Billboard Refrigerator Cars

Richard H. Hendrickson and Edward S. Kaminski
Item #88100

The practice of painting advertisements on the freight cars of shippers and car owners dates well back into the 19th century. But in the 1920s, leasing companies realized they could contract with shippers to pass back usage payments beyond some agreed minimum.

Thoroughly documented here are hundreds of these paint schemes, together with details of the leasing companies and car builders associated with the individual cars. More than 440 photographs, most previously unpublished, enrich this book. Even a modest amount of color information was available and is included.
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Description
The practice of painting advertisements on the freight cars of shippers and car owners dates well back into the 19th century. But in the 1920s, leasing companies realized they could contract with shippers to pass back usage payments beyond some agreed minimum.

This led to an explosion of car leasing and, as this book amply demonstrates, a corresponding explosion of billboard decoration of refrigerator cars. Railroad objections, especially to the usage payment rebates, led to hearings before the Interstate Commerce Commission, which, taking effect in 1937, banned most of the leasing practices which had generated the car leasing bonanza. After World War II, a restrained billboard style made a modest comeback.

Car-side advertising was only a detail of that ICC decision. But because it was the basis for a remarkable diversity of refrigerator car paint schemes in the era, the photographs of these cars have long held an interest for historians, railfans, and model railroaders.

Thoroughly documented here are hundreds of these paint schemes, together with details of the leasing companies and car builders associated with the individual cars. More than 440 photographs, most previously unpublished, enrich this book. Even a modest amount of color information was available and is included.

The authors, both recognized authorities on railroad freight car history, have done a superb job of collecting and organizing the information presented here. The book is sure to appeal to modelers and to many who are interested in railroad history.
Author: Richard H. Hendrickson and Edward S. Kaminski
Size: 8.5x11
Pages: 224
Table of Contents

Foreword, by Anthony W. Thompson

Acknowledgements

Chapter 1: Historical Background

Chapter 2: Early Billboard Refrigerator Cars

Chapter 3: Billboard Reefers of the 1920s and '30s: Meat Packers

Chapter 4: North American Despatch

Chapter 5: North Western Refrigerator and Western Refrigerator Lines

Chapter 6: Merchants Despatch Transportation Company and Northern Refrigerator Car Company

Chapter 7: General American Refrigerator Express

Chapter 8: Union Refrigerator Transit Lines

Chapter 9: Quaker City Refrigerator Express

Chapter 10: Other Owners and Leasing Companies

Chapter 11: End of An Era

Chapter 12: Postwar Renaissance - Postwar Color Gallery

Appendix 1: Historical Color Renditions

Appendix 2: Summary of ICC Ruling

Bibliography

Index

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