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The Knapheide Wagon Company 1848–1943
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 February 2011
Extract
In 1848, most wagons were still made in small scattered shops where general blacksmithing and wagonmaking were combined, although a few firms such as Wilson, Childe and Company of Philadelphia had achieved considerable size. In that year, Quincy, located in the middle of the corn belt in the westernmost part of Illinois on the Mississippi River, was a growing center of commerce, shipping, and manufacturing for the surrounding area. There had already been established here at least four wagon manufacturers.
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- Copyright © The Economic History Association 1943
References
1 Bishop, J. Franklin, A History of American Manufacture from 1608–1860 (Philadelphia, 1864), I, 784.Google Scholar
2 Wilcox, David C. and McCarl, Judge Lyman, Quincy and Adams County—History and Representative Men (Chicago, 1919), II, 941.Google Scholar
3 Real-estate records in the Adams County Court House, Quincy, Illinois.
4 Minutes of the meeting of the Board of Directors, February 1, 1894.
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6 Sample divisions are the following:
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