[Steam-engine] Re: How many remain?
James Hefner
james1 at pernet.net
Mon Aug 28 10:45:13 PDT 2006
Andy glines writes:
> A question I often get asked is how many traction
> engines remain today? I don't reqally have a guess.
> It seems like there a lot of them but that may be
> because they get a lot of attention wherever they go.
>
> Andy Glines
> Evansville, IN
That's a good question, one that I am not sure anyone can answer with any
accuracy.
I have 4400 steam vehicles in my "Surviving World Steam Vehicle" database
for North America; that includes not just traction engines, but steam cars,
shovels, cranes, basically steam engines that were not on rails or on the
water, but could be moved from location to another.
Blake Malkamaki, who is also a member of this forum, was kind enough to
share his list with me awhile back. I have since added on quite a few
others from other sources and direct observation.
To the best of my knowledge; no-one else has attempted such a list until
recently for North America. There is a website on the web that lifted most
of my list for North America, and added his own information to it. The
British have "The Traction Engine Register", Europe has "The European
Traction Engine Register", and while back, someone put together a
comprehensive steam engine registery for the state of Victoria in Australia.
Looking at the numbers for my project; the ratio of steam vehicles to steam
locomotives and steam engines in total are pretty close between the U.S.A.
and the UK and Australia. But, my best guess is that I have only 50% of the
engines still remaining in the North America; Blake's list seems to fall
short when it comes to engines preserved in Canada, in museums, and stuffed
and mounted in parks and whatnot.
Worldwide, I have 11,307 listed. But, outside of the above countries; few
lists can be found; only individual observations and a few works lists of
preserved engines. My "finger in the wind" estimation is between 25,000 and
40,000 worldwide remain.
Steam vehicles and traction engines will always be more difficult to list
accurately because most are in private hands, they change hands surprisingly
often, and sometimes the serial numbers are not known. That is along with
the usual problems of trying to match lists from two sources and timeframes
and account for engines lost in the woods, sunk, buried, or abandoned in far
corners of the world. What has been found so far (like the two ploughing
engines now abandoned in the midst of the Sudan Desert) still continue to
amaze me.
-James Hefner
Hebrews 10:20a
Surviving World Steam Project
http://www.survivingworldsteam.com
More information about the AT
mailing list