Energy & Power

The Museum's collections on energy and power illuminate the role of fire, steam, wind, water, electricity, and the atom in the nation's history. The artifacts include wood-burning stoves, water turbines, and windmills, as well as steam, gas, and diesel engines. Oil-exploration and coal-mining equipment form part of these collections, along with a computer that controlled a power plant and even bubble chambers—a tool of physicists to study protons, electrons, and other charged particles.
A special strength of the collections lies in objects related to the history of electrical power, including generators, batteries, cables, transformers, and early photovoltaic cells. A group of Thomas Edison's earliest light bulbs are a precious treasure. Hundreds of other objects represent the innumerable uses of electricity, from streetlights and railway signals to microwave ovens and satellite equipment.


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Jupiter, Steam Locomotive
- Description
- The “Jupiter” steam locomotive was built in August of 1876 by the Baldwin Locomotive Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The locomotive was commissioned by the Santa Cruz Railroad in California for light freight and passenger service in the agricultural region between Santa Cruz and Watsonville. The Santa Cruz Railroad was built to "narrow gauge" of 36-inch width, instead of the more-common "standard" gauge of 56-1/2 inches. The idea of narrow gauge was that it would reduce construction costs in the railroad-building mania of America's post-Civil War era, where miles of rails were built so quickly that tracks were often necessarily cheap and uneven tracks. This necessitated the "American" type engine that included four small steering wheels in front and four larger driving wheels in the back (commonly called a "4-4-0" layout). The four rear driving wheels have an “equalized” spring suspension, so that as the wheels on each side rock differentially up-and-down over uneven track, the weight borne by each of the wheels stays very close to equal.
- The Santa Cruz Railroad used the Jupiter until 1883, when it was sold to the International Railway of Central America (IRCA), a United Fruit Company subsidiary. Jupiter was used on the IRCA's Ocos Branch rail line in northwestern Guatemala—hauling mostly bananas and some coffee, with few passengers. In the 1960s D.C. Transit owner O. Roy Chalk bought an interest in the successor to the IRCA and shipped the battered and derelict Jupiter from Guatemala up to Washington, D.C., where it made its home in a children's park he built at 7th & O Streets. Smithsonian curator John H. White, Jr. persuaded Mr. Chalk to donate the locomotive to the Smithsonian for its Bicentennial Exhibition in 1976, where Smithsonian staff then restored Jupiter to its present state.
- Date made
- 1876
- associated dates
- 1974 / 1974
- 1876 / 1876
- 1885 / 1885
- 1904 / 1904
- user
- Guatemala Central Railroad
- International Railways of Central America
- Santa Cruz Railroad
- United Fruit Company
- maker
- Baldwin Locomotive Works
- ID Number
- TR.335093.01
- accession number
- 252681
- catalog number
- 335093.01
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
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