Skene automobile (1 G.) `1900 - Ëåãêîâîé àâòîìîáèëü (ÑØÀ) | |
HW100 - 45000
UAW55 - 105000 RRW100 - 175000 PKRR - 7500 |
Skene (automobile)
Skene
Overview
Type - Steam car
Manufacturer - Skene American Automobile Company
Production - 1900-1901
Designer - James W. Skene
The Skene was an American automobile manufactured from 1900 to 1901. A
twin-cylinder 5-hp steam car, it was built in Lewiston, Maine.
History
J. W. Skene Cycle Company of Lewiston finished its first steam carriage in 1900.
R. H. B. Warburton of Springfield, Massachusetts helped Skene organize, with a
capital stock of $500,000, the Skene American Automobile Company. Company
headquarters were in Springfield, the factory remained in Maine.
The Skene was a simple steam buggy with a 5-hp double-acting two-cylinder engine
and had a boiler with a working pressure of 160 pounds. The gasoline and water
tanks were sufficient for a 25-mile run. All parts of the Skene were built in
the Lewiston plant, a fact in which the Skene company took pride. Prices ran
from a Model 1 Steam Stanhope at $750 (equivalent to $24,429 in 2021) to a Model
5 Canopy Steam Surrey at $1,300, equivalent to $42,344 in 2021.
By January of 1901, Skene had a production run of twenty cars, and Warburton
arranged a large display at the Philadelphia Automobile Show that month. This
didn’t work out as planned. As The Motor Age magazine put it, "a miscalculation
on the part of the railroad officials tied up four Skene machines somewhere
between Springfield and Philadelphia, and a space big enough to comfortably
exhibit half a dozen vehicles looked bare with but one."
Later in 1901, Skene reported 125 vehicles under construction but the partners’
money ran out. Sometime that spring the Skene American Automobile Company was
attached for $5,000 by creditors. James Skene subsequently became a Rambler
dealer, and spent the rest of his life in the automobile business in Maine.
wikipedia.org (en)