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Wikipedia

Ross Winans

Ross Winans (1796–1877) was an American inventor, mechanic, and builder of locomotives and railroad machinery. He is also noted for design of pioneering cigar-hulled ships. Winans, one of the United States' first multi-millionaires, was involved in national and state politics, a southern-sympathizer and was a vehement "states' rights" advocate. Winans was briefly arrested after the Baltimore riot of 1861. His outspoken anti-federal stance as a member of the Maryland House of Delegates, the lower chamber of the General Assembly, (state legislature) led to his temporary arrest on May 14, 1861. At the time of his arrest, Winans was returning on a Baltimore and Ohio Railroad train from an early session of the legislature that was being held in the western Maryland town of Frederick to avoid the Union Army-occupied state capital of Annapolis in April–May 1861 to consider the possibilities of state secession during the early decisive period of the American Civil War. Winans was related to James McNeill Whistler through marriage (Whistler's brother George married Winans' daughter Julia).

Ross Winans late in life.

Early life Edit

Ross Winans was born in Vernon Township, New Jersey on October 17, 1796. His parents were William and Mary Winans. He married Julia de Kay (1800-1850) in 1820 and they had five children. He moved his family to Baltimore, Maryland in the late 1820s and did business with the newly founded Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B. & O.).[1]

Following the death of his wife Julia in 1850, he married Elizabeth K. West (1807-1889) in 1854.[1]

Railroad Work Edit

 
Ross Winans by Whistler

Winans came from a New Jersey family of horse breeders, but successfully made the transition to other forms of motive power.

In 1828 he developed a friction wheel with outside bearings which established a distinctive pattern for railroad wheels for the next one hundred years or so. In the late 1820s also he became associated with the B&O, eventually entering their service as an engineer. One of his first and more important tasks was to help the famous inventor and industrialist Peter Cooper, (1791-1883), of New York City build the new revolutionary "Tom Thumb" steam-powered locomotive, to eventually replace the horse-drawn rail cars then being pulled along the short route of the Baltimore and Ohio that had been built so far - from the city's waterfront temporary depot facing "The Basin" (today's "Inner Harbor") at East Pratt Street and South Charles Streets to the southwest 20-some miles to its first terminus at Ellicott Mills on the upper Western Branch of the Patapsco River. By 1831, he was appointed assistant engineer of machinery on the B. & O. He invented and patented an improvement in the construction of axles, or bearings on July 20, 1831. Also in this productive year he built the "Columbus", his first double-truck car, which he immediately patented, even though it is widely known he stole the idea for after the original inventor failed to do so.[citation needed]

In 1835, Winans went into partnership with George Gillingham and in 1836 they succeeded to the 1834 lease of Phineas Davis and Israel Gardner of the B. & O. Company's shops at Mount Clare and continued the manufacture of locomotives and railroad machinery. "As far back perhaps as the year 1836, the firm of Gillingham and Winans, and, after the dissolution of that firm, I myself, down to 1841 or 1842, manufactured a Rail Road Wheel..." (letter #322).

In 1841, he opened his own shop adjacent to the B. & O.'s new Mount Clare Shops, along West Pratt Street, between Arlington and Schroeder Streets in southwest Baltimore, with that railroad as his primary customer. He was a pioneer in the development of substituting coal-burning steam locomotives, for the less efficient wood-burners. He was eccentric, and his locomotive business made him independently wealthy. His customer relations were simple—he built engines his way, and you bought them. Bored with the business, and having a design disagreement with the B. & O., he closed his shops, which were later leased to the Hayward, Bartlett, and Co. iron and steel foundries. He went on to do significant work for the Czar's railroad from the new imperial capital St. Petersburg on the Baltic Sea to the old traditional medieval capital of Moscow in central Russia. All of the listed engines are type 0-8-0, called the "Camel." They were all acquired from predecessor roads. Engine sales to the Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad (C. & P.) were recorded in 1863. James Millholland, the C. & P. Master Mechanic, was familiar with keeping these "Camel" engines running, and making improvements to them.

Winans set trends in locomotive and car design rather than followed them. His steam locomotives, popularly known as "Crabs," "Muddiggers," and "Camels" were used all over the fledgling rail network of the burgeoning industrial northeastern United States, from the 1840s until after the turn of the 20th century. The B. & O. was Winans' largest locomotive customer, with one hundred and forty locomotive deliveries going to that road. Winans had a disagreement with Mr. Hayes of the B. & O., which delayed delivery of some engines into 1863. Winans' second best customer was the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad. These two customers represented 70 percent of his sales. Winans typically offered a thirty-day trial period at the customer site.

About three hundred engine deliveries to twenty-six American railroads by Winans are documented during the period 1843–1863. He is also credited with being the first manufacture to export a locomotive to Europe. The Winans engine designs impressed a Russian delegation, and he was asked by the Czar to build the Imperial railroad from Moscow to St. Petersburg. Winans sent his two sons, as well as engineer George W. Whistler (father of painter James Whistler) to Russia for several years for that project. Winans may have sold as much or more equipment in Russia as he did in the United States, with both future 20th Century "super-powers" now setting the stage by building up their industrial and transportation networks on a continental scale, unknown in the smaller countries and kingdoms of Europe. Winans' son Thomas returned to build a Russian style estate in west Baltimore, named "Alexandrofsky", surrounded by a somewhat forbidding-looking wall which also enclosed an eclectic sculpture garden. Further west, another country estate of Italianate design with fieldstone walls in future suburban Baltimore County overlooking along the Gwynns Falls stream valley named "Crimea", off the Franklintown Road. "Alexandrofsky", located near what is now the Hollins Market, built in the 1830s, was demolished a century later to expand the housing stock of the city and fill in the regular street grid of white marble-stepped brick rowhouses. "Crimea" was later sold to the city, using a substantial money bequest from Mr Leakin in the 1920s to be set aside for purchasing a large parcel of property for a future park somewhere in the city. The Crimea purchase and park development was added to the Gwynn's Falls Park with the added name of Leakin Park. The contents of the "Crimea" mansion were sold at auction. Luckily, twenty-three boxes of Winans papers and journals were donated to the Maryland Historical Society in the old Enoch Pratt mansion on Park Avenue and West Monument Street in Mount Vernon-Belvedere neighborhood for safekeeping. The new municipal park was designated and designed as a "wilderness forest reserve" to preserve the natural foresting along the stream valleys Gwynns Falls-Leakin still maintains the original fieldstone mansion, with extensive porches and balconies, with a variety of interior uses. Surrounding the estate is the remnants of an intriquing cannon embankment with slotted places for carved logs resembling iron artillery pieces, supposedly Winans' attempt to deter Northern troops from camping on his grounds, a testimony to his infamous pro-Southern sympathies. Also a water wheel apparatus still exists along the stream for drawing fresh water uphill along with a small family cemetery now wooded in by the forest. The Carrie Murray Nature Center was recently established here in the early 1980s in remembrance of the mother of a famous Baltimore Orioles baseball team player Eddie Murray of the time, who donated it, to educate and enlighten visiting school children from the Baltimore City Public Schools. A clap-board Gothic stylish small chapel also exists on the grounds along the entrance road, Eagle Driveway from West Forest Park Avenue.

Winans' next important development in steam locomotive design was an 8-wheel connected freight locomotive in the early 1840s. In 1843, Gillingham and Winans built their own shop to maximize their profits. The company's most notable product was the "camelback locomotive". Winans quit the locomotive business in 1857 after a dispute with Henry Tyson, then head of motive power for the B. & O., over the use of leading bogies (trucks) on his locomotives. Winans generated a great many patents and was heavily engaged in litigation (legal lawsuits) over ideas he claimed as his own.

The majority of the Winans engines were burden (freight) as opposed to passenger type. Engines delivered after June 1848 are almost all of the Camel 0-8-0 type, favored by Winans. The early models are sometimes referred to as the "Baltimore engines". The "Camel" name derives from the first of class of that name, delivered to the B. & O. in 1848. All "Camel" engines were of the 0-8-0 wheel arrangement. Winans did not believe in the use of leading (pony) trucks.

The "Camel" engines were all low-speed, heavy haul units. The speed was limited to 10–15 miles per hour by the steam capacity of the boiler, and the lack of a pilot truck. However, at that speed, a single "Camel" could haul a 110 car train of loaded coal hoppers on the level. The most distinctive feature of the "Camel" was the cab atop the boiler. They had a large steam dome, slide valves, and used staybolts in the boiler. More than 100 iron tubes, each over 14 feet (4.3 m) long, were installed in the boiler.

A "Camel" was about 25 feet (7.6 m) long, with an 11-foot (3.4 m) wheelbase. There were three major variations: the short, medium, and long furnace models. The small units had 17" × 22" cylinders, and the others had 19" × 22" cylinders. The medium unit had about 23 square feet (2.1 m2) of grate area, expanded to more than 28 square feet (2.6 m2) in the large furnace model. The long furnace model had a firebox more than 8 feet (2.4 m) long, requiring lever-operated chutes for the fireman to feed the front of the fire. The fireman worked in the tender, as the firebox was behind the drivers. This design required that the drawbar passed beneath the firebox, and it typically heated to a cherry red color. Even after rebuilds with a more conventional cab design, the fireman worked in the tender. The standard Camel engine had 43" wheels, and was painted green.

"Camel" tenders were 8-wheeled, generally with brakes on the rear truck only. They held 5 tons of coal, and 812 tons (more than 2000 gallons) of water. Fully loaded, the tenders weighted 23 tons, only 4 tons less than the locomotive.

Ten "Camels" were delivered to the Baltimore and Susquehanna Railroad, which was running its lines from the north near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania including one "engine sold them from Maryland Mining Co., $8000 cash." Ten more sales were also recorded to the B. & S.'s successor line, the Northern Central Railway. Two units went to the Elmira & Canandaguia Railroad in New York, and were subsequently sold to the Cumberland & Pennsylvania. The P. & R. engine "Susquehanna" is described in detail in rail historian White's book (ref. 71). Two Winans engines went to the Huntingdon & Broad Top Mountain (H. & B.T.M.) Railroad in southwestern Pennsylvania in 1863. One unit blew up in 1868, with the loss of four lives. The H. & B.T.M. ran along the west side of Broad Top Mountain, best known for the narrow gauge line on its east side, the East Broad Top Railroad. The C. & P. interchanged with the H. & B.T.M. at State Line, Pennsylvania.

Most of the Winans "Camel" engines sold for around $10,000. Engine sales were expedited by syndicates of what we would now call investment bankers, such as Mr. Enoch Pratt. Banks did not yet have the accumulated capital to make loans for commercial purposes.

The records of the Philadelphia & Reading contain detailed information on "Camel" engine mileage's and rebuildings. This line received a series of forty-eight deliveries from 1846 to 1855. By 1858, the P. & R. had racked up in excess of 3.5 million miles on its 44 engines, with the "Camel" fleet representing 20 percent of the P. & R. motive power roster. By the end of the Civil War period in 1865, 28 of its 48 engines had not yet been rebuilt. By 1870, only 4 of the 48 were not yet rebuilt, but these four had accumulated almost one million miles of road service. The average service life before a rebuild was about thirteen and one-half years. Similar data for the B. & O. gives an average service life of 8.5 years before rebuilding. A total of 15 "Camel" rebuilds are recorded at the C. & P. shops in Mount Savage, Pennsylvania from 1866 through 1875.

There are only three documented catastrophic failures in "Camel" engines. Non-catastrophic failures were more prevalent, but fewer were documented. Railroad historian/author Roberts (reference 48) gives the performance of a Winans "Camel" on the B. & O.’s 17-mile (27 km) grade, circa 1855, as 144 trailing tons. Rail historian James Dilts (reference 17) gives the performance of B&O engine 71 as 117 trailing tons up a 2.2 percent grade at 18 mph (29 km/h). Engine 71 was a Winans "Camel", built in April 1851. The Winans engine could haul 40 empty coal hoppers up the Eckhart Branch, based on a tare weight of 3 tons for the Winans-designed 6-wheel hoppers in use in 1854.

Civil War politics Edit

During the Civil War Winans was elected a member of the Maryland House of Delegates (the lower house of the state legislature) for the 1861 special sessions called to discuss the issue of secession,[2] and was arrested twice due to his anti-Federal activities and speeches. On the day before the Baltimore riot of 1861, Winans moved a resolution "protest[ing] in the name of the people of Maryland against the garrisoning of Southern forts by militia drawn from the free States" and 'calling upon citizens of the state unite "to repel, if need be, any invader who may come to establish a military despotism over us." He was arrested shortly after the riot, was released, and elected again on April 24 as part of a States Rights ticket. Meanwhile, Winans' firm was reportedly preparing weapons and munitions for the defense of Baltimore against union troops. According to the American of April 23, "At the works of the Mssrs. Winans, the entire force is engaged in the making of pikes, and in casting balls of very description..." (Brown, 65). On May 14, one day after martial law was declared in Baltimore, Winans was again arrested while returning from a special session of the Maryland legislature in Frederick (the session in which the Maryland legislature considered, but ultimately rejected, secession). He was quickly released, after signing a "parole" guaranteeing his loyalty to the federal government. Winans' arrest, by Benjamin Butler's Federal troops, was one of the cases where Lincoln's emergency suspension of habeas corpus was employed. Winans' brief incarceration was not legally challenged, as it was in the case of Johns Merryman (Ex parte Merryman).

While Winans is often credited as the inventor of the Winans Steam Gun, said to be among the weapons bought from the five hundred thousand dollar fund that Baltimore Mayor Brown and Maryland Governor Hicks gathered "for the defense of the city. This experimental weapon was in fact not designed by Winans, but was invented by Charles S. Dickinson, and built in Boston in 1860. It passed through Winan's machine shop during the period when his workers were making pikes, shot and other items ordered by city authorities. When it emerged, its former history was forgotten, and word spread that it was built by Winan's to oppose Federal troops. Though this novelty ultimately had no military impact, it was widely discussed at the time and its connection to Winans, along with his political views reputation as a threat to federal control of Maryland.

The Russian Connection, and the Czar's St. Petersburg Railroad Edit

Railroad construction began to be of interest in Russia in the 1830s. Two colonels were sent to the United States as a Russian Railroad Mission to assess the State of the Art. The Tsar was interested in a new passenger locomotive on the Reading, a design of Moncure Robinson. The Colonels reported back favorably on American Railroad practice, and recommended Major George Washington Whistler as consultant for the project. Various gauges were in use on American lines. Whistler went to St. Petersburg in 1842. He recommended a 5-foot gauge. Whistler got things going, but he died of Cholera in 1849. T. S. Brown, an American, was his replacement. Whistler's son (the painter) and his wife (the subject of the famous painting) went to England. Another son, George, stayed until his death in 1869. Whistler recommended that Winans take charge of the mechanical works at St. Petersburg.

The Russian Colonels also wanted Joseph Harrison, of Eastwick & Harrison of Philadelphia to construct the rolling stock, under a contract for three million dollars. The company had built a locomotive in 1839, the Gowan and Marx, an 11-ton 4-4-0 unit for the Philadelphia and Reading. this locomotive had several technological innovations, which impressed the Russians. The boiler was set over the driving wheels, resulting in excellent traction. Also, Eastwick and Harrison of Philadelphia introduced the equalizing lever, a spring suspension that distributed the engine's weight over three points. In this arrangement, each of the four driving wheels could bounce independently as the engine negotiated rough track, greatly improving stability and traction. Later add-ons to the Russian contract, included another two million dollars, partially for the cast-iron bridge over the Neva River, the first time the river had been bridged.

Much of the machinery for the railroad, and the equipment came from the United States. Winans brought a "large and powerful locomotive" as well as "three steam pile driving machines." Four Otis steam shovels were imported from the U. S. By the order of the Czar, equipment was brought in duty-free. The firm Harrison, Winans, and Eastwick was organized in Russia for the venture.

Winans had impressed the Russians with his rail wagons, and he was invited to go to Russia and set up a factory. He declined, but sent his sons Thomas and William. Harrison sent a large portion of his Philadelphia manufacturing machinery to Russia, and installed it at the Alexandrovsky Works at St. Petersburg. This factory produced locomotives and rolling stock. It had a 5-year contract to develop locomotives and rolling stock. They impressed the Czar by finishing a year early, and secured a new contract. They eventually got a third extension, but were subsequently bought out by a Russian government entity, formed to operate the facility and the railroad. Thomas Winans followed in his father's footsteps, and was on a trip to deliver locomotives to the Boston and Albany, when he met George W. Whistler. Whistler was impressed by the young man. This meeting lead to the very lucrative Russian Contracts.

The Moscow to St. Petersburg Railway by built under the direction of Czar Nicholas I to connect his summer palace and his winter palace. There was a concern that the railway would enable social upheaval if the serfs were allowed to travel, so the service was restricted to the affluent and the aristocracy. The serfs were used to do the heavy labor, with a reported large loss of life. This is documented in the poem, The Railway, by Nikolay Nekrasov. After 10 years of construction, the line opened in November 1851.

George Washington Whistler was involved with the Czar on the rail project, as a consulting engineer. Winans was related to James McNeill Whistler through marriage (Whistler's brother George married Winans' daughter Julia) Another participant was John Hazelhurst Latrobe, son of the B&O's Benjamin Latrobe. He served as legal council for Winans, because he spoke Russian.

The Winans Brothers and Harrison bought out the interests of Eastwick, and formed a company for operations and future railroad construction.

Winans and Eastwick also seemed to get involved in the manufacturing of gunpowder in Russia. This was eyed by American gunpowder manufacturer DuPont with some suspicion.. The Crimean War had broken out in 1854. The U. S. Department of State was consulted, and Winans was assured that U. S. interests were not involved.

William Winans served for a while as U. S. vice-consul to Russia at St. Petersburg, but resigned to continue his private business. The great St. Petersburg fire in May 1862 was partially contained by a steam pump from the Winans factory.

A financial crisis in 1865–66 lead to the Russian Finance Minister initiating a special Railroad Fund to ensure continuity of operations. One key point was the privatization of the railroad. The Winans' contract with the government was highly profitable for William Winans, but was draining the Imperial coffers. The Czar raised some money by selling Russian America (Alaska) to the Americans, and decided the privatization of the railroad would proceed. It was to go to the recently formed Grand Society of Russian Railroads. Winans was seen as "the robber of the Russian Treasury." Russian America was sold for nine million rubles, and Winans received six and a half million.

William Winans retired to England with an estimated 25 million rubles ($18–29 million). He wisely used some of this to buy shares in the new railroad venture in Russia, and became an influential, but not controlling, stockholder. The St. Petersburg to Moscow remains in daily operation at this writing.

References from the Journal of the Railroad and Locomotive Historical Society:

The Cigar Ship (or Boat) Edit

 
Engraving of the first Winans cigar ship/boat from the "Illustrated London News", 1858
 
The Winans Steam Vessel End View.jpg

In the mid-19th Century, Winans and his son Thomas designed and built a series of spindle-shaped boats, usually referred to as the "cigar ships" or "cigar boats". The first was constructed in 1858 and featured an unprecedented (and in the end, technically unfeasible) midship propeller, enclosed in a shroud. This propeller was driven by steam engines located in each hull section. The intent was to allow the ship to progress with less disturbance from weather and waves. This ship was discussed at length in the pages of the "Scientific American" national journal/magazine, and in the end remained tied up at the Winans docks at Ferry Bar, southside of the Whetstone Point peninsula and along the north shore of the Middle Branch or Ferry Branch of the Patapsco River, just west of old Fort Covington and Fort Babcock which supported Fort McHenry in the September 1814 Battle of Baltimore during the War of 1812 for many years, (later the site of the Port Covington railroad and harbor piers of the Western Maryland Railway built in the late 1890s and early 1900s) after a series of trials and modifications. It was never subjected to a sea trial. In his own words, "the length of the vessel was more than eleven times it breadth of beam, being 16 feet wide by 108 feet long." It included four high pressure steam engines, driving a large iron wheel with fins amidships. It did achieve a speed of 12 miles per hour on its trial in January 1859. He then lengthened the ship to 194, and then 235 feet. It went to England for further trials, but was never a great success. After the Civil War, Winans and his son took their enterprise to Europe, and several similarly designed boats were built in England and in St. Petersburg, Russia. None of these were also put to full sea trials, though press reports survive of trips in the Solent and the English Channel. The boats themselves remained tied up in Southampton into the 1880s, but inspired no imitators. The Russian Naval Journal reported on the ships in 1858. Winans shifted his interests outside of the United States during the Civil War. His son William had gained experience in naval construction during the Crimean War, outfitting gunboats for the defense of St. Petersburg. The Railroad Shops at Alexandrovsky were employed for the Naval work. Winans presented a proposal to the Russian Government entitled, "War Vehicles on the Spindle Principle," July 1861. This was favorably received by the Grand Duke Nuikolaevich, Chief of the Russian Navy. A Winans Cigar boat was tested on the Neva River, and ran to Kronstadt, where it conducted tests in the Gulf of Finland. The Russian Shipbuilding Technical Committee were not impressed.. Winans then proposed to the U. S. Government the design of his ships, in what he saw as a pending conflict with England. Nothing came of this. Winans took his cigar boat construction to England with his experimental Russian craft loaded on the British steamboat Nautilus. He built another cigar ship in Havre, France. He constructed a private yacht for himself in England, the fourth cigar ship. It was launched in 1866 on the Thames. Winans wanted to register his yacht at the Imperial Saint Petersburg Yacht Club. Numerous problems preventing the ship making the voyage.

Thomas Winans stayed for a time in Russia and contracted with the Czar's government to develop Russian railroads.

Other interests Edit

Winans took an interest in sanitary engineering and public health, publishing a number of pamphlets on sanitation, particularly in regard to water and ventilation. He lobbied for the development of a public water supply for Baltimore City.

Winans was a pioneer in the development of low income housing building a housing project he called "workingmen's housing" in Baltimore. Today a public housing project remains on the site and is named Mount Winans.

He also published religious writings, including a pamphlet on religious tolerance and a collection of Unitarian sermons.

The Winans' cigar ship and its shape inspired Captain Nemo's submarine ship, in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne.

Death Edit

Winans died in Baltimore on April 11, 1877, at the age of 81.[1][3]

Sources Edit

  • Bell, J. Snowden The Early Motive Power of the B&O Railroad, New York: Angus Sinclair Publishing; 1912; reprinted: Glenwood Publishing, 1975, ISBN 0-911760-17-2.
  • Bell, J. Snowden "The "Camel" engine of Ross Winans,"Journal of the Franklin Institute, Volume 106, Issue 4, October 1878, Pages 246-248, IN3, 249-250.
  • Brown, George William,Baltimore and the Nineteenth of April, 1861; A Study of the War, Johns Hopkins University, 1887 (from Library of Congress)
  • Butler, Benjamin F., and Jessie Ames Marshall. Private and Official Correspondence of Gen.Benjamin F. Butler, during the Period of the Civil War .. Norwood, Mass.: The Plimpton press, 1915. (from Google Books)
  • Crisafulli, Michael,The Winans Cigar Ships.
  • Cottom, Robert I. (ed) "Cigar Boats," Maryland Historical Magazine, Vol 93, No. 4, Winter 1998.
  • Lamb, John, A Strange Engine of War: The "Winans" Steam Gun & Maryland in the Civil War, Chesapeake Book Company, 2011
  • Lamb, John A Strange Engine of War: The "Winans" Steam Gun & Maryland in the Civil War, Chesapeake Book Company, 2011, ISBN 0982304927.
  • Maryland. General Assembly. House of Delegates. Committee on Federal Relations. Report of the Committee on Federal Relations in Regard to the Calling of a Sovereign Convention. Frederick, Md.: E.S. Riley, printer, 1861.
  • Maryland. General Assembly. Protest of the General Assembly Against the Illegal Arrest and Imprisonment by the Federal Government of Citizens of Maryland. Frederick: B.H. Richardson, printer, 1861.
  • Mitchell, Charles W. Maryland Voices of the Civil War. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007.
  • Newell (E. T.) Company. "Catalog of auction sale of all the remaining furniture, bric-a-brac, bronzes, statuary,.lot of books by foreign and American authors, etc., within the premises ‘Alexandrofsky’, former home of the Winans, Nov. 5, 1925,.by order of Miss Elsie C. Hutton," Baltimore, 1925. (available at Pratt Library, Baltimore. Call Number: NK570.B4).
  • Noskov, Vladimir V. "The End of the Winans' Brothers Railroad Enterprise in Russia," in Whisenhunt, William Benton; Saul, Norman E. New Perspectives on Russian-American Relations, 1st ed, Routledge, 2016, ISBN 978-1-138-91623-4. pp 36–50
  • Parker, Theodore, and Ross Winans. Gleanings from Theodore Parker's Works on Speculative Theism. Baltimore, Md: John P. Des Forges,
  • Radinsky, Mike "History Captured in Ellicott's Mills - Our quaint little town was the scene of what could have been a turning point in the Civil War... or maybe just a footnote," Star Patcher, May 12, 2011, Ellicott City Patch.
  • Sagle, L. W. "Ross Winans," paper read before the New York Chapter, R&LHS, Feb. 21, 1947.
  • Stakem, Patrick H. and Stakem, Patrick E. From the (Iron) Horses Mouth An updated Roster from Ross Winans' Memorandum of Engines, 2008, PRRB Publishing, ISBN 0-9725966-2-3.
  • Stakem, Patrick H. Ross Winans, an ingenious mechanic of Baltimore. 2016, PRRB Publishing, ASIN B01D8VZ7BY.
  • Sullivan, John L. "Remarks on Winans' rail-way carriage," Journal of the Franklin Institute, Volume 11, Issue 1, January 1831, Pages 47–60.
  • Sullivan, John L. "On the Baltimore rail-road carriage, invented by Ross Winans, Esq. and the manner of adapting it to streets; also on cheap rail-roads," Journal of the Franklin Institute, Volume 7, Issue 4, April 1829, Pages 231–240. Also ASIN B00085VBEQ.
  • Whisenhunt, William Benton; Saul, Norman E. New Perspectives on Russian-American Relations, 1st ed, Routledge, 2016, ISBN 978-1-138-91623-4. (pp 36–50).
  • Whistler, George William "Report Upon the Use of Anthracite Coal in Locomotive Engines on the Reading Rail Road, Made to the President of the Philadelphia And Reading Rail Road Company by George W. Whistler, Jr.," Baltimore: Printed by J. D. Toy, Pub. 1849, (available at Pratt Library, Baltimore).
  • Winans, Ross. Collection of Articles and Correspondence in Relation to Baltimore Harbor Nuisance. Baltimore: John P. Des Forges, 1875.
  • ---"The Last of the Camels," Railway Master Mechanic, Dec. 1891, Vol 106, Issue 4, pp 246–248 avail: http://www.catskillarchive.com.
  • ---"School's out for Winans Conversion; Publishing Firm decides to keep Mansion rather than sell it to UB," The Baltimore Sun, May 17, 2004, ISSN 1943-9504.
  • ---. Gleanings from various Authors on Sanitary Matters. Selected, Prepared and Published by Ross Winans. Collection of Articles and Correspondence in Relation to Baltimore Harbor Nuisance. Baltimore: John P. Des Forges, 1875.
  • ---. The Jones' Falls Question:Hygiene and Sanitary Matters. Baltimore: J. P. Des Forges, 1872.
  • ---. Minority Report of W., One of the Water Commissioners Appointed ... to Examine the Sources from which a Supply of Pure Water may be obtained for the City of Baltimore. Baltimore:, 1853.
  • ---.Objections to Yielding to Northerners the Control of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road, on which Depends the Development of the Farms, Mines, Manufacturers and Trade of the State of Maryland. Baltimore:, 1860.
  • ---. Ventilation and Other Requisites to a Healthy and Comfortable Dwelling:. Baltimore: J. P. Des Forges, 1871.
  • ---. Winans, Ross Pocket Notebook, Collections of the Maryland Historical Society, Baltimore, Maryland, Folder 72, Box 23. The notebook covers the period June 8, 1848 to May 3, 1855.
  • ---.Winans, Ross, Gleanings from Frothingham, Longfellow, and others, selected, compiled and published, John P. Des Forges (1871), ASIN: B00088Y1A4.
  • ---.Winans, Ross "A Communication to the President and Directors of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, on the subject of Locomotive Engines for the Transportation of Freight on Railroads." Baltimore: printed by John D. Toy, 1856;
  • ---.Winans, Ross "Address to the President and Directors of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company on the Subject of Locomotive Engines, and the Errors in Relation Thereto, Contained in a Pamphlet Recently Published by Authority of the Company," Baltimore: printed by John D. Toy, 1857.
  • ---.Winans, Ross "Report to P. E. Thomas, President, Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, on the Operation of Peter Cooper’s Engine," August 28, 1830.
  • ---.Winans, Ross "Documents relating to Ross Winans' patent for the eight-wheeled car,"
  • ---.Winans, Ross; Hazlehurst, John; Latrobe, Benjamin "Argument Delivered May 1st and 2nd, 1855: In the Case of Ross Winans Vs. the New York and Harlem," Printed by J.D. Toy. Digitized from 1855 version, avail:

https://www.bookdepository.com/Argument-Delivered-May-1st-2nd-1855-Case-Ross-Winans-vs-New-York-Harlem-Rail-Road-Company-District-Court-Unite-John-Hazlehurst-Boneval-Latrobe/9781425512408.

  • ---.Winans, Ross "Ross Winans vs. the Eastern Railroad Company; Evidence for Complainant October Term, 1853, Counsel R Choate, G T Curtis, C M Keller, C P Curtis," 2012, General Books, LLC, ISBN 9781236382269.
  • ---.Winans, Ross; Hubbell, William Wheeler "Arguments of William W. Hubbell," General Books LLC, 2012, ISBN 9781151291387.

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Hager, Guy W.(2009). "Ross Winans (1796-1877)." Friends of Orianda House, Baltimore, Maryland.
  2. ^ Archives of Maryland: Historical List: House of Delegates, Baltimore City (1790–1864)
  3. ^ "Death of Ross Winans". New York Times. 1877-04-11.

External links Edit

  • Ross Winans (1837). "Locomotive Steam Engine - United States Patent 308".
  • Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution.

ross, winans, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, november, 2010, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, 17. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ross Winans 1796 1877 was an American inventor mechanic and builder of locomotives and railroad machinery He is also noted for design of pioneering cigar hulled ships Winans one of the United States first multi millionaires was involved in national and state politics a southern sympathizer and was a vehement states rights advocate Winans was briefly arrested after the Baltimore riot of 1861 His outspoken anti federal stance as a member of the Maryland House of Delegates the lower chamber of the General Assembly state legislature led to his temporary arrest on May 14 1861 At the time of his arrest Winans was returning on a Baltimore and Ohio Railroad train from an early session of the legislature that was being held in the western Maryland town of Frederick to avoid the Union Army occupied state capital of Annapolis in April May 1861 to consider the possibilities of state secession during the early decisive period of the American Civil War Winans was related to James McNeill Whistler through marriage Whistler s brother George married Winans daughter Julia Ross Winans late in life Contents 1 Early life 2 Railroad Work 3 Civil War politics 4 The Russian Connection and the Czar s St Petersburg Railroad 5 The Cigar Ship or Boat 6 Other interests 7 Death 8 Sources 9 References 10 External linksEarly life EditRoss Winans was born in Vernon Township New Jersey on October 17 1796 His parents were William and Mary Winans He married Julia de Kay 1800 1850 in 1820 and they had five children He moved his family to Baltimore Maryland in the late 1820s and did business with the newly founded Baltimore and Ohio Railroad B amp O 1 Following the death of his wife Julia in 1850 he married Elizabeth K West 1807 1889 in 1854 1 Railroad Work Edit nbsp Ross Winans by WhistlerWinans came from a New Jersey family of horse breeders but successfully made the transition to other forms of motive power In 1828 he developed a friction wheel with outside bearings which established a distinctive pattern for railroad wheels for the next one hundred years or so In the late 1820s also he became associated with the B amp O eventually entering their service as an engineer One of his first and more important tasks was to help the famous inventor and industrialist Peter Cooper 1791 1883 of New York City build the new revolutionary Tom Thumb steam powered locomotive to eventually replace the horse drawn rail cars then being pulled along the short route of the Baltimore and Ohio that had been built so far from the city s waterfront temporary depot facing The Basin today s Inner Harbor at East Pratt Street and South Charles Streets to the southwest 20 some miles to its first terminus at Ellicott Mills on the upper Western Branch of the Patapsco River By 1831 he was appointed assistant engineer of machinery on the B amp O He invented and patented an improvement in the construction of axles or bearings on July 20 1831 Also in this productive year he built the Columbus his first double truck car which he immediately patented even though it is widely known he stole the idea for after the original inventor failed to do so citation needed In 1835 Winans went into partnership with George Gillingham and in 1836 they succeeded to the 1834 lease of Phineas Davis and Israel Gardner of the B amp O Company s shops at Mount Clare and continued the manufacture of locomotives and railroad machinery As far back perhaps as the year 1836 the firm of Gillingham and Winans and after the dissolution of that firm I myself down to 1841 or 1842 manufactured a Rail Road Wheel letter 322 In 1841 he opened his own shop adjacent to the B amp O s new Mount Clare Shops along West Pratt Street between Arlington and Schroeder Streets in southwest Baltimore with that railroad as his primary customer He was a pioneer in the development of substituting coal burning steam locomotives for the less efficient wood burners He was eccentric and his locomotive business made him independently wealthy His customer relations were simple he built engines his way and you bought them Bored with the business and having a design disagreement with the B amp O he closed his shops which were later leased to the Hayward Bartlett and Co iron and steel foundries He went on to do significant work for the Czar s railroad from the new imperial capital St Petersburg on the Baltic Sea to the old traditional medieval capital of Moscow in central Russia All of the listed engines are type 0 8 0 called the Camel They were all acquired from predecessor roads Engine sales to the Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad C amp P were recorded in 1863 James Millholland the C amp P Master Mechanic was familiar with keeping these Camel engines running and making improvements to them Winans set trends in locomotive and car design rather than followed them His steam locomotives popularly known as Crabs Muddiggers and Camels were used all over the fledgling rail network of the burgeoning industrial northeastern United States from the 1840s until after the turn of the 20th century The B amp O was Winans largest locomotive customer with one hundred and forty locomotive deliveries going to that road Winans had a disagreement with Mr Hayes of the B amp O which delayed delivery of some engines into 1863 Winans second best customer was the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad These two customers represented 70 percent of his sales Winans typically offered a thirty day trial period at the customer site About three hundred engine deliveries to twenty six American railroads by Winans are documented during the period 1843 1863 He is also credited with being the first manufacture to export a locomotive to Europe The Winans engine designs impressed a Russian delegation and he was asked by the Czar to build the Imperial railroad from Moscow to St Petersburg Winans sent his two sons as well as engineer George W Whistler father of painter James Whistler to Russia for several years for that project Winans may have sold as much or more equipment in Russia as he did in the United States with both future 20th Century super powers now setting the stage by building up their industrial and transportation networks on a continental scale unknown in the smaller countries and kingdoms of Europe Winans son Thomas returned to build a Russian style estate in west Baltimore named Alexandrofsky surrounded by a somewhat forbidding looking wall which also enclosed an eclectic sculpture garden Further west another country estate of Italianate design with fieldstone walls in future suburban Baltimore County overlooking along the Gwynns Falls stream valley named Crimea off the Franklintown Road Alexandrofsky located near what is now the Hollins Market built in the 1830s was demolished a century later to expand the housing stock of the city and fill in the regular street grid of white marble stepped brick rowhouses Crimea was later sold to the city using a substantial money bequest from Mr Leakin in the 1920s to be set aside for purchasing a large parcel of property for a future park somewhere in the city The Crimea purchase and park development was added to the Gwynn s Falls Park with the added name of Leakin Park The contents of the Crimea mansion were sold at auction Luckily twenty three boxes of Winans papers and journals were donated to the Maryland Historical Society in the old Enoch Pratt mansion on Park Avenue and West Monument Street in Mount Vernon Belvedere neighborhood for safekeeping The new municipal park was designated and designed as a wilderness forest reserve to preserve the natural foresting along the stream valleys Gwynns Falls Leakin still maintains the original fieldstone mansion with extensive porches and balconies with a variety of interior uses Surrounding the estate is the remnants of an intriquing cannon embankment with slotted places for carved logs resembling iron artillery pieces supposedly Winans attempt to deter Northern troops from camping on his grounds a testimony to his infamous pro Southern sympathies Also a water wheel apparatus still exists along the stream for drawing fresh water uphill along with a small family cemetery now wooded in by the forest The Carrie Murray Nature Center was recently established here in the early 1980s in remembrance of the mother of a famous Baltimore Orioles baseball team player Eddie Murray of the time who donated it to educate and enlighten visiting school children from the Baltimore City Public Schools A clap board Gothic stylish small chapel also exists on the grounds along the entrance road Eagle Driveway from West Forest Park Avenue Winans next important development in steam locomotive design was an 8 wheel connected freight locomotive in the early 1840s In 1843 Gillingham and Winans built their own shop to maximize their profits The company s most notable product was the camelback locomotive Winans quit the locomotive business in 1857 after a dispute with Henry Tyson then head of motive power for the B amp O over the use of leading bogies trucks on his locomotives Winans generated a great many patents and was heavily engaged in litigation legal lawsuits over ideas he claimed as his own The majority of the Winans engines were burden freight as opposed to passenger type Engines delivered after June 1848 are almost all of the Camel 0 8 0 type favored by Winans The early models are sometimes referred to as the Baltimore engines The Camel name derives from the first of class of that name delivered to the B amp O in 1848 All Camel engines were of the 0 8 0 wheel arrangement Winans did not believe in the use of leading pony trucks The Camel engines were all low speed heavy haul units The speed was limited to 10 15 miles per hour by the steam capacity of the boiler and the lack of a pilot truck However at that speed a single Camel could haul a 110 car train of loaded coal hoppers on the level The most distinctive feature of the Camel was the cab atop the boiler They had a large steam dome slide valves and used staybolts in the boiler More than 100 iron tubes each over 14 feet 4 3 m long were installed in the boiler A Camel was about 25 feet 7 6 m long with an 11 foot 3 4 m wheelbase There were three major variations the short medium and long furnace models The small units had 17 22 cylinders and the others had 19 22 cylinders The medium unit had about 23 square feet 2 1 m2 of grate area expanded to more than 28 square feet 2 6 m2 in the large furnace model The long furnace model had a firebox more than 8 feet 2 4 m long requiring lever operated chutes for the fireman to feed the front of the fire The fireman worked in the tender as the firebox was behind the drivers This design required that the drawbar passed beneath the firebox and it typically heated to a cherry red color Even after rebuilds with a more conventional cab design the fireman worked in the tender The standard Camel engine had 43 wheels and was painted green Camel tenders were 8 wheeled generally with brakes on the rear truck only They held 5 tons of coal and 81 2 tons more than 2000 gallons of water Fully loaded the tenders weighted 23 tons only 4 tons less than the locomotive Ten Camels were delivered to the Baltimore and Susquehanna Railroad which was running its lines from the north near Harrisburg Pennsylvania including one engine sold them from Maryland Mining Co 8000 cash Ten more sales were also recorded to the B amp S s successor line the Northern Central Railway Two units went to the Elmira amp Canandaguia Railroad in New York and were subsequently sold to the Cumberland amp Pennsylvania The P amp R engine Susquehanna is described in detail in rail historian White s book ref 71 Two Winans engines went to the Huntingdon amp Broad Top Mountain H amp B T M Railroad in southwestern Pennsylvania in 1863 One unit blew up in 1868 with the loss of four lives The H amp B T M ran along the west side of Broad Top Mountain best known for the narrow gauge line on its east side the East Broad Top Railroad The C amp P interchanged with the H amp B T M at State Line Pennsylvania Most of the Winans Camel engines sold for around 10 000 Engine sales were expedited by syndicates of what we would now call investment bankers such as Mr Enoch Pratt Banks did not yet have the accumulated capital to make loans for commercial purposes The records of the Philadelphia amp Reading contain detailed information on Camel engine mileage s and rebuildings This line received a series of forty eight deliveries from 1846 to 1855 By 1858 the P amp R had racked up in excess of 3 5 million miles on its 44 engines with the Camel fleet representing 20 percent of the P amp R motive power roster By the end of the Civil War period in 1865 28 of its 48 engines had not yet been rebuilt By 1870 only 4 of the 48 were not yet rebuilt but these four had accumulated almost one million miles of road service The average service life before a rebuild was about thirteen and one half years Similar data for the B amp O gives an average service life of 8 5 years before rebuilding A total of 15 Camel rebuilds are recorded at the C amp P shops in Mount Savage Pennsylvania from 1866 through 1875 There are only three documented catastrophic failures in Camel engines Non catastrophic failures were more prevalent but fewer were documented Railroad historian author Roberts reference 48 gives the performance of a Winans Camel on the B amp O s 17 mile 27 km grade circa 1855 as 144 trailing tons Rail historian James Dilts reference 17 gives the performance of B amp O engine 71 as 117 trailing tons up a 2 2 percent grade at 18 mph 29 km h Engine 71 was a Winans Camel built in April 1851 The Winans engine could haul 40 empty coal hoppers up the Eckhart Branch based on a tare weight of 3 tons for the Winans designed 6 wheel hoppers in use in 1854 Civil War politics EditDuring the Civil War Winans was elected a member of the Maryland House of Delegates the lower house of the state legislature for the 1861 special sessions called to discuss the issue of secession 2 and was arrested twice due to his anti Federal activities and speeches On the day before the Baltimore riot of 1861 Winans moved a resolution protest ing in the name of the people of Maryland against the garrisoning of Southern forts by militia drawn from the free States and calling upon citizens of the state unite to repel if need be any invader who may come to establish a military despotism over us He was arrested shortly after the riot was released and elected again on April 24 as part of a States Rights ticket Meanwhile Winans firm was reportedly preparing weapons and munitions for the defense of Baltimore against union troops According to the American of April 23 At the works of the Mssrs Winans the entire force is engaged in the making of pikes and in casting balls of very description Brown 65 On May 14 one day after martial law was declared in Baltimore Winans was again arrested while returning from a special session of the Maryland legislature in Frederick the session in which the Maryland legislature considered but ultimately rejected secession He was quickly released after signing a parole guaranteeing his loyalty to the federal government Winans arrest by Benjamin Butler s Federal troops was one of the cases where Lincoln s emergency suspension of habeas corpus was employed Winans brief incarceration was not legally challenged as it was in the case of Johns Merryman Ex parte Merryman While Winans is often credited as the inventor of the Winans Steam Gun said to be among the weapons bought from the five hundred thousand dollar fund that Baltimore Mayor Brown and Maryland Governor Hicks gathered for the defense of the city This experimental weapon was in fact not designed by Winans but was invented by Charles S Dickinson and built in Boston in 1860 It passed through Winan s machine shop during the period when his workers were making pikes shot and other items ordered by city authorities When it emerged its former history was forgotten and word spread that it was built by Winan s to oppose Federal troops Though this novelty ultimately had no military impact it was widely discussed at the time and its connection to Winans along with his political views reputation as a threat to federal control of Maryland The Russian Connection and the Czar s St Petersburg Railroad EditRailroad construction began to be of interest in Russia in the 1830s Two colonels were sent to the United States as a Russian Railroad Mission to assess the State of the Art The Tsar was interested in a new passenger locomotive on the Reading a design of Moncure Robinson The Colonels reported back favorably on American Railroad practice and recommended Major George Washington Whistler as consultant for the project Various gauges were in use on American lines Whistler went to St Petersburg in 1842 He recommended a 5 foot gauge Whistler got things going but he died of Cholera in 1849 T S Brown an American was his replacement Whistler s son the painter and his wife the subject of the famous painting went to England Another son George stayed until his death in 1869 Whistler recommended that Winans take charge of the mechanical works at St Petersburg The Russian Colonels also wanted Joseph Harrison of Eastwick amp Harrison of Philadelphia to construct the rolling stock under a contract for three million dollars The company had built a locomotive in 1839 the Gowan and Marx an 11 ton 4 4 0 unit for the Philadelphia and Reading this locomotive had several technological innovations which impressed the Russians The boiler was set over the driving wheels resulting in excellent traction Also Eastwick and Harrison of Philadelphia introduced the equalizing lever a spring suspension that distributed the engine s weight over three points In this arrangement each of the four driving wheels could bounce independently as the engine negotiated rough track greatly improving stability and traction Later add ons to the Russian contract included another two million dollars partially for the cast iron bridge over the Neva River the first time the river had been bridged Much of the machinery for the railroad and the equipment came from the United States Winans brought a large and powerful locomotive as well as three steam pile driving machines Four Otis steam shovels were imported from the U S By the order of the Czar equipment was brought in duty free The firm Harrison Winans and Eastwick was organized in Russia for the venture Winans had impressed the Russians with his rail wagons and he was invited to go to Russia and set up a factory He declined but sent his sons Thomas and William Harrison sent a large portion of his Philadelphia manufacturing machinery to Russia and installed it at the Alexandrovsky Works at St Petersburg This factory produced locomotives and rolling stock It had a 5 year contract to develop locomotives and rolling stock They impressed the Czar by finishing a year early and secured a new contract They eventually got a third extension but were subsequently bought out by a Russian government entity formed to operate the facility and the railroad Thomas Winans followed in his father s footsteps and was on a trip to deliver locomotives to the Boston and Albany when he met George W Whistler Whistler was impressed by the young man This meeting lead to the very lucrative Russian Contracts The Moscow to St Petersburg Railway by built under the direction of Czar Nicholas I to connect his summer palace and his winter palace There was a concern that the railway would enable social upheaval if the serfs were allowed to travel so the service was restricted to the affluent and the aristocracy The serfs were used to do the heavy labor with a reported large loss of life This is documented in the poem The Railway by Nikolay Nekrasov After 10 years of construction the line opened in November 1851 George Washington Whistler was involved with the Czar on the rail project as a consulting engineer Winans was related to James McNeill Whistler through marriage Whistler s brother George married Winans daughter Julia Another participant was John Hazelhurst Latrobe son of the B amp O s Benjamin Latrobe He served as legal council for Winans because he spoke Russian The Winans Brothers and Harrison bought out the interests of Eastwick and formed a company for operations and future railroad construction Winans and Eastwick also seemed to get involved in the manufacturing of gunpowder in Russia This was eyed by American gunpowder manufacturer DuPont with some suspicion The Crimean War had broken out in 1854 The U S Department of State was consulted and Winans was assured that U S interests were not involved William Winans served for a while as U S vice consul to Russia at St Petersburg but resigned to continue his private business The great St Petersburg fire in May 1862 was partially contained by a steam pump from the Winans factory A financial crisis in 1865 66 lead to the Russian Finance Minister initiating a special Railroad Fund to ensure continuity of operations One key point was the privatization of the railroad The Winans contract with the government was highly profitable for William Winans but was draining the Imperial coffers The Czar raised some money by selling Russian America Alaska to the Americans and decided the privatization of the railroad would proceed It was to go to the recently formed Grand Society of Russian Railroads Winans was seen as the robber of the Russian Treasury Russian America was sold for nine million rubles and Winans received six and a half million William Winans retired to England with an estimated 25 million rubles 18 29 million He wisely used some of this to buy shares in the new railroad venture in Russia and became an influential but not controlling stockholder The St Petersburg to Moscow remains in daily operation at this writing References from the Journal of the Railroad and Locomotive Historical Society The Cigar Ship or Boat Edit nbsp Engraving of the first Winans cigar ship boat from the Illustrated London News 1858 nbsp The Winans Steam Vessel End View jpgIn the mid 19th Century Winans and his son Thomas designed and built a series of spindle shaped boats usually referred to as the cigar ships or cigar boats The first was constructed in 1858 and featured an unprecedented and in the end technically unfeasible midship propeller enclosed in a shroud This propeller was driven by steam engines located in each hull section The intent was to allow the ship to progress with less disturbance from weather and waves This ship was discussed at length in the pages of the Scientific American national journal magazine and in the end remained tied up at the Winans docks at Ferry Bar southside of the Whetstone Point peninsula and along the north shore of the Middle Branch or Ferry Branch of the Patapsco River just west of old Fort Covington and Fort Babcock which supported Fort McHenry in the September 1814 Battle of Baltimore during the War of 1812 for many years later the site of the Port Covington railroad and harbor piers of the Western Maryland Railway built in the late 1890s and early 1900s after a series of trials and modifications It was never subjected to a sea trial In his own words the length of the vessel was more than eleven times it breadth of beam being 16 feet wide by 108 feet long It included four high pressure steam engines driving a large iron wheel with fins amidships It did achieve a speed of 12 miles per hour on its trial in January 1859 He then lengthened the ship to 194 and then 235 feet It went to England for further trials but was never a great success After the Civil War Winans and his son took their enterprise to Europe and several similarly designed boats were built in England and in St Petersburg Russia None of these were also put to full sea trials though press reports survive of trips in the Solent and the English Channel The boats themselves remained tied up in Southampton into the 1880s but inspired no imitators The Russian Naval Journal reported on the ships in 1858 Winans shifted his interests outside of the United States during the Civil War His son William had gained experience in naval construction during the Crimean War outfitting gunboats for the defense of St Petersburg The Railroad Shops at Alexandrovsky were employed for the Naval work Winans presented a proposal to the Russian Government entitled War Vehicles on the Spindle Principle July 1861 This was favorably received by the Grand Duke Nuikolaevich Chief of the Russian Navy A Winans Cigar boat was tested on the Neva River and ran to Kronstadt where it conducted tests in the Gulf of Finland The Russian Shipbuilding Technical Committee were not impressed Winans then proposed to the U S Government the design of his ships in what he saw as a pending conflict with England Nothing came of this Winans took his cigar boat construction to England with his experimental Russian craft loaded on the British steamboat Nautilus He built another cigar ship in Havre France He constructed a private yacht for himself in England the fourth cigar ship It was launched in 1866 on the Thames Winans wanted to register his yacht at the Imperial Saint Petersburg Yacht Club Numerous problems preventing the ship making the voyage Thomas Winans stayed for a time in Russia and contracted with the Czar s government to develop Russian railroads Other interests EditWinans took an interest in sanitary engineering and public health publishing a number of pamphlets on sanitation particularly in regard to water and ventilation He lobbied for the development of a public water supply for Baltimore City Winans was a pioneer in the development of low income housing building a housing project he called workingmen s housing in Baltimore Today a public housing project remains on the site and is named Mount Winans He also published religious writings including a pamphlet on religious tolerance and a collection of Unitarian sermons The Winans cigar ship and its shape inspired Captain Nemo s submarine ship in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne Death EditWinans died in Baltimore on April 11 1877 at the age of 81 1 3 Sources EditBell J Snowden The Early Motive Power of the B amp O Railroad New York Angus Sinclair Publishing 1912 reprinted Glenwood Publishing 1975 ISBN 0 911760 17 2 Bell J Snowden The Camel engine of Ross Winans Journal of the Franklin Institute Volume 106 Issue 4 October 1878 Pages 246 248 IN3 249 250 Brown George William Baltimore and the Nineteenth of April 1861 A Study of the War Johns Hopkins University 1887 from Library of Congress Butler Benjamin F and Jessie Ames Marshall Private and Official Correspondence of Gen Benjamin F Butler during the Period of the Civil War Norwood Mass The Plimpton press 1915 from Google Books Crisafulli Michael The Winans Cigar Ships Cottom Robert I ed Cigar Boats Maryland Historical Magazine Vol 93 No 4 Winter 1998 Lamb John A Strange Engine of War The Winans Steam Gun amp Maryland in the Civil War Chesapeake Book Company 2011 Lamb John A Strange Engine of War The Winans Steam Gun amp Maryland in the Civil War Chesapeake Book Company 2011 ISBN 0982304927 Maryland General Assembly House of Delegates Committee on Federal Relations Report of the Committee on Federal Relations in Regard to the Calling of a Sovereign Convention Frederick Md E S Riley printer 1861 Maryland General Assembly Protest of the General Assembly Against the Illegal Arrest and Imprisonment by the Federal Government of Citizens of Maryland Frederick B H Richardson printer 1861 Mitchell Charles W Maryland Voices of the Civil War Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2007 Newell E T Company Catalog of auction sale of all the remaining furniture bric a brac bronzes statuary lot of books by foreign and American authors etc within the premises Alexandrofsky former home of the Winans Nov 5 1925 by order of Miss Elsie C Hutton Baltimore 1925 available at Pratt Library Baltimore Call Number NK570 B4 Noskov Vladimir V The End of the Winans Brothers Railroad Enterprise in Russia in Whisenhunt William Benton Saul Norman E New Perspectives on Russian American Relations 1st ed Routledge 2016 ISBN 978 1 138 91623 4 pp 36 50 Parker Theodore and Ross Winans Gleanings from Theodore Parker s Works on Speculative Theism Baltimore Md John P Des Forges Radinsky Mike History Captured in Ellicott s Mills Our quaint little town was the scene of what could have been a turning point in the Civil War or maybe just a footnote Star Patcher May 12 2011 Ellicott City Patch Sagle L W Ross Winans paper read before the New York Chapter R amp LHS Feb 21 1947 Stakem Patrick H and Stakem Patrick E From the Iron Horses Mouth An updated Roster from Ross Winans Memorandum of Engines 2008 PRRB Publishing ISBN 0 9725966 2 3 Stakem Patrick H Ross Winans an ingenious mechanic of Baltimore 2016 PRRB Publishing ASIN B01D8VZ7BY Sullivan John L Remarks on Winans rail way carriage Journal of the Franklin Institute Volume 11 Issue 1 January 1831 Pages 47 60 Sullivan John L On the Baltimore rail road carriage invented by Ross Winans Esq and the manner of adapting it to streets also on cheap rail roads Journal of the Franklin Institute Volume 7 Issue 4 April 1829 Pages 231 240 Also ASIN B00085VBEQ Whisenhunt William Benton Saul Norman E New Perspectives on Russian American Relations 1st ed Routledge 2016 ISBN 978 1 138 91623 4 pp 36 50 Whistler George William Report Upon the Use of Anthracite Coal in Locomotive Engines on the Reading Rail Road Made to the President of the Philadelphia And Reading Rail Road Company by George W Whistler Jr Baltimore Printed by J D Toy Pub 1849 available at Pratt Library Baltimore Winans Ross Collection of Articles and Correspondence in Relation to Baltimore Harbor Nuisance Baltimore John P Des Forges 1875 The Last of the Camels Railway Master Mechanic Dec 1891 Vol 106 Issue 4 pp 246 248 avail http www catskillarchive com School s out for Winans Conversion Publishing Firm decides to keep Mansion rather than sell it to UB The Baltimore Sun May 17 2004 ISSN 1943 9504 Gleanings from various Authors on Sanitary Matters Selected Prepared and Published by Ross Winans Collection of Articles and Correspondence in Relation to Baltimore Harbor Nuisance Baltimore John P Des Forges 1875 The Jones Falls Question Hygiene and Sanitary Matters Baltimore J P Des Forges 1872 Minority Report of W One of the Water Commissioners Appointed to Examine the Sources from which a Supply of Pure Water may be obtained for the City of Baltimore Baltimore 1853 Objections to Yielding to Northerners the Control of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road on which Depends the Development of the Farms Mines Manufacturers and Trade of the State of Maryland Baltimore 1860 Ventilation and Other Requisites to a Healthy and Comfortable Dwelling Baltimore J P Des Forges 1871 Winans Ross Pocket Notebook Collections of the Maryland Historical Society Baltimore Maryland Folder 72 Box 23 The notebook covers the period June 8 1848 to May 3 1855 Winans Ross Gleanings from Frothingham Longfellow and others selected compiled and published John P Des Forges 1871 ASIN B00088Y1A4 Winans Ross A Communication to the President and Directors of the Baltimore amp Ohio Railroad Company on the subject of Locomotive Engines for the Transportation of Freight on Railroads Baltimore printed by John D Toy 1856 Winans Ross Address to the President and Directors of the Baltimore amp Ohio Railroad Company on the Subject of Locomotive Engines and the Errors in Relation Thereto Contained in a Pamphlet Recently Published by Authority of the Company Baltimore printed by John D Toy 1857 Winans Ross Report to P E Thomas President Baltimore amp Ohio Railroad on the Operation of Peter Cooper s Engine August 28 1830 Winans Ross Documents relating to Ross Winans patent for the eight wheeled car Winans Ross Hazlehurst John Latrobe Benjamin Argument Delivered May 1st and 2nd 1855 In the Case of Ross Winans Vs the New York and Harlem Printed by J D Toy Digitized from 1855 version avail https www bookdepository com Argument Delivered May 1st 2nd 1855 Case Ross Winans vs New York Harlem Rail Road Company District Court Unite John Hazlehurst Boneval Latrobe 9781425512408 Winans Ross Ross Winans vs the Eastern Railroad Company Evidence for Complainant October Term 1853 Counsel R Choate G T Curtis C M Keller C P Curtis 2012 General Books LLC ISBN 9781236382269 Winans Ross Hubbell William Wheeler Arguments of William W Hubbell General Books LLC 2012 ISBN 9781151291387 References Edit a b c Hager Guy W 2009 Ross Winans 1796 1877 Friends of Orianda House Baltimore Maryland Archives of Maryland Historical List House of Delegates Baltimore City 1790 1864 Death of Ross Winans New York Times 1877 04 11 The Museum of Railway Transport in Russian http cmzt narod ru External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ross Winans Ross Winans 1837 Locomotive Steam Engine United States Patent 308 Ross Winans Letterbook 1850 51 Archives Center National Museum of American History Smithsonian Institution Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ross Winans amp oldid 1171034202, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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