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The Crossen
Car Company |
See also Crossen Car Manufacturing by Andrew Merrilees |
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James Crossen began his working life with the Helm Foundry in Cobourg. By his mid thirties he was a full partner in this enterprise and two years later he became the sole proprietor of the enterprise. In the mid 1860's the moribund Cobourg & Peterborough Railway was undergoing a resurgence led by a number of Cobourg citizens. By this time the iron ore deposits at Mamora served as the impetus for the railway revival. To that end the railway company required ore cars and James Crossen agreed to construct several dozen of these. All were delivered in early 1867 and unknowingly Crossen initiated what was to become Canada's largest independent manufacturer of wooden railway passenger and freight cars. |
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With James Crossen's death in 1890, the enterprise was reorganized as the Crossen Car Manufacturing Company of Cobourg under the ownership and direction of William Crossen, the founder's son. In the early 1890s the CPR began constructing its own rolling stock to the detriment of the Crossen Company. However the 1890s witnessed a boom in the construction of street railways and Crossen supplied several dozen street cars to several different radial railway lines. But the primary construction centred upon rolling stock for standard railways. |
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With the return to economic stability in the late 1890s the construction of new Canadian railways commenced and of course these required rolling stock. Notably amongst the new customers were the Canadian Northern Railway and the Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway. The CNoR became a significant purchaser of Crossen equipment and was the only customer for the final years of the Crossen Company. With the advent of steel in rolling stock construction William Crossen became aware that the new technology was a challenge to his company. He either had to invest heavily to compete in the new manufacturing process, or cease operations. He chose the latter and in mid 1915 the final wooden cars left the plant in Cobourg. The company ceased operations and the property itself was sold several years later. The only Crossen structure that survives on site is the original office building. All the other buildings were constructed by later companies. On the west side of George Street, on either side of Park Street, sit the houses of James and William Crossen, as reminders of what was once the largest employer in Cobourg. |
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| Ted Rafuse lives in Cobourg and is a well known historian in the field of railways. At Steampower publishing web site you can find out about the books he has written. | ||
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