Early EV History - Rae Article
The Electric Vehicle Company:
A Monopoly that Missed References
References
[1]The material on which this article is based was collected
in the course of a larger study of the engineer in business, for which I have received
grants from the Research Center in Entrepreneurial History at Harvard, the School of
Industrial Management at MIT, and the Social Science Research Council.
[2]There is a thorough study of this feature of the automobile
industry in Harold G. Vatter, "Closure of Entry in the Automobile Industry," Oxford
Economic Papers, New Series, Vol. IV, no. 3 (Oct., 1952), 213-34.
[3]William Greenleaf, "The Selden Patent Suit" (Ms. Ph.D. Thesis,
Columbia University, 1955), p. 117. The copy of this thesis which I used is in the
Ford Motor Company Archives, Dearborn, Michigan. It contains a very thorough description
of the founding of the Electric Vehicle Company, and is the basis for the somewhat
briefer account in Allan Nevins, Ford: The Times, the Man, the Company (New York, 1954),
pp. 284ff.
[4]Greenleaf, "The Selden Patent Suit," p. 118.
[5]Automobile Trade Journal, XXIX, No. 6 (Silver Anniversary
Issue, 1924), 286.
[6]Greenleaf, "The Selden Patent Suit," p. 122.
[7]Nevins, Ford, p. 288.
[8]Hiram P. Maxim, Horseless Carriage Days (New York, 1937),
pp. 129-30.
[9]H.O. Duncan, The World on Wheels (Paris, France, 1926),
p. 915; Automobile Trader Journal, XXIX, No. 6, 286.
[10]Maxim, Horseless Carriage Days, p. 165.
[11]Greenleaf, "The Selden Patent Suit," p. 143.
[12]This reorganization is described in Columbia Motor Car Co.
and G. B. Selden V. C. A. Duerr and Co. and Ford Motor Co. (U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals for the Second District, Transcript of Record, Vol. 3, p. 1086), and in
Herman F. Cuntz, "Pop Mfg. Co., Columbia Automobile Co., and the Electric Vehicle Co."
(Ms. account dated June, 1947, in the Henry Cave Collection, Detroit Public Library).
[13]This interview appeared in the New York World (17 Nov 1895)
and is quoted in Alexander Winton, "Get a horse," Saturday Evening Post, Vol. 202,
No. 32 (8 Feb 1930), 39.
[14]Maxim, Horseless Carriage Days, p. 165.
[15]Lawrence H. Seltzer, Financial History of the American
Automobile Industry (Boston, 1928), p. 25.
[16]Cuntz, "Pope Mfg. Co." (Cave Collection); Maxim, Horseless
Carriage Days, pp. 165-66. The batteries in the electric taxis weighed about a ton
and had to be changed after every trip.
[17]Greenleaf, "The Selden Patent Suit," p. 152. Mark D.
Hirsch, William C. Whitney. Modern Warwick (New York, 1941), p. 554, defends
Whitney's action in this matter.
[18]This description of the acquisition of the patent by the
Electric Vehicle Company is taken from H. F. Cuntz, "Hartford the Birthplace of the
Automobile Industry," Hartford Times (17 Sept. 1947), and from Maxim, Horseless
Carriage Days, pp. 162-64.
[19]The decisive opinion was given by Mr. Dugald Clerk,
a Scots engineer, who was then considered the world's leading authority on internal
combustion engines. It should be borne in mind that the courts did uphold the validity
of the Selden patent. Ford's victory consisted of a decision that the patent applied
only to two-cycle engines and that he therefore had not infringed it.
[20]Nevins Ford, p. 293. Apparently Selden had a deal with Day
whereby the latter received half of his royalties.
[21]There is possible confirmation for this theory in Cuntz's
story. He was sent to Rochester to interview Selden and was told that a group of
unidentified New York financiers had been negotiating for purchase of the patent.
Since Selden had been trying for years to interest potential backers, his claims
could easily have reached Whitney. See Cuntz, "Hartford the Birthplace of the
Automobile Industry," Hartford Times, (17 Sept. 1947).
[22]In 1900 the Electric Vehicle Company did begin the
manufacture of a gasoline car, the Columbia. We have therefore the curious situation
that in 1903 the reorganized Pope Manufacturing Company was competing with its own
former motor carriage department.
[23]Greenleaf, "The Selden Patent Suit," p. 195. Joy confided
to his associate, James W. Packard, that his hope was that something might be done,
either under the Selden patent or by agreement, to curtail competition. (Letter, Joy
to Packard, 9 March 1903; Henry B. Joy Papers, Michigan Historical Collections,
University of Michigan.)
[24]The text of this agreement can be found in Ralph C. Epstein,
The Automobile Industry. Its Economic and Commercial Development (Chicago, 1928),
Appendix C.
[25]Letter of G.C. Arvedson of Patent Dept., Automobile
Manufacturers Association (3 March 1936), in Federal Trade Commission, Report on the
Motor Vehicle Industry, 76th Congress, 1st Sess., House Document 468
(Washington, D.C., 1939), p. 43.
[26]Winton, "Get A Horse," loc.cit., p. 144.
[27]This company was purchased in 1916 by Charles W. Nash.
[28]Automobile Trade Journal, XXIX, No. 6, 292.
[29]Selden's share of the royalties had to come from the Electric
Vehicle Company's three-fifths.
[30]Letter, Henry B. Joy to George H. Day, 3 Jan. 1903
(Henry B. Joy Papers).
[31]Greenleaf, "The Selden Patent Suit," p. 192.
[32]Cuntz, who was employed by the Association as its patent
expert, insists that it never tried to limit competition. See letter, Cuntz to
Charles B. King, 11 Aug. 1936 (Charles B. King Collection, Detroit Public Library).
For conflicting evidence see Nevins, Ford, p. 432.
[33]George V. Thompson, "Intercompany Technical Standardization
in the Early American Automobile Industry," Journal of Economic History, XIV,
No. 1 (Winter, 1954), 3.
[34]Nevins, Ford, p. 443.
[35]Nevins, Ford, chap. XIII.
[36]Automobile Trade Journal, XXIX, No. 6, 206.
[37]The Automobile, Vol. 18, No. 19 ( 1 May 1908), 653.
[38]These figures are taken from Greenleaf, "The Selden Patent
Suit," pp. 32-33.
[39]Seltzer, History of Automobile Industry, p. 25.
The Pope Manufacturing Company was also scaled down. Its Toledo plant was bought
by John N. Willys, who then moved the Willys-Overland Company there from Indianapolis.
This reorganization lasted until 1911, when another failure resulted in liquidation.
[40]Seltzer, History of Automobile Industry, p. 38. Brady was
also a substantial stockholder in General Motors.
[41]Automobile Trade Journal, XXIX, No. 6, 51; Seltzer,
History of Automobile Industry p 38.
[42]Maxim claims that in 1899 the Pope company was the largest
producer of motor carriages in the country (Horseless Carriage Days, p. 169).
Since he uses the term to include both gasoline and electric vehicles, he was
probably correct.
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