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From Small Town to Downtown: A History of the Jewett Car Company, 1893-1919 - By Lawrence A. Brough and James H. Graebner
The Jewett Car Company was born in
Akron, Ohio, in the heyday of the electric railway boom in the
1890s. The company gained an excellent reputation for its elegant, well-built
wooden cars for street railway companies, interurban lines, and rapid transit
service. Cities large and small used Jewett cars. Many interuban lines employed
the graceful, arch-windowed, wood interurban that Jewett was famous for.
Competition from automobiles and from larger car builders such as J. G. Brill
and the St. Louis Car Company signaled the beginning of the end for Jewett. The
company was offered the opportunity to produce munitions for World War I, but
refused when a German nationalist banker who was a major source of financing
for Jewett refused to allow the company to do anything that would harm Germany.
As a result, the Jewett Car Company died, but the reputation of their product
survives to this day. Hardcover, 7” x 10”, 208
pages; $49.95.
