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J. G. Brill Company

The J. G. Brill Company manufactured streetcars,[1] interurban coaches, motor buses, trolleybuses and railroad cars in the United States for almost ninety years, making it the longest-lasting trolley and interurban manufacturer. At its height, Brill was the largest manufacturer of streetcars and interurban cars in the US and produced more streetcars, interurbans and gas-electric cars than any other manufacturer, building more than 45,000 streetcars alone.

J. G. Brill Company
TypePrivately held company
IndustryRail transport
GenrePublic transport
Founded1868
FounderJohn George Brill
Defunct1954 (acquired by GE Transportation)
Headquarters,
United States
ProductsStreetcars (trams), interurban railcars, motor buses, and trolleybuses

Coordinates: 39°55′38″N 75°13′45″W / 39.9273472°N 75.2291959°W / 39.9273472; -75.2291959

Share certificate issued by the J. G. Brill Company, issued on April 11, 1921
A 1903 Brill-built streetcar on a heritage streetcar line in Sintra, Portugal in 2010

The company was founded by John George Brill in 1868 in Philadelphia, as a horsecar manufacturing firm. Its factory complex was located in south-west Philadelphia at 62nd St and Woodland Avenue, adjacent to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad tracks.[2] Over the years, it absorbed numerous other manufacturers of trolleys and interurbans, such as Kuhlman in Cleveland and Jewett in Indiana. In 1944, with business diminishing, it merged with the American Car and Foundry Company (ACF) to become ACF-Brill. Although the company ceased production in 1954, some of its interurbans served the Philadelphia area until the 1980s.

History

Trolleys and interurban cars

In 1868, the Brill company was founded as J.G. Brill and Sons. After James Rawle joined the firm in 1872 it was renamed The J.G. Brill Company. In 1902, Brill bought out the American Car Company; in 1904, G. C. Kuhlman Car Company (Cleveland), then the John Stephenson Company (New Jersey) ; and in 1907 Wason Manufacturing Company (Massachusetts). Brill acquired a controlling share of the Danville Car Company in 1908, dissolving it in 1911, then the Canadian railway car builder Preston Car Company in 1921, which ceased operating in 1923. With rapid internal growth plus these acquisitions, Brill became the largest rail car manufacturer in the world. As large orders continued to be won, new facilities continued to be added in Philadelphia, including steel forges and cavernous erecting shops. Brill's primary and very large plant was at 62nd and Woodland Ave., adjacent to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad which it used for shipping its products. One particularly large order, received in 1911, was for 1,500 streetcars for the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company. It took two years to build those trolleys, with delivery rates at times exceeding a hundred cars a month. All told, more than 30,000 rail vehicles were produced at the Brill plant. In its best years, a workforce of 3,000 Philadelphians was employed by Brill, with many being skilled laborers and craftsmen.[3][4]

Gas electric motor cars

Heavy weight full railroad size gas electric cars capable of towing up to two trailers were manufactured using General Electric Company electrical equipment and various engine manufacturers for branch line service with little passenger demand to uphold U.S Post Office contracts requiring reduced crew sizes. The Pennsylvania Railroad was a large purchaser.

Buses

With the rapid growth of paved roads nationally and the explosion in auto use plus the impact of the great Depression, the business of trolley use thus trolley construction collapsed. Attempts by Brill to provide acceptable new designs went nowhere. The last rail cars built by J.G. Brill were 25 streamliner Brillliners for Atlantic City in 1939 and a final 10 trolley PCC competitive Brillliners for Philadelphia's Red Arrow Lines two years later. Production shifted to rubber-tired vehicles. More than 8,000 gasoline- and electric-powered buses (trolley buses) were built in the 1940s. However, by the early 1950s even the bus orders had dried up. In March 1954, the Brill plant was sold to the Penn Fruit Company and a strip mall was built on the eastern end of the site.[citation needed] In 1926, American Car and Foundry Company acquired a controlling interest in what had become the Brill Corporation. The new structure consisted of:

  • ACF Motors Company, which owned Hall-Scott Motor Car Company (100%) and controlled 90% of Fageol Motors; and
  • the J.G. Brill Company.[3] In 1944, the two companies merged, forming the ACF-Brill Motors Company.[5] In the same year, ACF-Brill licensed Canadian Car and Foundry of Montreal to manufacture and sell throughout Canada motor buses and trolley coaches of their design as Canadian Car-Brill. The firm built about 1,100 trolley buses and a few thousand buses under the name. Brill had earlier (in 1908) established a company in France (Cie. J.G. Brill of Gallardon, which was sold to Electroforge in 1935).[3]

In 1946, Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Corporation acquired a controlling interest in ACF-Brill for $7.5 million. Consolidated Vultee was sold the following year to the Nashville Corporation, which in 1951 sold its share to investment firm Allen & Co. In early 1954, the Brill name disappeared when ACF-Brill ceased production and subcontracted its remaining orders.[6] Brill granted licenses to build its vehicles to the Canadian Car and Foundry Company (Peter Witt streetcars, trolley buses and motor buses), and the South Australian Railways (Model 75 railcars).

Products

 
Preserved South Australian Railways narrow-bodied Brill Model 75 railcar no. 106 on the Pichi Richi Railway heritage line in 2006.
 
A Brill Bullet (right) passes a pair of "Strafford Cars" (left), Philadelphia, June 1968
 
A 1947 ACF-Brill trolley bus in Philadelphia, 1978
  • Birney safety car – by subsidiary, the American Car Company.
  • Traditional arch-windowed, all-wood interurban cars. 1890-1920s.
  • Model 55 (1924–38), Model 65 (1924) and Model 75 (1924–) railcars. Almost 300 were built for US and foreign railroads. A major purchaser was the South Australian Railways, which bought 12 Model 55 power cars plus trailers in 1924, followed in 1928 by 39 Model 75 power cars (all but the first being constructed in South Australia at the Islington Railway Workshops) plus trailers. The last was withdrawn from service in 1971.[3][7][8]
  • Steel heavy interurban cars built 1920-1930s. The Brill "Center Door" car was typical of suburban trolleys and interurbans built around 1920. These tended to be large, heavy, double-ended cars, with passengers entering and exiting via doors located at the center of the car. Many were rebuilt into one-man cars.[9]
  • Brill "Master Unit," built 1930s. All-steel; had standard controller stand, capable of 70 mph. [p86-100]
  • Brilliner – Brill's competitor to the PCC (Presidents' Conference Committee) car looked somewhat like the first PCCs. The Brilliner was not successful when compared to the PCC. Underpowered. Few were sold, whereas PCCs were well sold worldwide. Twenty-four built for Atlantic City's Miss America Fleet.[9]
  • Brill "Bullet" car, 1929–1932. For suburban/interurban use.[9]
  • Brill diners – Brill sold and designed diners, generally through one of its four subsidiaries, the Wason Manufacturing Company. The last one believed to be operating is the Capitol Diner in Lynn, Massachusetts, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
  • Peter Witt streetcar
    • Large cars with trailers
    • Small cars
  • Numerous models of trolleybuses, including T30, T40, 40SMT, 44SMT and, as ACF-Brill, TC44 and T46/TC46
  • C-36 city bus
  • IC-41 intercity bus

Bullet interurban cars

 
The streamlined interurban railcar Bullet from the P&W line. With a top speed at 92 mph (148 km/h) it was a forerunner of high-speed rail. No. 206 on display at Steamtown in Scranton, Pennsylvania.

The lines that operated interurban passenger cars recognized in the mid-1920s that they needed faster, quieter, more power-efficient equipment. Until then, the wooden and most of the steel interurban cars were large, sat high, and were heavy. Streetcars were slow, noisy, and clumsy to operate using the motor controller "stand" of the time. Car manufacturers such as Cincinnati Car Company (who already in 1922 made a lightweight, albeit slow, interurban), St. Louis Car Company, Pullman, and Brill worked to design equipment for a better ride at high speed, improved passenger comfort, and reduced power consumption. This particularly involved designing low-level trucks (bogies) able to handle rough track at speed. Brill, in conjunction with Westinghouse and General Electric, worked on a new interurban design and on a new streetcar design (the PCC).

The interurban design result was the aluminum-and-steel, wind-tunnel-developed, slope-roof "Bullet" multiple-unit cars, the first of which were purchased in 1931 by the Philadelphia and Western Railroad, a third-rail line running from 69th Street Upper Darby to Norristown in the Philadelphia region.[6] This line still runs as SEPTA's Norristown High Speed Line. The Bullets could attain speeds as high as 92 mph (148 km/h).[10] They were very successful, and operated until the 1980s, but Brill sold few others. Only the central New York state interurban Fonda, Johnstown, and Gloversville Railroad ordered Bullets, albeit a single-ended, single-unit "trolley-ized" version. Five were procured in mid-Depression 1932 for passenger business that was rapidly declining. In 1936, the closing FJ&G sold these Bullets to the Bamberger Railroad in Utah, which ran them in high-speed service between Salt Lake City and Ogden until the mid-1950s.[3]

Three of the SEPTA Bullet cars are now at the Seashore Trolley Museum; one is at the Electric City Trolley Museum in Scranton; one is at the Rockhill Trolley Museum in Orbisonia, Pennsylvania; one is at the National Museum of Transportation in St. Louis, Missouri; and one is at the Pennsylvania Trolley Museum in Washington, Pennsylvania. A Bamberger Bullet is in the Southern California Railway Museum in Perris, California, and another has been preserved by the Utah State Railroad Museum. A third is a part of a restaurant building in Springville, Utah, but is barely recognizable as a Bullet.

Brill also manufactured the Pack Howitzer 75 mm cannon for the U.S. Military during the years between World Wars I and II.

Brill look-alike cars in the 2010s

Since 2015 the JR Kyushu, one of the constituent companies of Japan Railways Group, has operated the Aru Ressha "sweet train", a deluxe excursion train. It comprises two power cars and two newly built trailer cars based on a luxury Brill car the railway ordered in 1908 but never used. Scale models of the original cars were used to derive the design.

See also

References

  1. ^ Young, Andrew D. (1997). Veteran & Vintage Transit, p. 101. St. Louis: Archway Publishing. ISBN 0-9647279-2-7
  2. ^ The Historical Society of Pennsylvania
  3. ^ a b c d e Brill, Debra (August 2001). History of the J.G. Brill Company (Series: Railroads Past and Present). Indiana University Press. ISBN 0253339499.
  4. ^ Szilagyi, Mike (January 5, 2012). "And Then There Was One". Hidden City Philadelphia.
  5. ^ Sebree, Mac; and Ward, Paul (1973). Transit's Stepchild: The Trolley Coach, p. 127. Los Angeles: Interurbans. LCCN 73-84356.
  6. ^ a b "The J.G. Brill Company". American-Rails.com. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  7. ^ "[Exhibit 60: 55 class railcar] 8 South Australian Railways – Broad Gauge". National Railway Museum. National Railway Museum Incorporated. November 2017. Retrieved November 30, 2017.
  8. ^ "[Exhibit 61: 75 class railcar] R.C. 41 South Australian Railways – Broad Gauge". National Railway Museum. National Railway Museum Incorporated. November 2017. Retrieved November 30, 2017.
  9. ^ a b c Springirth, Kenneth C. (2007). Suburban Philadelphia Trolleys. Charleston: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738550435.
  10. ^ Middleton, William D. (1965). The Interurban Era. Milwaukee: Kalmbach Publishing Company. ISBN 9780890240038.

Bibliography

  • Middleton, William D. The Interurban Era, Kalmbach Publishing Company, Milwaukee, 2000 [1965]. ISBN 9780890240038. (Coverage: list of US interurban car manufacturers, pp 416–417; Bullet design, pp 68–70.)
  • Volkmer, William D. Pennsylvania Trolleys in Color, Morning Sun Books, Scotch Plains, 1998. Vol. 2. ISBN 978-1878887993. (Coverage: photographs of Brilliners, Bullets and other Brill designs, on Philadelphia and Western line and in shops.)
  • Hilton, George W. & Due, John F. The Electric Interurban Railways in America, Stanford University Press, Stanford, reissue 2000. ISBN 9780804740142. (Coverage: development of improved interurban car design.)
  • Springirth, Kenneth C. Suburban Philadelphia Trolleys, Arcadia Publishing, Charleston, 2007. ISBN 9780738550435. (Coverage: development of Bullet design.)
  • Bradford, Francis H. & Dias, Ric A. Hall-Scott: the untold story of a great American engine maker, SAE International Book Publishing, Warrendale, 2007. ISBN 9780768016604.

External links

  • History of J.G. Brill Company
  • The J.G. Brill Company Records, including approximately 16,000 photographs, are available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
  • Brill Bullet
  • Photos of Red Arrow Trolleys, including Brill cars
  • Brill history and photos
  • The Tramways of Colombia

brill, company, heritage, tramway, line, england, unrelated, brill, company, brill, tramway, manufactured, streetcars, interurban, coaches, motor, buses, trolleybuses, railroad, cars, united, states, almost, ninety, years, making, longest, lasting, trolley, in. For the heritage tramway line in England unrelated to the J G Brill Company see Brill Tramway The J G Brill Company manufactured streetcars 1 interurban coaches motor buses trolleybuses and railroad cars in the United States for almost ninety years making it the longest lasting trolley and interurban manufacturer At its height Brill was the largest manufacturer of streetcars and interurban cars in the US and produced more streetcars interurbans and gas electric cars than any other manufacturer building more than 45 000 streetcars alone J G Brill CompanyTypePrivately held companyIndustryRail transportGenrePublic transportFounded1868FounderJohn George BrillDefunct1954 acquired by GE Transportation HeadquartersPhiladelphia Pennsylvania United StatesProductsStreetcars trams interurban railcars motor buses and trolleybusesCoordinates 39 55 38 N 75 13 45 W 39 9273472 N 75 2291959 W 39 9273472 75 2291959 Share certificate issued by the J G Brill Company issued on April 11 1921 A 1903 Brill built streetcar on a heritage streetcar line in Sintra Portugal in 2010 The company was founded by John George Brill in 1868 in Philadelphia as a horsecar manufacturing firm Its factory complex was located in south west Philadelphia at 62nd St and Woodland Avenue adjacent to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad tracks 2 Over the years it absorbed numerous other manufacturers of trolleys and interurbans such as Kuhlman in Cleveland and Jewett in Indiana In 1944 with business diminishing it merged with the American Car and Foundry Company ACF to become ACF Brill Although the company ceased production in 1954 some of its interurbans served the Philadelphia area until the 1980s Contents 1 History 1 1 Trolleys and interurban cars 1 2 Gas electric motor cars 1 3 Buses 2 Products 3 Bullet interurban cars 4 Brill look alike cars in the 2010s 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksHistory EditTrolleys and interurban cars Edit In 1868 the Brill company was founded as J G Brill and Sons After James Rawle joined the firm in 1872 it was renamed The J G Brill Company In 1902 Brill bought out the American Car Company in 1904 G C Kuhlman Car Company Cleveland then the John Stephenson Company New Jersey and in 1907 Wason Manufacturing Company Massachusetts Brill acquired a controlling share of the Danville Car Company in 1908 dissolving it in 1911 then the Canadian railway car builder Preston Car Company in 1921 which ceased operating in 1923 With rapid internal growth plus these acquisitions Brill became the largest rail car manufacturer in the world As large orders continued to be won new facilities continued to be added in Philadelphia including steel forges and cavernous erecting shops Brill s primary and very large plant was at 62nd and Woodland Ave adjacent to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad which it used for shipping its products One particularly large order received in 1911 was for 1 500 streetcars for the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company It took two years to build those trolleys with delivery rates at times exceeding a hundred cars a month All told more than 30 000 rail vehicles were produced at the Brill plant In its best years a workforce of 3 000 Philadelphians was employed by Brill with many being skilled laborers and craftsmen 3 4 Gas electric motor cars Edit Heavy weight full railroad size gas electric cars capable of towing up to two trailers were manufactured using General Electric Company electrical equipment and various engine manufacturers for branch line service with little passenger demand to uphold U S Post Office contracts requiring reduced crew sizes The Pennsylvania Railroad was a large purchaser Buses Edit With the rapid growth of paved roads nationally and the explosion in auto use plus the impact of the great Depression the business of trolley use thus trolley construction collapsed Attempts by Brill to provide acceptable new designs went nowhere The last rail cars built by J G Brill were 25 streamliner Brillliners for Atlantic City in 1939 and a final 10 trolley PCC competitive Brillliners for Philadelphia s Red Arrow Lines two years later Production shifted to rubber tired vehicles More than 8 000 gasoline and electric powered buses trolley buses were built in the 1940s However by the early 1950s even the bus orders had dried up In March 1954 the Brill plant was sold to the Penn Fruit Company and a strip mall was built on the eastern end of the site citation needed In 1926 American Car and Foundry Company acquired a controlling interest in what had become the Brill Corporation The new structure consisted of ACF Motors Company which owned Hall Scott Motor Car Company 100 and controlled 90 of Fageol Motors and the J G Brill Company 3 In 1944 the two companies merged forming the ACF Brill Motors Company 5 In the same year ACF Brill licensed Canadian Car and Foundry of Montreal to manufacture and sell throughout Canada motor buses and trolley coaches of their design as Canadian Car Brill The firm built about 1 100 trolley buses and a few thousand buses under the name Brill had earlier in 1908 established a company in France Cie J G Brill of Gallardon which was sold to Electroforge in 1935 3 In 1946 Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Corporation acquired a controlling interest in ACF Brill for 7 5 million Consolidated Vultee was sold the following year to the Nashville Corporation which in 1951 sold its share to investment firm Allen amp Co In early 1954 the Brill name disappeared when ACF Brill ceased production and subcontracted its remaining orders 6 Brill granted licenses to build its vehicles to the Canadian Car and Foundry Company Peter Witt streetcars trolley buses and motor buses and the South Australian Railways Model 75 railcars Products EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items September 2011 Preserved South Australian Railways narrow bodied Brill Model 75 railcar no 106 on the Pichi Richi Railway heritage line in 2006 A Brill Bullet right passes a pair of Strafford Cars left Philadelphia June 1968 A 1947 ACF Brill trolley bus in Philadelphia 1978 Birney safety car by subsidiary the American Car Company Traditional arch windowed all wood interurban cars 1890 1920s Model 55 1924 38 Model 65 1924 and Model 75 1924 railcars Almost 300 were built for US and foreign railroads A major purchaser was the South Australian Railways which bought 12 Model 55 power cars plus trailers in 1924 followed in 1928 by 39 Model 75 power cars all but the first being constructed in South Australia at the Islington Railway Workshops plus trailers The last was withdrawn from service in 1971 3 7 8 Steel heavy interurban cars built 1920 1930s The Brill Center Door car was typical of suburban trolleys and interurbans built around 1920 These tended to be large heavy double ended cars with passengers entering and exiting via doors located at the center of the car Many were rebuilt into one man cars 9 Brill Master Unit built 1930s All steel had standard controller stand capable of 70 mph p86 100 Brilliner Brill s competitor to the PCC Presidents Conference Committee car looked somewhat like the first PCCs The Brilliner was not successful when compared to the PCC Underpowered Few were sold whereas PCCs were well sold worldwide Twenty four built for Atlantic City s Miss America Fleet 9 Brill Bullet car 1929 1932 For suburban interurban use 9 Brill diners Brill sold and designed diners generally through one of its four subsidiaries the Wason Manufacturing Company The last one believed to be operating is the Capitol Diner in Lynn Massachusetts which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places Peter Witt streetcar Large cars with trailers Small cars Numerous models of trolleybuses including T30 T40 40SMT 44SMT and as ACF Brill TC44 and T46 TC46 C 36 city bus IC 41 intercity busBullet interurban cars Edit The streamlined interurban railcar Bullet from the P amp W line With a top speed at 92 mph 148 km h it was a forerunner of high speed rail No 206 on display at Steamtown in Scranton Pennsylvania The lines that operated interurban passenger cars recognized in the mid 1920s that they needed faster quieter more power efficient equipment Until then the wooden and most of the steel interurban cars were large sat high and were heavy Streetcars were slow noisy and clumsy to operate using the motor controller stand of the time Car manufacturers such as Cincinnati Car Company who already in 1922 made a lightweight albeit slow interurban St Louis Car Company Pullman and Brill worked to design equipment for a better ride at high speed improved passenger comfort and reduced power consumption This particularly involved designing low level trucks bogies able to handle rough track at speed Brill in conjunction with Westinghouse and General Electric worked on a new interurban design and on a new streetcar design the PCC The interurban design result was the aluminum and steel wind tunnel developed slope roof Bullet multiple unit cars the first of which were purchased in 1931 by the Philadelphia and Western Railroad a third rail line running from 69th Street Upper Darby to Norristown in the Philadelphia region 6 This line still runs as SEPTA s Norristown High Speed Line The Bullets could attain speeds as high as 92 mph 148 km h 10 They were very successful and operated until the 1980s but Brill sold few others Only the central New York state interurban Fonda Johnstown and Gloversville Railroad ordered Bullets albeit a single ended single unit trolley ized version Five were procured in mid Depression 1932 for passenger business that was rapidly declining In 1936 the closing FJ amp G sold these Bullets to the Bamberger Railroad in Utah which ran them in high speed service between Salt Lake City and Ogden until the mid 1950s 3 Three of the SEPTA Bullet cars are now at the Seashore Trolley Museum one is at the Electric City Trolley Museum in Scranton one is at the Rockhill Trolley Museum in Orbisonia Pennsylvania one is at the National Museum of Transportation in St Louis Missouri and one is at the Pennsylvania Trolley Museum in Washington Pennsylvania A Bamberger Bullet is in the Southern California Railway Museum in Perris California and another has been preserved by the Utah State Railroad Museum A third is a part of a restaurant building in Springville Utah but is barely recognizable as a Bullet Brill also manufactured the Pack Howitzer 75 mm cannon for the U S Military during the years between World Wars I and II Brill look alike cars in the 2010s EditSince 2015 the JR Kyushu one of the constituent companies of Japan Railways Group has operated the Aru Ressha sweet train a deluxe excursion train It comprises two power cars and two newly built trailer cars based on a luxury Brill car the railway ordered in 1908 but never used Scale models of the original cars were used to derive the design See also EditFrankfort and Cincinnati Model 55 Rail Car List of tram buildersReferences Edit Young Andrew D 1997 Veteran amp Vintage Transit p 101 St Louis Archway Publishing ISBN 0 9647279 2 7 The Historical Society of Pennsylvania a b c d e Brill Debra August 2001 History of the J G Brill Company Series Railroads Past and Present Indiana University Press ISBN 0253339499 Szilagyi Mike January 5 2012 And Then There Was One Hidden City Philadelphia Sebree Mac and Ward Paul 1973 Transit s Stepchild The Trolley Coach p 127 Los Angeles Interurbans LCCN 73 84356 a b The J G Brill Company American Rails com Retrieved February 23 2016 Exhibit 60 55 class railcar 8 South Australian Railways Broad Gauge National Railway Museum National Railway Museum Incorporated November 2017 Retrieved November 30 2017 Exhibit 61 75 class railcar R C 41 South Australian Railways Broad Gauge National Railway Museum National Railway Museum Incorporated November 2017 Retrieved November 30 2017 a b c Springirth Kenneth C 2007 Suburban Philadelphia Trolleys Charleston Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738550435 Middleton William D 1965 The Interurban Era Milwaukee Kalmbach Publishing Company ISBN 9780890240038 Bibliography EditMiddleton William D The Interurban Era Kalmbach Publishing Company Milwaukee 2000 1965 ISBN 9780890240038 Coverage list of US interurban car manufacturers pp 416 417 Bullet design pp 68 70 Volkmer William D Pennsylvania Trolleys in Color Morning Sun Books Scotch Plains 1998 Vol 2 ISBN 978 1878887993 Coverage photographs of Brilliners Bullets and other Brill designs on Philadelphia and Western line and in shops Hilton George W amp Due John F The Electric Interurban Railways in America Stanford University Press Stanford reissue 2000 ISBN 9780804740142 Coverage development of improved interurban car design Springirth Kenneth C Suburban Philadelphia Trolleys Arcadia Publishing Charleston 2007 ISBN 9780738550435 Coverage development of Bullet design Bradford Francis H amp Dias Ric A Hall Scott the untold story of a great American engine maker SAE International Book Publishing Warrendale 2007 ISBN 9780768016604 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to J G Brill Company History of J G Brill Company The J G Brill Company Records including approximately 16 000 photographs are available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania Brill Bullet Photos of Red Arrow Trolleys including Brill cars Brill history and photos The Tramways of Colombia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title J G Brill Company amp oldid 1133264869, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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