NEWSLETTER OF THE NORTH MANCHESTER HISTORICAL SOCIETY, INC.
Vol. XXVII, No. 2, May 2010
RED RIBBON CEREMONY AT CENTER FOR HISTORY
MILLER FAMILY DONATES LARGE
COLLECTION OF VINTAGE FARM EQUIPMENT
On April 2, members of the North Manchester Historical Society gathered with
descendants and friends of the Harold and Eleanor Miller family for the
dedication of the Barn Room at the Center for History. Dozens of antique farm
tools are now on exhibit. This is a must-see and one of the finest displays
anywhere of a farm family’s tools that were preserved and treasured over the
years. Three generations of Millers farmed just north of town. Included in this
collection are horse-drawn Oliver plows, cultivators, bobsled, Turnbull farm
wagon, bearskin coat, John Deere motor, Cyclone seed sower; corn sheller, grain
separator, numerous smaller implements and household items.
For more information and photos of this collection, visit our web site,
www.nmanchesterhistory.org.
WAGON MAKERS & THE
WHEELS OF HISTORY
By John Knarr
We thank the Miller family for donating a wonderful collection of vintage
agricultural equipment and artifacts to the North Manchester Center for History.
It is hoped that our visitors and future generations will gain a better
appreciation, through exposure and education, of our rural past and local
history.
A Turnbull farm wagon is part of the Miller collection and indeed is a
special addition to our museum. This large farm wagon is in
straight-from-the-barn condition. This vintage wagon appears to be solid,
retaining functional status. The large vintage wooden hubs and wooden axles are
impressive upon close inspection. The oak hubs have a 8 ½” diameter. The hickory
axles are 4 ½” thick at the widest point and are fitted into cast axle skeins
that measure at least 3 ½” in diameter. Embossed on each skein are the initials
“T.W.C.” [Turnbull Wagon Company]
The double box wagon measures 10 feet 6 inches in length; 38 inches wide; and 28
inches deep (16" lower box, 12” upper box).
(This length of wagon bed was a standard size for many farm wagons. The
bed on a Sears wagon as advertised in the 1902 Sears catalogue was also 10’6".)
The Turnbull is considered to be a wide track wagon measuring 57" across, nearly
five feet across from the middle of one wheel to the middle of the other one.
The Turnbull high wheels on the rear measure 44" while the smaller front ones
are 40" high. The felloe or wood rim is 2 ¾” wide and 2" deep. The felloes on
the front wheel come in two sections; the rear wheel has three-section felloes.
The rear wheels have 14 spokes while the front wheels contain 12 spokes. The
tires are well ironed and the iron is still well centered; dimension of the iron
rim is 3" width and 5/8" thick. The wagon comes with a lazy back spring seat,
patent endgate, and drop tongue. The original Turnbull seat is in excellent
condition. It still sports the paint and stripes of the Turnbull logo. Some
repair was done to the undercarriage. The undercarriage was designed to accept a
variety of beds with the box just sitting upon it. This particular wagon
features a catalogued load capacity of approximately 5200 pounds.[1913 Turnbull
Wagon Company Catalogue]
The Turnbull wagon was a horse drawn farm vehicle. It is an authentic
agricultural antique and represents an exceptional example of early rural
American transportation. Most of
the Turnbull gear and body elements are original. The wood construction of this
vehicle consists of original
manufactured pieces. Irons and cleats are original and intact. Farm work wagons
were designed for heavy usage, and this wagon was obviously used. Significant
wear is evident on the box and axles. Restorative paintwork is not present.
There are recognizable elements of original paint—green on the box and
reddish-orange on the wheels. Traces of paint and signage are still visible. The
lettering on the sideboards is nearly indiscernible in daylight or a lighted
room. Under a “black light”, one can better make out the sideboard signage on
both sides: “Sold by A.G. Lautzenhiser/No. Manchester IN”. He was the
authorized dealer of Turnbull wagons in the North Manchester area during the
period of 1900-1913.
The 1913 Turnbull catalogue price for a
wagon with the features associated with the Miller farm wagon without wheels was
$115.00; shipping weight was 890 pounds. A set of 4 wheels cost $100.00; the
four wheels weigh 650 pounds. Combined cost then was $225.00; total shipping
weight, 1540 pounds.
The Turnbull Wagon Company, Defiance, Ohio, was once Defiance’s largest
employer, employing hundreds of wagon makers. Their farm wagons were claimed to
be “BEST ON EARTH.” Such a wagon would have been shipped by railroad from
the factory in Defiance, Ohio, to their network of dealers. Defiance historian
Jim Rath informs us that a section of the railway spur into the Turnbull plant
has been relocated to the pioneer Auglaize Village a few miles outside of
Defiance.
Turnbull and Studebaker were competitors in the wagon industry. It is therefore
interesting and instructive to compare their respective wagon catalogues.
The 1913 Turnbull Wagon Catalogue affirms the merits of the Turnbull Skein and
Boxing: large opening at mouth of Skein; thick walls of both Skein and Boxing;
heavy Truss Rod Lug, insuring strength; heavy Collars to prevent breaking; “And
we can assure you the bevel is positively correct.”
The skein was the metal thimble in which the end of the axle was
inserted. Four-inch diameter skeins were the largest made by Turnbull.
The Studebaker wagon catalogue for 1913 explains: “If a cast skein or skein box
is too hard and brittle it will snap or break. If it is too soft it will wear
through like chalk, it must be hard on the surface and pliant and cushion-like
within, to give the longest wear.”
[p. 12] Moreover, “Skeins are fitted to the spindles of the axles with great
care; the ends of the axles are coated with lead and oil to fill up the grain of
the wood and to make a perfect cemented fit. The skeins are then forced onto the
spindles with hydraulic pressure.”
The Turnbull Catalogue illustrates the Sectional View of Hub, showing the way
the Spokes are driven in the Turnbull Wheel. These Spokes are all set in Hot
Glue, making “a union almost equal to an iron weld.” The Studebaker catalogue
[p. 13]: “The life and wearing quality of the wheels depend largely upon the
spokes which transmit the load from the hub to the rim or felloes, and being
subjected to severe shocks, jars and strain, quality and correct construction
are very essential. Experience has proven that the square shoulder spokes are
easily broken at the hubs directly under the surface. …The slope shoulder spoke
on the contrary spreads the load around the whole hub; it cushions the thrust
and strain.” Studebaker certainly made the claim that their construction was
superior, but it would appear that both Turnbull and Studebaker used a variation
on the slope shoulder spoke concept.
Some other regional wagon manufacturers a century ago included Birdsell
Manufacturing Co.(South Bend, IN); Milburn Wagon Company (Toledo, OH); Troy
Wagon Works Co. (Troy, OH); Peter Schuttler Wagon Co. (Chicago); G.P. Wagner of
Jasper, IN; Bain Wagons of Kenosha, WI; Weber & Damme Wagons (St. Louis); John
Deere Wagon Works (Moline, IL); Springfield Wagons (Springfield, MO); Sears,
Roebuck; and Studebaker of South Bend, IN.
Studebaker was a formidable competitor and industry leader in manufacturing
processes, laboratory testing, sales, promotion, national and international
distribution. The Studebaker company standardized models and made
interchangeable parts. In its wagon catalogues, Studebaker emphasizes the
careful selection and air-drying of wagon wood stock: “All dimension stock is
left to air-dry from one to three years, according to the size and kind. The
moisture dries slowly and steadily and welds the sap and cell walls together,
making a solid, dry and strong piece of timber unlikely to check, split or
break.”
The 1897 Sears Roebuck Catalogue
advertised a “Line of High Grade Farm Wagons” made at Abingdon, Illinois, “a
concern whose enviable reputation for the manufacture of high class work is a
guarantee for their quality.” The Sears Roebuck catalogue explained: “The wood
material is air seasoned, bone dry. The iron and steel are of best quality.
Wheels are well ironed and boiled in hot oil. Hubs are best oak and black birch.
Spokes are strictly select. Felloes [rims] finest white oak. Axles select young
hickory. Gear select white oak. Boxes are made of clear yellow poplar. Bottom
boxes made of long leaf yellow pine. Paint is strictly pure and carefully
applied by brush and positively no dipping of any kind.” By 1902 Sears was
promoting the HIGHEST GRADE FARM WAGON BUILT; these wagons were shipped
from the Hercules wagon factory in Evansville, IN. The Hercules plant was
located on a parcel of land bordering the railroad with a direct line north to
Chicago. The plant was less than a mile from the Ohio River which provided a
steady supply of timber.
The Turnbull Wagon Company of Defiance, Ohio, was also strategically located
near railroads and rivers (Maumee and Auglaize). Turnbull trumpeted its own
claim of BEST ON EARTH WAGONS in advertising and catalogues, and Turnbull
placed a great deal of pride in their vehicles.
Turnbull advertised in Chautauqua’s printed programs. [Defiance Public
Library file on Chautauqua] The large Turnbull factory complex was situated
across the river from the Chautauqua grounds. Turnbull promoted itself through
newspapers: “When you load up a wagon you want to know that it will hold it. The
Turnbull is made only of the best materials and will stand a great overload.
Every piece is guaranteed and should any defect appear, will be cheerfully and
quickly replaced. When you buy a Turnbull you buy service—long uninterrupted
satisfactory service.” [The Bryan Times, April 26, 1912]
Some of my own earliest memories are of the times when my siblings, cousins and
I would entertain ourselves during summer months on our grandparents’ Ohio farm
by rolling large heavy wooden wheels that we found leaning against the side of
the barn or granary. We even enjoyed a smooth-running set of two high wheels
still attached to a wooden axle that had once been part of the larger wagon
running gear. Such were the simple joys in growing up among the agricultural
relics of our past. It is possible that those wheels with memories were
manufactured by Turnbull. Vintage Turnbull wagons can today be viewed at the
museums and pioneer villages of Sauder Village, Archbold, OH (four Turnbull
wagons confirmed by curator Tracy Evans) and Auglaize Village outside of
Defiance (at least two Turnbulls). You can also enjoy ice cream or a cup of
coffee next to an authentic Turnbull wagon (above the entrance) in Defiance at
Cabin Fever Coffee shop, 312 Clinton Street.
The ubiquity of wagons in our history reflects the necessity to haul materials,
goods, animals and persons from one point to another. In his Recollections,
Thomas Riley Marshall recalls the time his father hitched a team of horses
to a wagon and moved the family westward in 1856 from North Manchester to
Rantoul, Illinois: “When I was two years of age my mother was threatened with
tuberculosis and my father concluded to hook up a team of horses to what was
then known as the democrat wagon, start west to the prairies of Illinois and try
the open air treatment as a cure.” Our nation and our future Vice President,
were then “on the move.”
Blacksmiths and wheelwrights built the early wagons. The U.S. market for wagons
expanded significantly in the 1800s. Large-scale production and factory
complexes with dozens and even hundreds of employees eventually evolved in the
production of carriages and wagons. The American Revolution, Civil War, other
military conflicts, overall westward expansion of the country and the clearing
of land for crops stimulated greater demand for wagons. The Conestoga wagon and
other farm wagons were pulled by oxen or horses and were widely used even as
early as the French and Indian War to transport weapons and supplies. The early
Conestogas had five- or six-foot diameter wheels in the rear with 4-inch or
wider iron rims.
John C. Studebaker, a Dunkard, constructed a Conestoga wagon for his family’s
journey from Pennsylvania to Ohio. The wagon’s curved shape was designed to
prevent cargo from shifting. The high wheels lifted the wagon over stumps and
streams. This Studebaker Conestoga is now on display at the National Studebaker
Museum in South Bend. While the box is original to the wagon, the running gear
(including wheels) was replaced in the late 1880s. Consequently the wheels now
on the wagon are not truly representative of the earlier, higher Conestoga
wheels.
Smaller utilitarian farm wagons became popular. The Studebaker operations
started in 1852 in South Bend when Henry and Clement Studebaker started a
blacksmith shop. This shop became the Studebaker Manufacturing Co. in 1868, and
the Studebaker firm would
eventually become the largest maker of wagons in the world. At the important
Centennial Exposition held in Philadelphia in 1876, there were 30 different
wagon manufacturers who displayed 78 wagons. Studebaker had the largest number
of wagons shown at the Exposition., including a huge freight wagon said to have
a carrying capacity of 14 tons. Also on display was a ‘Centennial’ labeled
Studebaker farm wagon that won awards at the Philadelphia
Exposition. Fancy and expensive wagons that Studebaker exhibited at the
1876 Philadelphia and the 1893 Chicago Expositions are today featured at the
Studebaker Museum.
WAGON “OAQS”—Occasionally Asked Questions:
How do you identify a wagon that has lost much of its paint?
Close scrutiny of construction styles and individual parts can sometimes offer
up important clues. The Turnbull name can sometimes be found stenciled on the
back of the wagon seat, on the wooden axle or sideboard, or the “T.W.” initials
might be found on the patented axle skein.
How do you determine the age of a horse drawn vehicle?
Without a documented history of ownership, it is often difficult to pinpoint the
age of a farm wagon. Through heavy use and weathering, wagons lose paint and
other identifying characteristics. Careful analysis and research using
manufacturer catalogues can often reveal altered hardware, styles, paint colors,
etc., over several years. The kind of axle (wooden or tubular steel) along with
other gear and hardware will give clues. Moreover, when the dealer’s name
appears on the wagon, the vehicle can be dated to those years that the wagon
dealer was in business. Lautzenhiser was in business 1900-1915. “Sold by A.G.
Lautzenhiser & Co./No. Manchester IN” was stenciled on the sideboards of the
Turnbull wagon. The wagon, then, was sold to the Millers in the time frame
1900-1913.
Why are the rear wheels larger than the front?
The lesser mass of the front wheels facilitates turning, and the larger back
wheels better support the load. Note the “rub irons” on the Turnbull wagon to
protect the wagon box from being damaged by turning wheels. D.B. Turnbull
patented his rub-iron on June 27, 1882 (No. 260, 138). Some wagons such as log
and lumber vehicles used the same sized wheels on each axle.
What is the axle skein?
Attached to the hub boxing, it is the metal thimble in which the axle spindle
fits. Its mouth (or opening) is of a specific diameter. Generally, the larger
the diameter the more weight the wagon can carry. D.B. Turnbull had his axle
skein patented on June 27, 1882 (No. 260,139).
Can you interchange wagon wheels between different wagons?
One can interchange only if the hub boxing is same size as the skeins.
What kind of nuts are used in the Turnbull wagon construction?
Square nuts were popular and used on this wagon. Hex (six-sided) nuts were
promoted in Wagon manufacturer catalogues by the 1870s but Turnbull used square
nuts on the Miller wagon. On some of the fancier Studebaker wagons exhibited at
the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition in 1876 and the 1893 Columbia Exposition
in Chicago, hex nuts were used.
Is the name on the sideboards that of the local manufacturer?
Hardware and farm implement stores were among the early outlets for wagon
makers. Lautzenhiser was the local agent or reseller, not the manufacturer.
This Turnbull wagon does not have brakes…Is this normal?
Vintage wagons came with or without brakes. It depended on region and use. If
you used the wagons on hills and mountains you needed brakes. Footboards,
brakes, spring seats and other items were “options” and not included with every
wagon. The 1913 list price for the Turnbull spring seat was $6.00; box brake was
$7.50.
What are some differences between
earlier Conestoga wagons and this Turnbull farm wagon?
The Studebaker family of Solingen, Germany, emigrated to America, and began
building wagons in their blacksmith shops. Origins of the Conestoga wagon in the
Conestoga Valley of Lancaster County, PA, are shrouded in the mists of time. The
design and construction of the famous Conestoga wagon have a boat like box
design with distinctive sloping lines and a bulging middle, no driver’s seat and
stiff tongue. The Conestoga bed
sloped upwards from the middle to prevent the shifting of the cargo weight. The
massively built, early four-wheeled Conestoga hauled freight over rough terrain,
trails and rutted roads, being pulled by several teams of horses (or oxen). The
high wheels enabled the Conestoga to be driven over small stumps and streams
without damaging the wagon bed and its cargo. It was essential that the axles,
wheel hubs and spokes be sturdily built. The wide iron-rimmed wheels helped in
passing through streams and muddy areas.
Also, the Conestoga was noted for its canvas top supported by wooden
hoops or bows secured through large staples on the sideboards. The fabric was
frequently soaked in linseed oil for waterproofing.
Is “Prairie Schooner” synonymous with “Conestoga”?
The prairie schooner differed from the large freight carrying Conestogas. The
lines of the bed were straight rather than curved; the bows supporting the cloth
bonnet were upright rather than slanting fore and aft. The prairie schooner also
had a seat where the driver or his family could ride.
Like the prairie schooner, and unlike the Conestoga, the Turnbull farm wagon has
straight utilitarian lines with a “boxy” look. It was designed to be pulled by
one or two horses. Its farm wagon wheels, albeit large and heavy, are somewhat
smaller than those on the earlier Conestoga. An optional “top” for Turnbull
wagons was available and could be used by those who wanted to travel West to
Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Iowa or
beyond. The Turnbull marketing motto combined “Strength” with “Lightness of
Draft”; “Elegance of Finish” with “Durability”.
The construction of wagons required the skills and craft of blacksmiths,
turners, wheelwrights, woodworkers. Whereas the Conestoga was crafted mostly
with hand tools, the manufacture of Turnbull wagons after 1876 benefited from
newer, patented technologies and manufacturing equipment. With large-scale
production of wagons and marketing approaches, catalogue descriptions and a
network of designated dealers, the standardization and interchangeability of
parts marked a new era in the development of technology, impacting
commerce, culture and daily life. The concentration of newer
technologies, patents, money and marketing placed the smaller wagon makers at a
distinct disadvantage. Large-scale wagon production was surely a prelude and
precursor to Henry Ford’s assembly line.
Why was the Turnbull Wagon Company located in Defiance, Ohio?
Prior to locating in Defiance, Turnbull had made a fortune in carriage making in
New Orleans but all was lost because of the Civil War. He then established wood
working and wagon making businesses in South Bend, Goshen, Laporte (Indiana),
and Napoleon (Ohio). In 1876 David
B. Turnbull, founder, selected twelve acres in Defiance, on the right bank of
the Maumee river, just below the confluence of the Maumee with the Auglaize
river. Turnbull utilized both rivers for a market in which to buy logs rafted
down to his location and remaining in the water until sawn. An outstanding wagon
timber source was important for this wagon manufacturer. By 1880 Turnbull was
producing an average of about twenty wagons and one thousand agricultural wheels
per day. Turnbull was the largest employer in Defiance and had annual sales of
$500,000. The 1890 Defiance County history described the Turnbull Wagon Company
as the “most extensive manufacturing interest in Defiance.” By 1890 Turnbull
employed about 450 and was producing 2,000 wheels and 15 wagons daily. Turnbull
had a close association with Defiance Machine Works, a manufacturer of
wheelwright and mortising machinery, hub turning machines, rim and felloe
bending machines and polishers. Both firms held several patents, and Turnbull’s
success can largely be attributable to this mutual relationship. By 1906, the
Turnbull factory was annually producing 10,000 farm wagons and 50,000 sets of
wheels with rail shipment of their products nationwide, selling through an
extensive dealer network.
What happened to the Turnbull business?
The March 1913 great flood in Defiance inundated the 24 factory buildings and
nearly wiped out the manufacturing business; the Turnbull operation apparently
had no flood insurance and suffered a severe financial setback. By 1919 wagon
production had ceased in Defiance. Turnbull attempted a comeback by developing
motorized vehicles. Between 1919 and 1925 the Defiance Motor Truck Co. was
located at the old Turnbull plant at the end of Seneca Street in Defiance. In
1923 Turnbull built a passenger car but it was short-lived. None of the old
buildings of the Turnbull complex are standing today. The Defiance Machine Works
building is today located on the former Turnbull grounds, now adjacent to a city
park along the river. Turnbull did not make the successful transition from
horse-drawn vehicles to gasoline-powered cars and trucks. Of all the important
manufacturers of wagons, Studebaker alone navigated a successful transition
after 1900-1920. The last farm wagon produced by Studebaker was in 1920. In that
year Studebaker sold its horse drawn vehicle business to the Kentucky Wagon
Works Company of Louisville, Kentucky. Neither Studebaker nor Turnbull
manufactured horse-drawn wagons after 1920. Both companies focused in the
post-World War I era on the production of motorized vehicles, trucks and cars.
In addition to the Turnbull wagon, the Lautzenhiser agricultural implement
business name was stenciled on a corn sheller in the Miller farm collection.
A.G. Lautzenhiser & Co. located on the west side of Walnut Street had a
Grand Opening on October 20, 1900 “With the Most Full and Complete Line
of Implements, Carriages, Surries and Buggies Ever Shown in Northern Indiana.”
Lautzenhiser’s lines included McCormick binders, mowers, hay rakes, and twine;
also corn binders, huskers and shredders; Oliver Sulky and Walking Plows
404-405, Kraus Sulky cultivators; Tiger, Brown and Clipper riding cultivators;
“The Brown” and “The Best” walking cultivators; Wolverine Disc Harrows; the
original Reed spring tooth and Crescent spike tooth harrows; Turnbull
and Brown farm wagons; Butler steel wind mills; galvanized steel tanks,
all sizes; tank heaters, the Haward cast heater and Butler galvanized heater;
corn planters—Hamilton, Tiger, Haworth, Bull’s Eye; grain drills-Superior, disc
and hoe; American clover bunchers and hay tedders manufactured by Ohio Rake Co.;
truck scales; lawn swings; carriages, surries, buggies, harness, robes,
blankets, whips, road wagons. In
Cox’s Farm Accounting (1913), A.G. Lautzenhiser & Co. advertised: “Phone 36.
A.G. Lautzenhiser and B.H. Domer. Implements, Buggies, Harness, Automobiles and
Accessories. We Sell the Leading Lines Manufactured: Oliver complete Line.
McCormick’s Full Line. Turnbull Wagons. Heavy and Light Harness. A Complete Line
of Buggies. Superior Drill. Auburn, Overland and Krit Automobiles. Accessories
and Tires. Come In and See for Yourselves. Yours to Please.”
W.E. Billings, publisher of The Weekly Rays of Light, effusively praised
[Oct 18, 1900] A.G. Lautzenhiser and our town: “This week will witness the
completion and dedication of one of the most handsome, well appointed and
substantial business buildings in North Manchester, and that is saying a great
deal, for no town in the country can boast of any better buildings than can this
place.” Lautzenhiser’s background was outlined by Billings [for complete
article, go to our web site]: “A.G. Lautzenhiser, from whom the firm takes its
name, was born in Wabash county, and moved to North Manchester, October 22,
1874. He spent a few years in the west, and then returning worked at
carpentering for a time. He was also employed as a day laborer and a rail
splitter. After this he was employed on a salary by A.W. Bowman, and worked for
him for three years. He then purchased an interest in the firm, and it was known
as A.W. Bowman & Co., and for ten years did a successful business. At the end of
this time he disposed of his interest and went on the road for the Rex Wind Mill
company. He had two thousand dollars in this company, which went in the loss
account. After that he identified himself with the McCormick harvesting machine
company as manager for five counties in Indiana, which position he still holds
at a very lucrative salary. He has won an enviable reputation as being a hustler
and a pusher, honest at all times and attentive to business. He is a pleasant
man to meet, and during his active business life here of over twenty years he
has contributed much to the welfare of the town.”
Besides Lautzenhiser, other early farm equipment dealers in North Manchester
included: A.W. Bowman, A.B. Miller,
J.H. Butterbaugh, Riverview Agricultural Implements (A.C. Mills).
Amos W. Bowman had married Emma Studebaker, the eldest daughter of Henry
Studebaker, one of the founders of the Studebaker Wagon factory in South Bend.
Clarence Bowman, their son, had a good position working for the Studebaker Wagon
Works in South Bend. [N. Manchester Journal, May 2, 1901] The Bowmans were
members of the German Baptist/Brethren Church, as was A.G. Lautzenhiser, and
active in the affairs of the WCTU. [The Studebaker Family in America
1736-1976, Vol. 1, p. 418.] John Clement Studebaker had married Rebecca
Mohler in 1820. Five sons were
involved in the Studebaker business: Henry, Clement, John Mohler, Peter and
Jacob. In 1858 Henry sold his share of the firm to younger brother J.M. Like his
parents Henry was a member of the Dunkards having pacifist beliefs. He abstained
from tobacco and liquor, and probably had mixed feelings about the governmental
and military contracts entered into by the family firm. Although the family was
raised as Dunkards (German Baptist), Henry’s brothers as adults joined other
denominations: Clement (Methodist); J.M. (Presbyterian); Peter (Methodist);
Jacob (Baptist).
EARLY WAGON MAKERS IN NO. MANCHESTER AREA
The following list of Wagon Makers in North Manchester was compiled from various
directories. Note that in 1890, there were at least four local wagon
manufacturers! Also, the Wabash County Directory for 1894 listed four Wagon
Makers in North Manchester and one in Liberty Mills. Several other occupations
and businesses of course were associated with the wagon industry: blacksmithing,
saw mills and lumber, wood workers, buggy and harness makers, hardware and
implement dealers.
John Frost,
Carriage and Wagon Maker [listed in Indiana State Gazetteer, 1860-1861;
1864-1865]
D.C. West,
Carriage and Wagon Maker [Indiana State Gazetteer, 1864-1865]
D. Fannin,
Wagon Maker [Swartz, Tedrowe & Tilford’s Indiana State Directory, 1875-1876]
David Fanning,
Wagon Maker [Indiana State Gazetteer, 1890; 1892; 1895-1896]
J. & S. Horn,
Carriage and Wagon Manufacturer, corner Main and Cincinnati, Wabash & Michigan
RR [Swartz, Tedrowe & Tilford’s 1875-1876]
Smith Horn,
Wagon Manufacturer [Indiana State Gazetteer, 1880-1881; 1882-1883; 1884-1885]
David J. Rupley,
Blacksmith, Carriage and Wagon Maker, South Manchester [Indiana State Gazetteer,
1882-1883; Wabash County Directory, 1894]
Wm. Stadler,
Carriage and Wagon Manufacturer, corner Mill and Main [Indiana State Gazetteer,
1884-1885; 1890; 1895-1896; Wabash County Directory, 1894]
Henry Thrush & Son,
Wagon Maker, corner Main & Big Four RR [Indiana State Gazetteer, 1890; 1892;
Wabash County Directory, 1894]]
Young & Shoop,
Wagon Makers [Indiana State Gazetteer, 1890; 1892]
Enyart & Son,
Wagon Maker, corner Mill and Main [Wabash County Directory, 1894]
Michael Cook,
Wagon Maker, Liberty Mills [Wabash Co. Directory, 1894]
In addition to the aforementioned persons classified as wagon makers, there were
those whose businesses supplied the wagon wood, parts, materials and supplies.
One such person was J.A. Browne who had a saw mill and large lumber
business. In 1893 it was reported that “J.A. Browne is at home from Neelerville,
Mo., where he bought several car loads of wagon felloes. A.H. Williams and John
Smith who went down to take care of the stock, are still there.” [N. Manchester
Journal, Mar 30, 1893]
The author wishes to acknowledge the assistance of several persons who helped
with this wagon research, including Bea Knarr, Paul Shrider, Joyce Joy, Nancy
Reed, Allan White, Jim Rath, Andy-archivist at Studebaker National Museum, Tracy
Evans-curator of Sauder Village Museum, the librarians at Defiance (OH) Public
Library, and Leon Jones of Defiance-Turnbull wagon expert. The Indiana State
Gazetteer and other Indiana business directories are in the Indiana State
Library, Indianapolis.