Capels, West Virginia, is the Norfolk & Western, Farm Coaling Tower. Left over from the bygone era of steam, it stands tall and proud above the Pochahontas District Mainline.

Zander commented on his post
This was some time in the 1950s.

Eastern Rails Photography posted
Seen from the air, the old N&W coaling tower at Farm, WV stands as a reminder of massive steam engines that onced ruled the rails.  Today, two eastbound trains being powered by ES44DC engines are occupying the tracks.  10/14/23
Christopher Esposito shared
Tim Shanahan shared

Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Terre Haute, IN: Indiana Gas & Chemical (a coke plant) and Milwaukee's Hulman Street Yard

(Satellite)

Bill Foster posted four photos with the comment: "Indiana Gas & Chemical (AKA Coke plant) was served via Hulman Street yard."
Bill Foster Was between 13th st and Hulman st yards on south side of Hulman street. Environmental clean up site now. The place had a car shaker for unloading hoppers. They shook cars day and night. I always wondered what it was like to live across the street.
Evie N Bob Bruns Driving by had that unique smell of coal being burned to coke. It was in the neighborhood. Lot of coal came in and a lot of coke came out. A good industry for the Milwaukee. Coke went to the steel plants in Michigan and a few other northern places. 77 usually had a slug of coke next to the caboose. Nothing on site anymore, all gone, a sign of progress?

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Dennis DeBruler commented on Bill's post
The 2005 SPV Map doesn't have Hulman Street Yard. It is rather rare for that map to miss a yard. But it is pretty obvious where it is on this topo map.
1941 Terre Haute Quadrangle @ 1:24,000
And there appears to be a roundhouse just north of Hulman Street.


Dennis DeBruler commented on Bill's post
The gas holder in the first photo reminds me that manufactured gas was an important byproduct of making coke. In fact, for this plant, gas was probably the main product and coke was the byproduct. I include this topo map because it shows where the gas holder was located.
1958 Terre Haute Quadrangle @ 1:24,000


Bill Foster posted two photos with the comment: "Hulman Street roundhouse and turntable."
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