From Steam to Diesel: Managerial Customs and Organizational Capabilities in the Twentieth-Century American Locomotive Industry

From Steam to Diesel: Managerial Customs and Organizational Capabilities in the Twentieth-Century American Locomotive Industry

by Albert J. Churella
From Steam to Diesel: Managerial Customs and Organizational Capabilities in the Twentieth-Century American Locomotive Industry

From Steam to Diesel: Managerial Customs and Organizational Capabilities in the Twentieth-Century American Locomotive Industry

by Albert J. Churella

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Overview

This overview of the leading locomotive producers in the United States during the twentieth century shows how they responded to a radical technological change: the replacement of steam locomotives by diesels. The locomotive industry provides a valuable case study of business practices and dramatic shifts in innovation patterns, since two companies--General Motors and General Electric--that had no traditional ties to locomotive production demolished established steam locomotive manufacturers. Albert Churella uses many previously untapped sources to illustrate how producers responded to technological change, particularly between the 1920s and the 1960s. Companies discussed include the American Locomotive Company (ALCo), the Baldwin Locomotive Works, the Lima Locomotive Works, Fairbanks-Morse, the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors, and General Electric.

A comparative work of business history and the history of technology, the book is not a complete history of any locomotive builder, nor does it explore the origins of the diesel engine in great detail. What it does, and does superbly, is to demonstrate how managers addressed radical shifts in technology and production methods. Churella reveals that managerial culture and corporate organizational routines, more than technological competency per se, allowed some companies to succeed, yet constrained the actions of others. He details the shift from small-batch custom manufacturing techniques in the steam locomotive industry to mass-production methods in the diesel locomotive industry. He also explains that chance events and fortuitous technological linkages helped to shape competitive patterns in the locomotive industry.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781400822683
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 08/03/1998
Series: Princeton Studies in Business and Technology
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 482 KB

About the Author

Albert Churella is a Senior Lecturer in History at The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction 3
I Steam vs. Diesel: The Capabilities and Requirements of a Radically New Technology 10
II Internal-Combustion Railcars: Springboard to Participation in the Diesel Locomotive Industry 23
III First-Mover Advantages and the Decentralized Corporation 37
IV ALCo and Baldwin: Established Companies, New Technologies 58
V Policy and Production during World War II 75
VI Postwar Dieselization and Industry Shakeout 95
VII The Era of Oligopoly 127
Conclusion 146
Notes 155
Bibliography 201
Index 213

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