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Pullman Company

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Pullman Company
IndustryRail transport
Founded
  • 1862; 162 years ago (1862): partial; full in 1900
  • 1930; 94 years ago (1930): became Pullman-Standard Car Manufacturing Company
DefunctDecember 31, 1968 (as Pullman Company)
FateAbsorbed by Bombardier Transportation (1987)
Successor
  • The Pullman, Inc.
  • Pullman Technology, Inc.
HeadquartersChicago, Illinois, U.S.
Area served
United States/Worldwide
ProductsHigh-speed trains
Intercity and commuter trains
Locomotives
People movers
Railroad cars
Rapid transit trains
Signalling systems
Trams
Trolleybuses
Workers leave the Pullman Palace Car Works in 1893

The Pullman Company,[1] founded by George Pullman, was a manufacturer of railroad cars in the mid-to-late 19th century through the first half of the 20th century, during the boom of railroads in the United States. Through rapid late-19th century development of mass production and takeover of rivals, the company developed a virtual monopoly on production and ownership of sleeping cars.

During a severe economic downturn, the 1894 Pullman Strike by company workers proved to be a transformative moment in American labor history. At the company's peak in the early 20th century, its cars accommodated 26 million people a year, and it in effect operated "the largest hotel in the world".[2] Its production workers initially lived in a planned worker community, known as a company town, named Pullman, Chicago.[3]

Pullman developed the sleeping car, which carried his name into the 1980s. Pullman did not just manufacture the cars, it also operated them on most of the railroads in the United States, paying railroad companies to couple the cars to trains. In return, by the mid-20th century, these railroads would own Pullman outright. A labor union associated with the company, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, founded and organized by A. Philip Randolph, was one of the most powerful African-American political entities of the 20th century. The company also built thousands of streetcars[4] and trolley buses for use in cities.[5] Post-WWII changes in automobile and airplane transport led to a steep decline in the company's fortunes. It collapsed in 1968, with a successor company continuing operations until 1981.

History

[edit]

After spending the night sleeping in his seat on a train trip from Buffalo to Westfield, New York, George Pullman was inspired to design an improved passenger railcar which contained sleeper berths for all its passengers. During the day, the upper berth was folded up overhead similar to a present-day airliner's overhead luggage compartment. At night, the upper berth folded down and the 2 facing seats below it folded over to provide a relatively comfortable lower berth. Although this was a somewhat spartan accommodation by today's standards, it was a great improvement on the previous layout. Curtains provided privacy, and there were washrooms at each end of the car for men and women. The first Pullman coach was built at the Chicago & Alton shops in Bloomington, Illinois in the spring of 1859 with the permission of Chicago & Alton President Joel A. Matteson.

Pullman established his company[6] in 1862 and built luxury sleeping cars which featured carpeting, draperies, upholstered chairs, libraries, card tables and an unparalleled level of customer service. Patented paper car wheels provided a quieter and smoother ride than conventional cast iron wheels from 1867 to 1915.[7][8][9]

Once a household name due to their large market share, the Pullman Company is also known for the bitter Pullman Strike staged by their workers and union leaders in 1894. During an economic downturn, Pullman reduced hours and wages but not rents, precipitating the strike. Workers joined the American Railway Union, led by Eugene V. Debs.

After George Pullman's death in 1897,[10] Robert Todd Lincoln, son of Abraham Lincoln, became the company's president.[11]

In 1922, Haskell & Barker Car Manufacturing was acquired and in 1924 was merged with the other car manufacturing units of Pullman, and a new company was formed, Pullman Car & Manufacturing Company. In 1927, Pullman Company was created as a separate company and Pullman Incorporated was established as a holding company. In 1930, Pullman purchased the Standard Steel Car Company conglomerate which included Osgood Bradley, Standard Motor Truck, and Siems-Stembel. In 1934, it was merged with Pullman Car & Manufacturing Company to be known as Pullman-Standard Car Manufacturing Company.

The company closed its factory in the Pullman neighborhood of Chicago in 1955. The company ceased production after the Amtrak Superliner cars in 1982 and its remaining designs were purchased in 1987 when it was absorbed by Bombardier.

[edit]

Corporate history

[edit]
Pullman's Palace Car Co. capital stock certificate (1884)
Entrance gates to the company's Calumet Works, circa 1900
The Calumet Works, circa 1900
The Pullman Company ticket from Chicago to Des Moines
The Pullman Company ticket from Atlanta to Washington

The original Pullman Palace Car Co. had been organized on February 22, 1867.[12]

On January 1, 1900, after buying numerous associated and competing companies, it was reorganized as The Pullman Co.,[12] characterized by its trademark phrase, "Travel and Sleep in Safety and Comfort."

In 1924, the Pullman Car & Manufacturing Corporation was organized from the previous Pullman manufacturing department and recently acquired Haskell & Barker Car Company, to consolidate the car building interests of The Pullman Co. The parent company, The Pullman Co. was established as its own company and Pullman, Inc., was formed on June 21, 1927.[13]

The best years for Pullman were the mid-1920s. In 1925, the fleet grew to 9800 cars. Twenty-eight thousand conductors and twelve thousand porters were employed by the Pullman Co.[14] Pullman built its last standard heavyweight sleeping car in February 1931.

Pullman purchased controlling interest in Standard Steel Car Company in 1929, and on December 26, 1934, Pullman Car & Manufacturing, along with several other Pullman, Inc. subsidiaries, merged with Standard Steel Car Co. and its subsidiaries to form the Pullman-Standard Car Manufacturing Company. Pullman-Standard remained in the rail car manufacturing business until 1982.[13] Standard Steel Car Co., had been organized on January 2, 1902, to operate a railroad car manufacturing facility at Butler, Pennsylvania, and, after 1906, a facility at Hammond, Indiana, was reorganized as a subsidiary of Pullman, Inc., on March 1, 1930.

In 1940, just as orders for lightweight cars were increasing and sleeping car traffic was growing, the United States Department of Justice filed an anti-trust complaint against Pullman Incorporated in the U.S. District Court at Philadelphia (Civil Action No. 994). The federal government sought to separate the company's sleeping car operations from its manufacturing activities. In 1944, the court concurred, ordering Pullman Incorporated to divest itself of either the Pullman Company (operating) or the Pullman-Standard Car Manufacturing Company (manufacturing). After three years of negotiations, the Pullman Company was sold to a consortium of 57 railroads for approximately US$40 million.[15]

In 1943, Pullman Standard established a shipbuilding division and entered wartime small ship design and construction. The yard was located near Lake Calumet in Chicago, on the north side of 130th Street. Pullman built the boats in 40-ton blocks which were assembled in a fabrication shop on 111th Street and moved to the yard on gondola cars. In two years, the company built 34 Corvette Patrol Craft, Escorts (PCEs), which were 180 feet long and weighed 640 tons, and 44 Landing Ship, Medium (LSMs), which were 203 feet long and weighed 520 tons. Pullman ranked 56th among United States corporations in the value of World War II military production contracts.[16]

Pullman-Standard built its last sleeping car in 1956[17] and its last lightweight passenger cars in 1965, an order of ten coaches for Kansas City Southern.[18] The company continued to market and build cars for commuter rail and subway service and Superliners for Amtrak as late as the late 1970s and early 1980s.

Beginning in 1975, Pullman started delivery of the massive 754 75 ft (23 m) stainless steel subway cars to the New York City Transit Authority. Designated R46 by their procurement contract, these cars, along with the R44 subway car built by St. Louis Car Company, were designed for 70 mph (110 km/h) speeds in the Second Avenue Subway. After it was deferred in 1975, the Transit Authority assigned the cars to other subway services. Pullman also built subway cars for the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, which assigned them to the Red Line. Pullman-Standard was spun off from Pullman, Inc., as Pullman Technology, Inc., in 1981, and was sold to Bombardier in 1987.

Pullman antitrust case

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In United States v. Pullman Co., 50 F. Supp. 123, 126, 137 (E.D. Pa. 1943), the company was ordered to divest itself of one of its two lines of sleeping car businesses after having acquired all of its competitors.[19]

The end of Pullman

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After the 1944 breakup, Pullman, Inc., remained in place as the parent company, with the following subsidiaries: The Pullman Company for passenger car operations (but not passenger car ownership, which was passed to member railroads), and Pullman-Standard Car Manufacturing Co., for passenger car and freight car manufacturing; along with a large freight car leasing operation under the parent company's control. Pullman, Inc., remained separate until a merger with Wheelabrator,[20] then headed by CEO Michael D. Dingman, in late 1980, which led to the separation of Pullman interests in early and mid-1981.

Operations of the Pullman Company sleeper cars ceased and all leases were terminated on December 31, 1968.[17][21] On January 1, 1969, the Pullman Company was dissolved and all assets were liquidated. (The most visible result on many railroads, including Union Pacific, was that the Pullman name was removed from the letterboard of all Pullman-owned cars.) An auction of all Pullman remaining assets was held at the Pullman plant in Chicago in early 1970. The Pullman, Inc., company remained in place until 1981 or 1982 to close out all remaining liabilities and claims, operating from an office in Denver.

Pullman advertisement in 1962 Seaboard Air Line Railroad time table

The passenger car designs of Pullman-Standard were spun off into a separate company called Pullman Technology, Inc., in 1982. Using the Transit America trade name, Pullman Technology continued to market its Comet car design (first built for New Jersey Department of Transportation in 1970) for commuter operations until 1987, when Bombardier purchased Pullman Technology to gain control of its designs and patents. As of late 2004, Pullman Technology, Inc., remained a subsidiary of Bombardier.

Pullman, Inc., spun off its large fleet of leased freight rail cars in April 1981 as Pullman Leasing Company, which later became part of ITEL Leasing, retaining the original PLCX reporting mark. ITEL Rail Leasing (including the PLCX reporting mark) was later divested to GE Rail Services.

In mid-1981, Pullman, Inc., spun off its freight car manufacturing interests as Pullman Transportation Company. Several plants were closed and in 1984, the remaining railcar manufacturing plants and the Pullman-Standard freight car designs and patents were sold to Trinity Industries.

After separating itself from its rail car manufacturing interests, Pullman, Inc., continued as a diversified corporation, with later mergers and acquisitions, including a merger in late 1980 with Wheelabrator-Frye, Inc., in which Pullman became a subsidiary of Wheelabrator-Frye, Inc. In January 1982, Wheelabrator-Frye merged with M. W. Kellogg Company, a builder of large, cast-in-place smokestacks, silos and chimneys. Wheelabrator-Frye retained both Pullman and Kellogg as direct subsidiaries. Later in 1982 Signal acquired Wheelabrator-Frye.[22] In 1990, the entire Wheelabrator-Frye group was sold to Waste Management, Inc. The Pullman-Kellogg interests were spun off by Waste Management as Pullman Power Products Corporation, and by late 2004 that company was doing business as Pullman Power LLC, a subsidiary of Structural Group, a specialty contractor.

As a side note, other construction engineering portions of Pullman-Kellogg were spun off as a new M. W. Kellogg Corporation, and in December 1998, became part of the merger that formed Kellogg, Brown & Root, a specialty contractor which itself was later sold to Halliburton, an oil well servicing company. In an eventual competitive move, other Kellogg engineering interests were merged with Rust Engineering becoming Kellogg Rust, which itself became The Henley Group, and later Rust International before it became the Rust Division of what is today Washington Group International, a specialty contracting firm that competes directly with Halliburton worldwide. Washington Group International is the successor to the Morrison Knudsen civil engineering and contracting corporation, and is also the owner of Montana Rail Link.

After the last of the Kellogg interests of Pullman-Kellogg were spun off, and after the railcar manufacturing plants were sold, and with the formal dissolution of the old Pullman Company (the operating company from the 1944 split), the remaining portions of the Pullman interests were spun off in May 1985 by Signal into a new Pullman Company. In November 1985, Pullman bought Peabody International and the new company took the new name of Pullman Peabody. In April 1987 (after Pullman Technology was sold to Bombardier), the name was changed back to Pullman Company. In July 1987 the company acquired Clevite Industries.[23] By 1996, Pullman Co., with its Clevite subsidiary, was almost solely a supplier of automotive elastomer (rubber) parts, and in July 1996 the company was sold to Tenneco. As of late 2004, Pullman Co. (now the brand name Clevite), as a manufacturer of automotive elastomer products, was still under the control of Tenneco Automotive.

Company town

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Pullman, Illinois

In 1877, the United States experienced the Great Railroad Strike. Part of its legacy included more powerful unions and a tendency for employers to consider the broader well-being of their employees. Pullman's objective in building a company town was to attract a superior type of employee and further elevate these individuals by excluding baneful influences.[24] In late April 1880, George Pullman announced his plans to build a company town and factory. Pullman's plan included an expectation that rent collected on the houses in the town would produce a 6% return on investment (ROI), but the ROI never exceeded 4–4+12%.[25]

The company built Pullman, Illinois on 4,000 acres (1,600 ha), 14 mi (23 km) south of Chicago, contracting Solon Spencer Beman for design and Nathan F. Barrett for landscaping. Both were considered experts in their respective fields. Beman interned under architect Richard Upjohn. Barrett landscaped areas in Staten Island and Tuxedo, New York, as well as Long Branch, New Jersey. George Pullman's governing concept placed the town not within the city limits of Chicago but in the adjoining town of Hyde Park. On April 24, 1880, groundwork began. Throughout construction, Pullman sought to minimize costs and maximize efficiency adopting techniques of mass production whenever possible. Some of the earliest departments and shops created included painting, iron, and woodworking. These could then be employed to contribute to continuing construction.[26] By January 1, 1881, the town was ready for its first resident. A foreman from the Pullman Company's Detroit shop, Lee Benson, moved his wife, child, and sister into the town.[27]

Building exteriors were red brick with limestone trim. Interiors featured high ceilings and large windows. Interior walls were purposefully painted in light colors to provide a cheerful environment.[28] When completed, the town included a library, theater, hotel, church, market, sewage farm, park, and many residential buildings. The bar in the Florence Hotel was the only place within the town limits where alcohol could be served and consumed.[29] In the residential section, 150 acres (61 ha) were dedicated to tenements, flats and single-family homes with rents from $0.50 to $0.75 per month ($16 to $24 in 2023 adjusted for inflation).[30] The residences featured modern conveniences such as gas, running water, indoor sewage plumbing and regular garbage removal. By 1884, there were more than 1,400 tenements and flats. By July of the following year, the population exceeded 8,600.[31]

In charge of the company town was the town agent who was responsible for all services and businesses including street and building maintenance, gas and water works, fire protection, the hotel, sewage farm, and the nursery and greenhouse. Reporting to the town agent were nine department heads and approximately 300 men.[32] There were no elections except for the school board, as all officials were selected by Pullman.[33]

After its completion, the Pullman company town attracted national attention. Many critics praised Pullman's concept and planning. One newspaper article titled "The Arcadian City: Pullman, the Ideal City of the World" praised the town as "the youngest and most perfect city in the world, Pullman; beautiful in every belonging."[34] In February 1885, Harper's Monthly published and article by Richard T. Ely entitled "Pullman: A Social Study". Though the article offered praise for creating an elevated environment for its workers, it criticized the all-encompassing influence of the company ultimately concluding that "Pullman is un-American" and "benevolent, well-wishing feudalism."[35]

During the Panic of 1893, Pullman closed his manufacturing plant in Detroit to move all manufacturing to Pullman.[36] Due to the soft economic conditions of this period, the Pullman Co. reduced wages and laid off employees. Though wages were reduced, residential utility rates and rents remained unchanged. On May 11, 1894, the employees of the Pullman Co. walked off the job initiating the Pullman Strike. Thirty people were killed as a result of the strikes and sabotage. The loss of pride after the strike stayed with the town long afterward.[37]

In February 1904, the Pullman Company was given a court order to sell the company town but delayed compliance until 1907.[38] Today, Pullman is a Chicago neighborhood, and a historical landmark district on the state, National Historic Landmark and National Register of Historic Places lists.

In 2014, the National Park Service initially considered the concept of turning Pullman into a new, urban National Park.[39] On February 19, 2015, Pullman's company town was established as a National Monument by President Barack Obama.[40]

Other Pullman sites

[edit]

The Pullman Company operated several facilities in other areas of the US. One of these was the Pullman Shops in Richmond, California, which was linked to the mainline tracks of both the Southern Pacific and the Santa Fe, servicing their passenger equipment from throughout the Western US. The main building of the Richmond Pullman Shops still exists, as does the thoroughfare it is located on: Pullman Avenue. Another site was Pullman Car & Manufacturing Corp. of Bessemer, Alabama, incorporated on January 15, 1929. [41]

Porters

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A Pullman porter assisting a passenger with her luggage

The Pullman Company was also noted for its porters. The porters served first-class passengers traveling in the luxurious Pullman sleeping cars.

When George Pullman began hiring porters in 1868, he sought people who had been trained to be the perfect servants. This led the company to hire black men (many, if not all, of whom were newly freed chattel slaves) almost exclusively for the porter positions. This decision by Pullman wasn't one of altruism but one primarily driven by economics: Pullman paid the black porters a pittance, forcing them to rely on tips from their white clientele for most of their earnings. This allowed the company to increase profits by minimizing the wages paid to one of its most important, and numerous, positions.

Being a Pullman Porter was seen as safe, steady work and allowed tens of thousands of African-Americans access to middle-class life. This had little to do with the wages being paid to them by Pullman, and more to do with the reliable income stream.

Former slaves working in a servile position were treated harshly, and were frequently subject to verbal and physical abuse. In 1925, after decades of discrimination and mistreatment by the passengers and the Pullman company itself, the porters organized and became the first African-American labor union. Founded by A. Philip Randolph the porters formed the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP), which after years of effort, fought for and won a collective bargaining agreement in 1937. At its height the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters had a membership of over 18,000 passenger railway workers across Canada, Mexico, and the United States.[42]

The legacy of Pullman porters goes beyond the railway. A. Philip Randolph took the lessons learned and experience gained in organizing the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters to help organize the nascent black civil rights movement. Likewise, E.D. Nixon, a Pullman porter and leader of a local chapter of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, worked with one of his employees to help start the 1955 Montgomery bus boycott in Alabama, using Rosa Parks' arrest as a catalyst and rallying cry to help organize it. Nixon, whose duties as a porter often saw him out of town for various lengths of time, had to enlist the help of a young, energetic black minister new to Montgomery to run the boycott in his absence: the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.

Products

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Rail vehicles

[edit]
Model Operator Introduced Withdrawn
Streetcars, including the Presidents' Conference Committee streetcar, "A" series see note below 1891 1951
steel interurban cars South Shore and South Bend Railroad 1926–29
articulated rapid transit cars Chicago Transit Authority 5001–5004 1947 retired 1985
Skytop Lounge sleeping cars Milwaukee Road 1948–49
4400 "Washboard" EMUs New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad 1954 Inherited by Penn Central, then Metro-North, which retired them in 1983
MP72/P72/T72/PT72 passenger stock Long Island Rail Road 1955 retired 1999
Gallery cab and coach cars
(based on St. Louis Car 7600 series for C&NW in 1955)
Chicago and North Western Transportation Company 1956, 1958–70
lightweight, all aluminum Train-X New York Central (Xplorer) & New Haven (Dan'l Webster) 1957 1970
ACMU Cars New York Central/Metro-North 1962–65
Pullman-Standard 01400/01491 Bluebird cars MBTA Red Line 1963 1994
MP75 Long Island Rail Road 1963 converted to trailer coaches in the 1970s
rapid transit cars Chicago Transit Authority 2001–2180 1964 retired 1993
"Airporter" cars Cleveland GCRTA Red Line 1967
01500/01600 Silverbird cars MBTA Red Line 1969–70
Comet I commuter coach NJ Transit 1970
R6
R7 Subway car
R7A
New York City Subway 1936
1937
1938
R46 New York City Subway 1975–78
CTC/BTC-1 coaches
(based on NJDOT/NJT Comet I coaches)
MBTA Commuter Rail 1978
Superliner Amtrak 1978–81
Gallery I-III series bi-level passenger cars

Pullman's streetcar building period lasted from 1891[4][5] until 1951.[43] The company one was one of just three builders (and one of only two in the U.S.) of the PCC streetcar, a standardized type of streetcar purchased by numerous North American transit systems between 1936 and 1952[44] and nearly 5,000 of which were constructed.[45] Pullman built the body of the very first all-new PCC car, a prototype called "model B", in 1934,[46] but the first production-series Pullman PCC cars were not built until 1938 (and delivered in early 1939).[43] The St. Louis Car Company captured about 75% of the U.S. market for PCC cars, with the balance of around 25% being supplied by Pullman.[43]

Trolley buses

[edit]

In addition to rail vehicles, Pullman-Standard also manufactured trolley buses – or trolley coaches, as they were more commonly known at the time – starting in 1931[47] and concluding in late 1952.[48] A total of 2,007 trolley buses were built by the company.[47] Production took place at a former Osgood Bradley Car Company plant in Worcester, Massachusetts, which had come under Pullman control as part of its 1929/30 acquisition of a controlling interest in the Standard Steel Car Company.[5] The vast majority were built for U.S. cities, with only 24 being supplied to Canadian cities and a total of 136 built for cities in South America.[47] The last trolleybuses built were an order of 30 for Valparaíso, Chile, in late 1952.[48][49] That city's Pullman trolley buses have far outlasted any others, and as of 2015 about a dozen were still in regular service there,[50] four from the 1952 batch and the others from a larger group built in 1946–48 but partially rebuilt in 1987–88.[51] In 2003, the remaining 15 were declared a National Historic Monument by the Chilean government.[51][52]

Buses

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "The Pullman Company". Pullman Museum.
  2. ^ Briggs, Martha T.; Perters, Cunthia H. (1995). "Pullman Company Archives". Newberry Library. p. v. Retrieved April 9, 2018.
  3. ^ "South Shore Journal - Marktown: Clayton Mark's Planned Worker Community in Northwest Indiana". Archived from the original on September 13, 2012.
  4. ^ a b Middleton, William D. || || 1967. The Time of the Trolley, p. 424. Milwaukee: Kalmbach Publishing. ISBN 0-89024-013-2.
  5. ^ a b c Sebree, Mac; and Ward, Paul (1973). Transit's Stepchild, The Trolley Coach (Interurbans Special 58), p. 173. Los Angeles: Interurbans. LCCN 73-84356.
  6. ^ "The History of Pullman". Pullman.
  7. ^ John H. Lienhard: Engines of Our Enginuity, No. 758: Paper railroad wheels.
  8. ^ Cupery, Ken (2016). "Paper Railroad Wheels?". cupery.net.
  9. ^ J. Wallace: Pullman Palace Car Works: The Allen Paper Wheel Company.
  10. ^ "GEORGE M. PULLMAN DEAD; The Millionaire Car Builder of Chicago Expires Suddenly of Heart Disease. FELT ON THE STOCK MARKET The Announcement of Mr. Pullman's Death Followed by Lively Fluctuations in the Stocks in Which He Was Interested". The New York Times. October 20, 1897. Retrieved July 26, 2024.
  11. ^ member, Phil Lewis, ECCCMA (June 19, 2017). "Pullman railroad cars, Robert Todd Lincoln and Effingham County railroads". Effingham Daily News. Retrieved July 26, 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ a b Light, Craig (June 2, 2021). "PULLMAN CAR - History in Motion". Manchester Life. Retrieved July 26, 2024.
  13. ^ a b Beberdick, Frank H. (December 7, 2002). "A Pullman Timeline". The Pullman History Site. Archived from the original on August 6, 2020. Retrieved May 14, 2021.
  14. ^ "Eliillinois". Archived from the original on June 29, 2006.
  15. ^ "Pullman Guide" (PDF). Newberry.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2011. Retrieved July 19, 2013.
  16. ^ Peck, Merton J. & Scherer, Frederic M. The Weapons Acquisition Process: An Economic Analysis (1962) Harvard Business School p. 619
  17. ^ a b Bedingfield, Robert E. (November 23, 1968). "Rails Taking Over Sleeping Car Runs; Pullmans Moving Into Rails' Hands". New York Times. pp. 71, 77. Archived from the original on February 24, 2015. Retrieved February 24, 2015.
  18. ^ Drury, George H. (June 5, 2006), "Who built the streamliners: Historical profiles of North American passenger-car builders", Trains magazine, archived from the original on September 5, 2010, retrieved November 24, 2010
  19. ^ TIME (July 22, 1940). "RAILROADS: Pullman Monopoly". TIME. Retrieved July 26, 2024.
  20. ^ Ettorre, Barbara (August 22, 1980). "Wheelabrator, Pullman Set to Merge; Pullman Accepts Bid For Merger Pullman Stock Gains 3". The New York Times. Retrieved July 26, 2024.
  21. ^ "Pullman Conductor All but Disappears With End of 1968". The New York Times. December 31, 1968. Archived from the original on February 24, 2015. Retrieved February 24, 2015.
  22. ^ Cole, Robert J. (November 10, 1982). "Wheelabrator and Signal to Merge". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  23. ^ "Pullman Co. reports earnings for Qtr. to Sept 30". The New York Times. December 8, 1987. Archived from the original on November 14, 2013. Retrieved November 30, 2010.
  24. ^ United States Strike Commission, Report on the Chicago Strike of June–July 1894 (Washington D.C., Government Printing Office, 1895), 529, accessed April 15, 2015
  25. ^ United States Strike Commission, Report on the Chicago Strike of June–July 1894 (Washington D.C., Government Printing Office, 1895), 530, accessed April 15, 2015
  26. ^ Buder 1967, p. 52
  27. ^ Buder 1967, p. 53
  28. ^ Buder 1967, p. 57
  29. ^ Buder 1967, p. 65
  30. ^ Buder 1967, p. 71
  31. ^ Smith, Carl (2007). Urban Disorder and the Shape of Belief Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, pp. 180-181
  32. ^ Buder 1967, pp. 107–108
  33. ^ Buder 1967, p. 117
  34. ^ "The Arcadian City," uncited newspaper clipping, accessed April 15, 2015, "Pullman: Labor, Race, and the Urban Landscape in a Company Town | "The Arcadian City"". Archived from the original on February 5, 2017. Retrieved April 23, 2015..
  35. ^ Richard Ely, "Pullman: A Social Study," Harper's Monthly 70 (1885): 465, accessed April 15, 2015, "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 23, 2014. Retrieved April 23, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link).
  36. ^ Buder 1967, p. 139
  37. ^ Buder 1967, p. 206
  38. ^ Buder 1967, p. 214
  39. ^ "Chicago's Pullman site could become national park, Seattle-pi.com (August 23, 2014)". seattlepi.com. Archived from the original on August 26, 2014. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  40. ^ "NPS Archeology Program: Antiquities Act Centennial". www.nps.gov. Archived from the original on December 12, 2017. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  41. ^ Frank H. Beberdick. "A Pullman Timeline". The Pullman History Site. Retrieved October 6, 2023.
  42. ^ Chateauvert, Melinda (June 28, 2016). "Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters": 9780190280024–0011. doi:10.1093/obo/9780190280024-0011. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  43. ^ a b c Carlson, Stephen P.; and Schneider, Fred W. || || (1980). PCC: The Car That Fought Back, pp. 103–04. Glendale (CA): Interurban Press. ISBN 0-916374-41-6.
  44. ^ Kashin & Demoro 1986, p. 59
  45. ^ Kashin & Demoro 1986, p. 81
  46. ^ Kashin & Demoro 1986, pp. 35–36
  47. ^ a b c Porter, Harry; and Worris, Stanley F.X. (1979). Trolleybus Bulletin No. 109: Databook II. Louisville (KY): North American Trackless Trolley Association (defunct).
  48. ^ a b Saitta, Joseph P. (ed.) (1987). Traction Yearbook '87, p. 111. Merrick (NY), US: Traction Slides International. ISBN 978-0-9610414-6-5. LCCN 81-649475.
  49. ^ Murray, Alan (2000). World Trolleybus Encyclopaedia. Yateley, Hampshire, UK: Trolleybooks. p. 124. ISBN 0-904235-18-1.
  50. ^ Trolleybus Magazine, September–October 2015, p. 152. UK: National Trolleybus Association. ISSN 0266-7452
  51. ^ a b Webb, Mary (ed.) (2009). Jane's Urban Transport Systems 2009–2010, pp. 65–66. Coulsdon (UK): Jane's Information Group. ISBN 978-0-7106-2903-6.
  52. ^ "Quince troles porteños so monumentos históricos". La Estrella (in Spanish). July 29, 2003. Archived from the original on November 6, 2009. Retrieved November 28, 2009.

References

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Pullman Company publications

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Researching Pullman

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