The Railway's Part In Coal Mining

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
D. W. McDonald
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
4
File Size:
1085 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1924

Abstract

Coal mining and railway transportation are so closely en-twined and so dependent one upon the other that the failure of one would mean the total collapse of the other. With this indisputable fact in mind, there is no doubt that the operator of each is deeply interested in the other's success. Railway transportation began at the mouth of a coal mine. The first railway car was the English coal-wagon, a crude box on four wooden trowlets, running on wooden rails and holding 1,600 pounds. This was operated by gravity or horse-power in England to convey coal from the mines to the rivers. The first coal-cars used on Nova Scotia railways were of 4 tons capacity with side doors and "V" shaped centres. Then followed flat-bottom, 4-ton cars that operated on tipples, the car bei.ng held in tipple by a chain passing over the top and fastened on either side. Next came the 6-ton car with drop-bottoms, then the 10, 15, 30-ton cars, and now the modern 50 and 100-ton steel cars, equipped with automatic couplers, brakes, and rachet dumping device. Contrast the first coal-car with a modern luxurious pull-man or a I 00-ton coal and ore car, and you have a record of progress in railway transportation. The development of the steam locomotive was no doubt the greatest factor in this progress, but let us not forget that the foundation of all industrial development was and is coal. and that development in mining and railway transportation should keep abreast.
Citation

APA: D. W. McDonald  (1924)  The Railway's Part In Coal Mining

MLA: D. W. McDonald The Railway's Part In Coal Mining. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1924.

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