Difference between revisions of "Silver Brothers Iron Works (Ogden Iron Works)"
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[[image:SilverBrothersDumpCar_ThePacificMiner.jpg|center|400px|Thumb|upright=1.1|Advertisement for the Silver Brothers Iron Works contractors dump car]] | [[image:SilverBrothersDumpCar_ThePacificMiner.jpg|center|400px|Thumb|upright=1.1|Advertisement for the Silver Brothers Iron Works contractors dump car]] | ||
==History== | |||
'''Timeline''' | |||
*1900 | |||
Silver Brothers Iron Works expands with a new boiler shop and an addition to the foundry building. | |||
''"Manufacturing," The Iron Age 25 January 1900.'' | |||
*1911 | |||
Silver Brothers Iron Works establishes an iron industry catalog library. | |||
''"Catalogues Wanted," The Iron Age 26 January 1911.'' | |||
Revision as of 14:05, 7 November 2025
Freight Cars by Builder > Silver Brothers Iron Works (Ogden Iron Works)
Introduction
The Silver Brothers Iron Works was a small foundry and machine shop in Salt Lake City that specialized in mining and agricultural equipment. While the majority of its railcars were for underground mine service, the company also produced narrow gauge rolling stock, including side dump cars, for construction contractors. In later years the company moved to Ogden, Utah and was renamed the Ogden Iron Works, producing the same product line but expanding into sugarbeet machinery, soon dominating the market for sugarbeet cutters and piling machines.
Silver Brothers also was the original manufacturer of the Silver Permanent Railway Tie, a cast-steel and concrete-filled track tie intended to replace wood as the United States faced a timber crisis as commercially viable tree stands on public lands began to run out in the early 20th century.
History
Timeline
- 1900
Silver Brothers Iron Works expands with a new boiler shop and an addition to the foundry building.
"Manufacturing," The Iron Age 25 January 1900.
- 1911
Silver Brothers Iron Works establishes an iron industry catalog library.
"Catalogues Wanted," The Iron Age 26 January 1911.
