Al Milburn

From IBLS
Revision as of 04:28, 4 April 2026 by Dnevil (talk | contribs) (→‎1960's)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

1940

From New England Live Steamers:

Upper-right: -- 4-4-2 3-1/2" gague. W. S. Van Brocklin, Jr., builder. Al Milburn running the engine with Billy as passenger.
NELS Meet Danvers 1940.jpg

1949

Lester Friend's home shop, Danvers, Mass., 1949. Front left to right: Art Wegner, Ray Peck, Lester Friend's daughter. Bending over: Lester Friend. At right behind: Al Milburn. Photo by A.W. Leggett.

1950

From IBLS Journal 1950:

Al Milburn's cut from the solid Atlantic a beautiful job to see.
Bill Leggett admiring Al Milburn's Atlantic (top) at BLS Meet at Danvers, MA, 1950. Photo by A.W. Leggett, provided by Jim Leggett.
Al Milburn built a beautiful 3/4" scale Atlantic where everything was hacked from solid. The drivers were sawn out by hand with a jeweler's saw, then filed to the correct profile...then sand blasted so they would look like castings!

1951

From Youd Better Not Call Them Toys:

From "You'd Better Not Call Them Toys"
Many men who didn't know a drill press from a grape press until they started their first loco have found that the thousands of hours of trial-and-error shop work have made them competent machinists. One such is A. C. Milburn of Milford, Connecticut. Ten years ago he started work on a 1/2-inch scale freight engine in his spare time from a 4,000-foot coal shaft where he was a digger, today Milburn is a well-paid toolmaker-thanks to live steam.

From IBLS Journal 1951:

The former speed record of 26 MPH set at Danvers some years ago by Norm Robinson & his 3/4 inch scale Fayette, or our friend Al Milburn's record of 22 MPH on his own former home loop with his 2-1/2 inch gauge Lucy-Ann 4-8-4, would very likely raise the hair on the necks of these California steam boys. These records were watch timed and are actual miles per hour, not scale MPH.

3/4" Atlantic

Keith Taylor wrote:

Al Milburn built a beautiful 3/4 inch scale Atlantic where everything was hacked from solid. The drivers were sawn out by hand with a jeweler's saw, then filed to the correct profile...then sand blasted so they would look like castings!

1960's

Mark Bassini wrote on Chaski.org:

The 1 inch scale 870 built by Al Milburn & once owned by Pierre Mauer & then by my father, now in my possession.

Raybestos Article

We are very happy to include in our Hobby Show Case this week Al Milburn, who is pictured above working on the miniature of a large locomotive which is the second one he has constructed since starting his hobby in 1935.

Back in 1933, Al visited a sports show and saw his first miniature engine and decided at that time he would some day design and construct one of his own miniatures.

In 1935 Al started to work on his first engine. He was a book binder by trade, with no mechanical knowledge whatsoever, and through research and book learning he completed his first locomotive with two flat cars after 10 long years of work at his hobby. He approximates that the engine took him 4,000 hours to build.

This engine was designed by an Englishman who wrote a series of articles in an American publication. Al says that the knowledge gained the first year in working with his hobby through this self education enabled him to give up book binding and take a job as an instrument maker in a local plant, so actually he had a new trade, a hobby and a wealth of mechanical knowledge.

The engine shown above is about 80% complete, and is Al's own design. It is cut from solid steel with no castings used.

All parts are hand filed and cut. He figures that the four driving wheels took him ap-

External Links