Filer and Stowell

Filer & Stowell is a company based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in the United States of America.[1] Founded by Delos Filer and John Stowell in 1856, the company has produced equipment primarily for the lumber industry, largely for lumber mills but also in the past stationary steam engines, marine steam engines and even steam locomotives for logging lines.

Locomotives

Filer & Stowell produced a line of steam locomotives from the 1880s for the logging industry. They were simply constructed, tough and easy to maintain, and employed oscillating cylinders, an extreme rarity in locomotive practice. "A large number" were produced, mostly for customers in the southern and south-eastern United States.[2]

Stationary steam engines

Filer & Stowell produced large Corliss engines, both simple and compound, originally for lumber mill power but also for other applications.

Shipping

Filer & Stowell produced marine steam engines for a number of years, and were one of fourteen engine manufacturers to produce the triple expansion steam engines for the World War II Liberty ships.[3]

gollark: I mean, you could maybe spin it as "breach of contract", but in the EU I don't think EULAs are actually enforceable half the time.
gollark: > This policy supersedes any applicable federal, national, state, and local laws, regulations and ordinances, international treaties, and legal agreements that would otherwise apply.> If any provision of this policy is found by a court (or other entity) to be unenforceable, it nevertheless remains in force.
gollark: Although technically this is a privacy policy.
gollark: Not potatOS's.
gollark: > You also agree that unless you disable remote debugging services and/or backdoors in potatOS before installation, data available via these may be used at any time for the purposes of remote debugging, analysis of what potatOS users have installed, random messing around, or anything whatsoever. You also agree that your soul is forfeit to me.

References

  1. "Filer & Stowell". Corporate website. Archived from the original on 2011-02-03. Retrieved 2010-06-08.
  2. Odegard, Gordon (May 1976). "Filer & Stowell logging locomotives". Model Railroader. Vol. 43 no. 5. pp. 46–49.
  3. American Society of Mechanical Engineers. "Liberty Ship" (PDF). National Historical Engineering Landmarks. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-07-01. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
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