An Early Catalog for Queen City Forging Co.

Queen City ForgingProduct cataloges of 1885 (right), 1896, and 1921 give hints of the company's standing and focus during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. That focus was primarily carriage hardware with some attention given to custom drop forging. The 1885 catalog reflects Cincinnati in the boom of the carriage building business. Step pads, axle parts, fifth wheels, and a large assortment of all kinds of hardware were being sold.

Early Queen City Forging
By 1896, the company's prosperity is reflected by the etching on the back cover (left) of the catalog . The factory represented in the picture is not the evidence of the prosperity but the fact that the owners saw fit to have a picture of the factory on the catalog. It is clear from later photographs that the artist worked in the style of the times, inflating the size and the importance of the operation to please the men ordering the picture made.

Eleven years after the catalog of 1885, the basic connecting pieces such as couplings, eyes, clips, and various "irons" have become more prominent in the catalog. All of these were products undoubtedly produced by the company. Also appearing in the 1896 catalog were a series of "top joints", the hardware for fold down fabric "canopy" tops; what we call "convertibles" today. This reflects the increased affluence of the customers of the carriage and buggy builders who were purchasing more vehicles with tops rather than the old style of open wagon.

Beginning of Automobile IndustryThis photo was taken from a newspaper clipping and captioned: "Here's the first car ever in these parts, a 1908 Carrico being navigated by Bruce Walker [Oliver Bruce Walker], with his wife as passenger. An inveterate putterer, Mr. Walker has several patents to his name."

The early twentieth century was the beginning of the automobile industry. At the outset, the "horseless" carriage was exactly that, and some companies in the carriage and buggy business built early models based on the vehicles they already produced. Queen City Forging was no exception. Around 1908, several vehicles were built, named the "Carrico", which mounted an internal combustion engine under the seat of a wagon. It was clear from the start, however, that the company did not have the abilities to continue in this endeavor. The "horseless" carriage, the "Carrico", was basically a toy for the owners.

It is said that the conservative German buggy builders of Cincinnati refused requests from Henry Ford to participate in the production of automobiles. As the automobile industry replaced the carriage industry, the fortunes of Queen City Forging began to change. The center of the transportation industry moved form Cincinnati to Detroit. 


Read More, 1920's -- The Carriage Industry declines and is replaced with custom forging!

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