Loading

Patent Model of Railroad Signal Lantern, 1867

Towne, A. N.1867

The Henry Ford

The Henry Ford
Dearborn, MI, United States

Flags and lanterns were the primary means of communication between conductors, brakemen and engineers on American railroads. Different movements and colors indicated different instructions as crews assembled and operated trains. Lanterns with red globes typically were used to signal a train to stop at places like "flag" stations -- where trains did not regularly halt -- and crossings with other railroad lines.

Show lessRead more
  • Title: Patent Model of Railroad Signal Lantern, 1867
  • Creator: Towne, A. N.
  • Date: 1867-04-16
  • Date Created: 1867
  • Location: United States, Illinois, Chicago
  • Subject Keywords: Lighting, Railroads (Infrastructure), Safety, Models (Patent), Lanterns (Lighting devices), Signal lanterns
  • Type: Objects
  • Contributor: The Henry Ford
  • Original Source: Digital Collections
  • Patent Place: Chicago, Illinois
  • Patent Date: 1867
  • Object Name: Model (Patent)
  • Object ID: 26.160.27
  • Inventor: A. N. Towne
  • Invention: Railroad Signal Lantern
  • Image ID: THF152198
  • Field: Transportation
  • Credit: From the Collections of The Henry Ford. Gift of the Smithsonian Institution
The Henry Ford

Get the app

Explore museums and play with Art Transfer, Pocket Galleries, Art Selfie, and more

Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites