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File:HODIMG 3071.JPG
Alabama Power Company fireless locomotive No.40 built by Davenport in 1953 at the Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum.<ref>Alabama Power Company Steam Engine No. 40 Interpretative Sign; Heart of Dixie Railroad Museum, Calera, Alabama</ref>
File:Hugo Frisco Depot Museum March 2016 29 (DkW OZA Davenport 0-4-0T No. 1907).jpg
Davenport-built DkW OZA Template:Whyte No. 1907 on display outside the Frisco Depot Museum in Hugo, Oklahoma

The Davenport Locomotive Works, of Davenport, Iowa, USA, was formed as the W W Whitehead Company in 1901. In 1902, the company commenced building light locomotives. The Company was renamed the Davenport Locomotive Works in 1904.<ref>http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/msc/ToMsc100/MsC81/MsC81_davenportbesler.html#box1 University of Iowa Special Collections Department, Papers of Davenport Besler Corporation</ref>

In late 1930, Davenport was licensed to assemble and market R G LeTourneau Inc products under the Davenport-LeTourneau brand. The agreement is believed to have ended in 1935 when LeTourneau moved to Peoria, Illinois. Davenport also sold Davenport-Winchell three-wheel roller conversions of industrial wheel tractors, Davenport-Frink snow plows, which were built in license from Frink Sno-Plows Inc, and Reynolds patented Mov-Mor rotary scrapers.

In 1933, the company was again restructured and renamed the Davenport-Besler Corporation, which continued in business until 1956. William George Besler was a director at the time of the restructuring. The company acquired the locomotive business of H. K. Porter, Inc. in 1950 and from then on produced Porter designs as well as its own. The Canadian Locomotive Company acquired Davenport-Besler in 1955, closing it the following year.

The company had built small steam locomotives early on; its first gasoline-fueled internal combustion engined locomotive was built in 1924 and its first diesel locomotive in 1927, a Template:Convert diesel-electric for the Northern Illinois Coal Company of Boonville, Indiana.

An extensive range of diesel locomotives in all industrial sizes followed, utilizing either mechanical torque converter or electric transmission, the former for the smaller locomotives. Most were used by a variety of industrial customers, but some railroads also bought Davenport locomotives, particularly the Template:Convert size: being the largest locomotive then allowed by union rules to be operated by one person. Railroad buyers included the Rock Island, Milwaukee Road, Santa Fe, Frisco, and Missouri Pacific. In 1963, that rule was relaxed and railroads ceased buying industrial-sized locomotives for light switching.

Davenport built a number of locomotives for the United States Army including World War I trench railways, the USATC S100 Class 0-6-0 of World War II, and eighteen larger switcher locomotives during the 1950s, two of which were adjustable in gauge: One could operate on broad gauges up to Template:RailGauge, and one on narrow gauges—the latter (Template:RailGauge) operating for a period on the Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad.

Three Davenport 500 HP locomotives (built in 1952) of the State Railway of Thailand<ref name=Hewitt>Template:Cite news</ref> are still in service as of March 2023.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Various Davenport locomotives are preserved in the US as well as in other parts of the world.

PreservationEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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