Make | Country | Years active | Comments |
Albany-Lamplough | England | 1903 | Designed by Frederick Lamplough and better known as the Lamplough-Albany, it was only made in 1903. Albany also made petrol powered cars. |
Altmann | Germany | 1905–1907 | The Altmann was an automobile made by Kraftfahrzeug-Werke GmbH, Brandenburg-Havel from 1905 to 1907. See also the American Aultman. |
AMC | England | 1900-1910 | The Automobile Manufacturing Company was a short-lived British steam car manufactured in London around 1900. to 1910. |
Anderson | US | 1901–1902 | Steam cars made by the Anderson Steam Carriage Company of Anderson. |
Arden | England | 1908 | Steam cars made by the Arden Steam Car Company, Halifax probably not produced commercially. |
Artzberger | US | 1903–1905 | See Foster. |
Aultman | US | 1901–1902 | The Aultman was a 1901 American automobile manufactured in Canton, Ohio. |
Ball | US | 1902 | Miami Cycle and Manufacturing Company Middletown Ohio. |
Barton | US | 1903 | Barton Boiler Company Chicago, Illinois made steam cars to order. |
Binney & Burnham | US | 1901–1902 | A steam automobile built in Boston from 1901 to 1902 by James L Binney and John Appleton Burnham. |
Bliss | US | 1901 | A steam car made by the Bliss Chainless Automobile Company of Attenborough. The drive train was spur geared to the rear axle rather than chain drive. |
Bolsover | England | 1902 | Only made a prototype. No production model made. Best known as makers of the Bolsover Express boiler, used for steam launches and as a replacement boiler for Stanley steam cars. |
Bon-Car | England | 1905–1907 | No series production cars made. |
Boss | US | 1903–1907 | A steam car made by the Boss Knitting Machine Works of Reading. |
Brecht | US | 1901–1903 | Steam-powered cars made by the Brecht Automobile Company of St Louis. |
Breer | US | 1900 | A steam-powered car made by Carl Breer, an engineer who later went on to work for Chrysler and is credited with providing much of the aerodynamic design to the Chrysler Airflow. |
Buffard | France | 1900–1902 | Details unknown—named in list of steam car makes. |
California | US | 1903–1905 | Maker of steam, electric, and gasoline automobiles based in San Francisco. |
Campbell | Australia | 1901 | A steam car made by Archie M Campbell of Liverpool Street, Hobart. |
Cannon | US | 1902–1906 | Details unknown—named in list of steam car makes. |
Capitol | US | 1902–1903 | A steam built by the Capitol Automobile Company of Washington DC and based on a Frank Goodwin model developed from experiments that commenced in 1889. |
Central | US | 1905–1906 | A rotary steam engine powered vehicle made by the Central Automobile Company of Providence, Rhode Island. |
Chaboche | France | 1901–1906 | Chaboche made steam cars and a steam wagon with a 2.5 ton carrying capacity. |
Chautauqua | US | 1911 | A car made by the Chautauqua Motor Company, Dunkirk, New York. |
Chelmsford | England | 1901–1903 | The company exhibited two cars and a van at the 1903 motor show. They were made at the Moulsham Works in Chelmsford. Chelmsford also built many steam buses. |
Chicago | US | 1905–1907 | A steam car made by the Chicago Automobile Company. |
Cincinnati | US | 1903–1905 | A two seat steam-powered car made by the Cincinnati Automobile Company of Ohia. |
Clark | US | 1900–1909 | Advanced flash boiler steam cars made by Edward S Clark Steam Automobiles of Dorchester. |
Cloughley | US | 1902–1903 | A four seat steam-powered surrey made by the Coughley Motor Vehicle Company of Parsons. |
Connor | Switzerland | 1903 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Conrad | US | 1900–1924 | A variety of 2 seat and 4 seat models plus a dos-a-dos. |
Cook | England | 1901–1902 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Cotta | US | 1901–1903 | A 4 wheel drive and steering steam car made by Charles Cotta's Cotta Autombobile Company of Lanark, Illinois. |
Covert | US | 1901–1907 | B.V. Covert and Company was a manufacturer of automobiles in Lockport, New York from 1901 to 1907. The company started as a manufacturer of steam-powered cars, but later switched to gas-powered vehicles. Some Coverts were exported to England as Covert-Jacksons. |
Cremorne | England | 1903–1904 | A steam car made by the Cremorne Motor Manufacturing Company of Chelsea. |
Crompton | US | 1903–1905 | A steam car made by the Crompton Motor Carriage Company of Worcester. |
Dawson | US | 1900–1902 | A steam car made by George Dawson's Dawson Manufacturing Company at Waynesboro. Only one was completed and sold. |
Desberon | US | 1901–1904 | The Desberon was an American automobile manufactured from 1901 until 1904. The company initially built steam trucks, and later branched out into making 4 hp gas-driven "pleasure carriages" built along "French lines". |
Doble | US | 1906–1930 | The first Doble was made from wrecked White with a Doble steam engine. Two more prototypes were made with production starting with the Model B. The most technically sophisticated of the steam car manufacturers. Even after they had been supplanted by petrol engines for use in automobiles, Abner Doble continued to sell his experience in designing water-tube boilers to railway locomotive manufacturers, such as Sentinel. |
Eastman | US | 1900–1903 | Henry Eastman and Jay Hayes formed the Eastman Automobile Company in Cleveland to make steam cars. At the end of 1900 Eastman and Hayes sold the company to the Benson Automobile Company. |
Eclipse | US | 1900–1903 | Eclipse Automobile Company Boston. |
E.J.Y.R | England | 1907 | See Rutherford. |
Elberon | US | 1903 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Electronomic | US | 1900–1901 | The Electromagnetic Steamer was manufactured by the Simplex Motor Vehicle Company. The company was incorporated in 1900, but made its first car in 1899. |
Elite | US | 1900–1901 | A model built by D B Smith and Company, Utica, New York. |
Empire | US | 1901 | Built by Empire Manufacturing Company of Stirling, Illionois also known as the Stirling steam car. |
Empire | US | 1904–1905 | A steam-driven car designed by William H Terwilliger of the Empire Auto Company of Amsterdam, New York. Several experimental models were made from 1898 but production only started in 1904. |
English Mechanic | England | 1900–1905 | Do-it-yourself tricycle and steam car designed by Thomas Hyler White for The English Mechanic and World of Science magazine. He also designed petrol cars as the one shown to the photograph. |
Essex | US | 1905–1906 | A 4 cylinder steam car made by the Essex Motor Car Company of Boston. |
Fawcett-Fowler | England | 1907–1909 | |
Federal | US | 1901–1903 | A steam car made by Federal Motor Vehicle Company of Brooklyn, New York. |
Fidelia | France | 1905–1906 | A steam car produced by Voitures Fidelia of Angers, Maine-et-Loire, France. |
Filtz | France | 1901–1910 | Mostly commercial vehicles. |
Foster | US | 1900–1903 | The Foster Automobile Manufacturing Company of Rochester, New York produced 165 vehicles before bankruptcy in 1903. One of the investors in the company William H. Artzberger, an artist of Allegheny acquired the rights, and founded the Artzberger Automobile Company. Re-launching the cars as improved Foster's in 1903. The company ceased auto production in 1905. |
Frazer | England | 1911 | Possibly only a prototype made. |
Friedmann | US | 1900–1903 | A steam car made by the Friedmann Automobile Company of Chicago. |
Gage | US | 1903 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Geneva | US | 1901–1904 | The Geneva Steamer was made in 1901 by the Geneva Automobile and Manufacturing Company of Geneva, Ohio. One is on display at the Henry Ford Museum, Dearborn, Michigan. Geneva also made the Turtle, a racing car. In 1904 the company was sold to the Colonial Brass Co. |
Henrietta | US | 1901 | A steam car made by the Henrietta Motor Company of New York. |
Hess | US | | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Hidley | US | 1901 | Between one and four were made by the Hidley Automobile Company of 257 Broadway, Troy, New York. |
Hoffman | US | 1902–1904 | A light steam car made by the Hoffman Automobile and Manufacturing Company at Cleveland, Ohio. From 1904 the company switched to petrol powered vehicles, the Royal Tourist. |
Holland | US | | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Hood | US | 1900–1901 | Steam car made by Ralph Hood of Danvers associated with the Simplex Motor car company. |
Houghton | US | 1900–1901 | A steam car made by H R Houghton's Houghton Automobile Company of West Newton. |
Howard | US | 1900–1902 | Steam cars built by the Howard Automobile Company of Trenton, New Jersey. |
Howard | US | 1901–1903 | A chainless steam car built by William S Howard's Trojan Launch and Automobile Works of Troy, New York. |
Hudson | US | 1901–1902 | A steam car designed by Howard Coffin and built by Bean-Chamberlain Manufacturing Company. |
Hythe | England | 1903 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
International | US | 1903 | In Toledo became the International Motor Car Company for a time before becoming Pope Motor Car Company. |
Jaxon | US | 1903–1904 | Steam cars made by Jackson Automobile Company of Jackson, Michigan. |
Johnson | US | 1905–1907 | Steam cars made by Professor Warren F Johnson's Johnson Service Company of Milwaukee until 1907 when the company switched to petrol powered vehicles. The company ceased business after Johnson died in 1912. |
Keene | US | 1900–1901 | The Keen Steammobile was built by the Trinity Bicycle Company of Keene. In 1901 the company changed name to the Steammobile Company of America and the cars name also changed to Steammobile. |
Keenelet | England | 1904 | Possibly only a prototype built by Keene's Automobile Works of London. |
Kellogg | US | 1903 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Kent's Pacemaker | US | 1900 | An unusual steam car made by A.W. Kent's Colonial Company of Boston. It had a wheel for steering at the front and three rear wheels, one of which propelled the car while the other two could be lifted making it more like a motorbike. |
Kidder | US | 1900–1901 | Three styles of Kidder's were made including a delivery wagon. |
King | US | 1904 | One off steam automobile built for Gilbert M King. |
:de:Friedmann-Knoller|Knoller | Austria | 1904-1910 | Steam cars made by Max Friedmann of Vienna. Very few were made. |
Kraft | US | 1901 | A steam car made in St. Louis, Missouri. |
:de:L'Autovapeur|L'Autovapeur | France | 1905–1906 | A Parisian steam car make powered by a Gardner-Serpollet engine. |
Lamplough-Albany | England | 1903 | See Albany-Lamplough. |
Lane | US | 1900 | Steam cars made by Lane Motor Vehicle Company of Poughkeepsie, New York. |
Liquid Air | US | 1901-1902 | Liquid Air Power and Automobile Company Boston. |
Locke | US | 1901 | See Puritan. |
Lozier | US | 1901–1902 | A Lozier Motor Company prototype steam car. The production cars, commencing in 1905, had petrol engines only. |
Lyons | US | | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Maryland | US | 1900–1901 | A steam car made by the Maryland Automobile Manufacturing company of Luke, Maryland. |
MCC | England | 1902–1904 | Motor Construction Company of Nottingham steam cars sold as Vapomobile. |
McCurdy | US | 1901 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
McKay | US | 1900–1902 | Renamed Stanley-Whitney. Steam buggy made by Frank Forrester Stanley's Stanley Manufacturing Company. Stanley's reverted to manufacturing shoes and in 1920 were taken over by the A.G. Walton Shoe Co. |
Meteor | US | 1902–1903 | The Reading steam cars were built by the Meteor Engineering Company from 1902 after the company acquired the Steam Vehicle Company of America. |
Miller | US | 1903 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Mills | US | | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Milwaukee | US | 1900–1902 | A steam stanhope made by the Milwaukee Automobile Company. |
Moncrief | US | 1901–1902 | James A Moncrief of the Pawtucket Steamboat Company of Pawtucket, Rhode Island made a few steam cars. |
Morriss | England | 1906–1912 | Only four cars were made at Sandringham. Only one survives. |
Morse | US | 1904–1909 | Made by the Morse Motor Vehicle Company of Springfield. In 1909 the company became the Easton Machine Company, which made a petrol powered vehicle under the Morse name. |
Neff | Canada | 1901 | A steam buggy built by Benton Neff of Port Colborne and displayed at the Port Colborne Historical and Marine Museum. |
Neustadt-Perry | US | 1901–1903 | J.H. Neustadt and Perry was partnership. In 1904 Neustadt bought out Perry forming the Neustadt Automobile and Supply Company located in St Louis, Missouri. From 1904 it made petrol powered cars. |
New Home | US | 1901 | See Grout. |
Ophir | US | 1901 | Made by the Century Motor Vehicle Company of Syracuse, New York. |
Ormond | US | 1904–1905 | Made by United Motor and Vehicle Co of Boston. |
Overholt | US | 1909 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Oxford | US | 1900–1904 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Paridant | Belgium | 1903–? | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Parker-Wearwell | England | 1901 | Thomas Hugh Parker of Wearwell Motor Carriage Company, Wolverhampton made a steam car. Only one seems to have been made with Wearwell concentrating on petrol powered motor bikes. |
Pawtucket | US | 1901–1902 | A single seat car made by the Pawtucket Steam Boat Company of Providence, Rhode Island. |
Pearson & Cox | England | 1908–1916 | Pearson and Cox were petrol and steam powered car makers from Shortlands, Kent. |
Phelps | US | 1901 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Pierce | US | 1900 | The first car made by George N Pierce and Co was steam powered but a failure. They switched to petrol cars. |
Pope | US | 1903–1904 | The Pope Motor Car Company replaced the International Motor Car Company making Toledo's. |
Porter | US | 1900–1901 | Steam cars made by Porter Motor Company of Boston. |
Prescott | US | 1901–1907 | These steam cars were made by A L Prestcott's Prescott Automobile Manufacturing Company, 09 Chambers Street, New York. The company closed in 1907 after an employee stole most of its cash. |
Puritan | US | 1902–1903 | Albert Locke's Lock Regulator Company of Salem, Massachusetts built a four-passenger steam runabout named the Puritan. |
Ramapaugh | US | 1902 | Charles A Ball's Miami Cycle and Manufacturing Company decided to build automobiles in 1902. The name Ramapaugh came from an old Indian chief who lived near Ball in New York. Ball bought the first and only vehicle completed. |
Randall | US | 1902 | A steam carriage made by G N Randall. |
Randolph | US | | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Reading | US | 1900–1902 | A steam car made by Steam Vehicle Company of America, Reading. The company was sold to Meteor Engineering Co in 1902. |
Reid | New Zealand | 1903-1905 | Made three steam cars which used engines imported from the United States. |
Rexer | France | 1905–1910 | See Weyher et Richemond. |
Richmond | US | 1902–1903 | A steam car made by the Richmond Automobile Company of Richmond, Indiana. |
Riley & Cowley | US | 1902 | A steam car made in Brooklyn, New York. |
Rochester | US | 1900–1901 | A steam buggy made by Rochester Carriage Motor Company of Rochester, New York. |
Ross | US | 1905–1909 | A steam car made by Louis S Ross of Newtonville. |
Rutherford | England | 1907–1912 | The car was designed by EJY Rutherford and George Hamilton of the Highclere Motor Car Syndicate Ltd, and was first known by Rutherford's initials as the E.J.Y.R. |
Safety | US | 1901 | Safety Steam Automobile Company Boston. |
Schirmer | Switzerland | 1903–1904 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Seely | US | 1900s | A double engined steam car made by F.L. Seely. Only one is believed to have been built. |
Shatswell | US | 1901–1903 | A kit steam car sold by H K Shatswell and Co Dedham MA. |
Sheppee | England | 1912 | A steam automobile made in York by Colonel F H Sheppee's Sheppee Motor Company. Only two were made. Prior to this Sheppee made commercial vehicles. The company still exists but no longer makes vehicles. |
Siemens-Halske | Germany | 1900–1905 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Simons | US | 1903 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Simpson | India | 1903 | Samual John Green of Simpson & Co, Madras produced the first Indian steam car in 1903. They made very few as the company specialised in coachmade bodies for imported motor car chassis. |
Skene | US | 1900–1901 | Steam cars made by Skene American Automobile Company of Springfield. |
SM | England | 1904–1905 | A steam car that may never have got beyond prototype. |
Springer | US | 1904–1906 | A steam car made by John H Springer's Springer Motor Vehicle Company of New York. |
Springfield | US | 1900–1904 | The Springfield Motor Car Company made a steam-powered van in 1901, but no details of a steam-powered car found. |
Stammobile | US | 1902–1905 | A steam buggy made by the Stammobile Manufacturing Company of Stamford, Connecticut. |
Standard | US | 1902–1905 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Stanton | US | 1901 | Stanton Manufacturing Co acquired the New England steam car business in 1901. They continued to make the cars with some improvements but ceased business the same year. |
Steamobile | US | 1901–1902 | The renamed Keene. In 1902 the factory closed because of over-production. |
Stearns | US | 1900–1904 | E.C. Stearns of Syracuse, New York owned a huge automobile parts supply store and as owner of the Stearns Automobile Co made Stearns Steam Carriages. He made the automobile company a subsidiary of E J Pennington's Anglo-American Rapid Transit Co which drained money from Stearns company making it went bankrupt. |
Sterling | US | 1901–1902 | See Empire. |
Stesroc | England | 1905–1906 | A steam car made by Johnson Brothers of Knaresborough, Yorkshire. |
Stolz | Hungary | 1911–1915 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Storck | US | 1901–1903 | Steam cars made by Frank C Storck of Red Bank, New Jersey. |
Stringer | US | 1901 | Prototype only made by Stringer Automobile Company of Marion, Ohio. |
Strouse | US | 1915 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Sunset | US | 1901–1904 | A steam car made by Dorville Libby Junior's Sunset Automobile Company of San Francisco until they switched to petrol engines. |
Taunton | US | 1901–1904 | A steam runabout built by Everitt Cameron. Cameron went on to build petrol powered cars under his name. |
Thompson | US | 1900–1902 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. There was a Thompson Automobile Company of Providence Rhode Island that made a six-passenger steam car in 1906 |
Toledo | US | 1901–1903 | A steam car first made in September 1900 by the American Bicycle Company of Toledo, later by the International Motor Car Company and then by Pope in 1903. Production ceased in 1903 and Pope contracted the Manhattan Supply Company to dispose of the remaining cars. The last were sold in 1904 at below cost. |
Tractobile | US | 1900–1902 | The Tractobile was built by E.J. Pennington's company of Carlisle between 1900–1902. While a car with that name could be ordered it was more an engine and wheels on a removable frame that could be attached to a carriage instead of horses. Very few were built. |
Trinity | US | 1900 | Possibly a name for Keene's as they were made by the Trinity Cycle Manufacturing Company. |
Triumph | US | 1900 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Turner-Miesse | England | 1902–1913 | Miesse's from Belgium built under licence in England. |
Twombly | US | 1904, 1910 | The first of Williard Twombly's three attempts to make a car. The steamer was too expensive to produce so he turned to petrol. This to proved two expensive. His 1910 version had a quick replacement engine and a body that could be changed. Unfortunately Twombly could not raise funds to manufacture the car. He tried again in 1914 with a petrol powered cyclecar, but this suffered the same fate. |
Vapomobile | England | 1902–1904 | See MCC. |
Xander | US | 1901–1902 | The Xander automobile company was founded in 1901 by John G. Xander in Reading, Pennsylvania. His first cars were steam, then gasoline engines were used. He only built his car custom order. In 1902, he stopped. |
Warfield | England | 1903 | Possibly only a prototype. |
Watch | US | 1903 | A steam car made by Watch City Automobile Company of Waltham, Massachusetts. |
Watt | US | 1901 | Named in list of steam cars—details unknown. |
Webb-Jay | US | 1908 | Racing specials largely of White Motor Company origin. |
Weidknecht | France | 1911 | Weidknecht built a steam bus in 1911. |
Westfield | US | 1902–1903 | Steam cars made by C J Moore Manufacturing Company of Westfield. |
Weyher et Richemond | France | 1905–1910 | Steam cars made by Automobiles Weyher et Richmond of Pantin, Seine. Probably no private cars built after 1907. Also known as Rexer. |
White | US | 1900–1911 | The White Motor Company was an American automobile and truck manufacturer from 1900 until 1980. The company also produced bicycles, roller skates, automatic lathes, and sewing machines. Before World War II, the company was based in Cleveland, Ohio. From 1900 to 1911 White produced steam-powered cars before switching to gasoline. |
Wood | US | 1902–1903 | A steam car made by the Wood Vapor Vehicle Company of Brooklyn, New York. |
Wood-Loco | US | 1901–1902 | A steam car made by Wood-Loco Vehicle Company of Cohoes, New York. |