Monday, May 15, 2017

ALVIN ORLANDO LOMBARD – INVENTOR AND LEGEND by Dale Potter-Clark

Alvin O. Lombard was born in Springfield, Maine in 1856, the son of Johnson Lombard - a sawmill owner. When other boys his age were entering the third grade Lombard was bundling shingles in his father’s mill. He received little formal schooling but he had a brilliant mind and taught himself reading, writing, arithmetic and advanced mathematics.

By the time Lombard was twelve he was considered the most expert shingle-buncher in Maine. His father soon placed him in other positions as a lumberjack, swamper, river driver and sawyer. Those experiences and his creative genius melded and served him well. 

Lombard loved to build things and even as a child he had the remarkable ability to envision designs of machinery. As a young adult he conjured up the idea for a regulator with which to govern the power generated by water turbines. No one had ever heard of such a thing and did not take him seriously, but his younger brother Samuel was a machinist and agreed to build one for him. That invention was so successful that Lombard immediately built a bigger one and installed it on the water wheel that powered the Bangor street railway. He afterwards left the lumbering business to manufacture governors which he did for six years - until he sold his company and used the capital to become a full time inventor. Lombard was on his way to fame and fortune!

Lombard invented several machines that improved production in the lumbering, transportation and paper making industries: a de-barker; a pulpwood crusher; a pine knots separator; an automatic pulpwood chop saw; a road machine; a dog sled; a traction engine; and a tractor-truck as well as other smaller equipment. The invention he is known best for, and the one that made him an infamous millionaire, was the Lombard Hauler. By then he was a resident of Waterville and in business with his brother Samuel.

Why Lombard ended up moving to Waterville is not known. He married a Waterville girl in 1875, but they lived in Springfield for the next twenty years. More than likely he saw potential to build and market his inventions in the industrial towns of Waterville – Winslow. But, before they moved he made sure his only child, Grace, received a formal education that far exceeded his own. Following the primary grades Grace attended Lee Academy (Normal School), and graduated from Bangor Business School. Only then did her father move them to Waterville.

In 1895 Lombard bought land in Waterville at 225 College Avenue, where he set up a machine shop and used his skills as a blacksmith. In 1899 he met E.J. Lawrence, a Kennebec lumberman, who thought Lombard worthy of inventing a mechanical log hauler. Until then draft horses were utilized for this task, and there was some limited use of logging railroads, but horses tired and could only work for a few hours at a time; and rails also had significant limitations. Lombard had thought about such an invention himself, so rose to the task. He first built a wooden model of a steam powered machine. The front was supported on a pair of sled runners; the locomotive was equipped in back by a pair of endless tracks instead of large drive wheels. Lombard enlisted Waterville Iron Works to build a prototype, and he applied for the patent.

On Thanksgiving Day, 1900 the first ever continuous track machine, that Lombard affectionately called “Mary-Ann”, was fired up for the first time.  Lawrence was impressed and ordered three.  Years later Lombard would refer to “Mary Ann” as the granddaddy of all present day tractors. Five more of the 19 ton machines were built and sold in the next three years. The machine could haul sleds holding 300 tons of logs on snow iced roads. A crew of four was needed to operate the Lombard Hauler – an engineer, a fireman, a conductor who connected and inspected each sled, and a steersman who sat up front by the smokestack. His job was the most dangerous because he was often blinded by belching smoke. The Hauler hit 5mph at top speed but it had no brakes, so on a steep downgrade, with 200-300 tons of logs in tow, it provided some frightening rides and crashes. In spite of the risks it became a popular machine to men in the logging trade.

In 1904 there was great excitement when Lombard held a demonstration in Colebrook, NH. He hooked his Hauler up to a string of sleds holding 40,000 board feet of logs. “Thousands of people lined the road” Lombard said. “They came from Boston and from the lumber mills and the woods.” The demonstration so impressed one lumberman that he wrote a $5,000 check ($127,000 today) and bought the machine then and there. 

A contemporary of the Stanley (Steamer) brothers, Lombard developed a running steam-engine car in 1899 which gained attention when he drove it about town. He aborted that project, however, to build more Lombard Haulers - eighty-three of them by 1917. When gas engines came into vogue he designed two six-cylinder gasoline engines. About 10 years later he introduced a 10-ton tractor-truck powered by a diesel engine that could handle 250 tons on icy roads.  The gas and diesel versions did not resemble the steam haulers; the fronts were more like heavy duty trucks with front wheels instead of runners. They were used as heavy dump trucks and to push snowplows. The back end resembled WWII half-tracks. Speaking of which, Lombard’s track-wheeled vehicle served as a model for military tanks as well as today’s bulldozers and snowmobiles.

Lombard Tractor and Truck Company in Waterville

The business name was changed from Lombard Traction Engine Co. to Lombard Tractor and Truck Company in 1927. They continued to manufacture Lombard Haulers until 1937, when the company that made Caterpillar tractors seized the market. Lombard had retired from active participation in the company years before to pursue full time inventing. In fact, in 1929 he applied for a patent for a car-to-snowmobile conversion. Another forward-thinking creation!

The Alvin Lombard house at 65 Elm St. Waterville

Lombard bought land on Elm Street in 1908 and built a stately home. The property, although converted to apartments by daughter Grace in the 1940s, is still known today as “Lombard Estates”. His secluded workshop, located on a nearby stream, beckoned to him daily. His machine tools were powered by a water wheel that was regulated by the very governor he had invented years before, which he always considered his greatest invention. Sometimes, as a reminder of his youth, he took to the woods and chopped down some trees - always a woodsman at heart. Alvin O. Lombard died in 1937 – six years after his wife Mary. Both are buried in Waterville’s Pine Grove Cemetery.

Some Lombard Haulers have been restored and are on display across the country including in Waterville, Patten, Leonard’s Mills and the Maine State Museum. In 1982 the Lombard Hauler was designated as a National Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Alvin O. Lombard’s legacy lives on in yet another realm. In 1960 the highest peak on the Cape Sobral Peninsula in Antarctica, was named Mount Lombard in honor of the man and his extraordinary invention.  

Photos below are from an edition of Popular Science Magazine 



From the Kennebec Journal in 1937.