Monday, April 6, 2026

The Berwick Multiplex

  

The 1912-1913 Berwick Multiplex

Twice Multiplex Cars were made in the Valve Factory at Berwick - first in 1912, and again in 1953.  Both times, the cars were little more than prototypes - very few were completed. 

The 1912/13 models were designed and built by engineer Clarence Crispin, at the Multiplex valve company located on 600 Fowler Avenue in Berwick.   Crispin approached the Car and Foundry about producing the cars, but they declined. 





In 1912, Multiplex Manufacturing Company spent two years producing 14 Multiplex Cars.  "The Multiplex was a sporty, upper-priced and large car equipped with a four-cylinder engine, and offered as a Touring, a Roadster, and a Raceabout.

 A prototype "Sports" car with an 85 inches (2,200 mm) wheelbase, weighing in at just 980 pounds (440 kg) and allegedly capable of a top speed of 126 mph (203 km/h) was also built"

The Horseless Age, April 1913

The Multiplex was expensive; $3,125 for the raceabout, $3,175 for the roadster, and $3,600 (equivalent to $120,103 in 2025) for the touring car.  The Prototype sports car had an envisioned price of $4,000.  (That would be roughly $120-130,0000 in todays equivalent)



After completing just 14 cars, the company went back to just making valves.

Until the 1950s, when it decided to try again - but again, only a few were made, this time really only prototypes.  It was a beautiful car - I got to see one myself a few years at an event in Berwick. 


And it wasn't actually made by the valve company.  In 1952 they made it clear that their space may be used, but the company would not be outlaying any money for the venture.

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The Multiplex 186  By Bob Ohl
From :  Car Life, February 1954
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A homely, pale blue car made an auspicious competitive debut at the Floyd Bennett sport car races in New York last September.  Getting off slowly in the LeMans type start, it worked its way through the field of the finest 1,500 cc (91 cubic inch) cars in the East and, by the 40th lap, was led only by an OSCA and the potent Bandini of Jim Pauley.  Trailing were Porsches, MG Specials, and two Siata V8’s, one of which the newcomer had lapped.  

Plans are underway to enter this newly designed car in other competitive events and Henry Fanelli, an experienced sport car driver who piloted the Multiplex at Floyd Bennett, claims it is the finest handling car he has driven.

That Multiplex had a rather crude, handformed aluminum body on an original design chassis fitted with a stock 1,497 cc, Singer engine.  This powerplant, which was held under 4800 rpm in fourth gear, maintained an average speed of slightly under 71 mph for the approximate 100 miles it covered. 

After the mishap, another wheel was installed and the Multiplex was driven 165 miles through the New York City traffic to the factory at Berwick, Pa.  This performance could be envied, for the competitive temperament of the Multiplex appears to be matched by its gentle town and country handling.

The Multiplex 186 is the brainchild of ‘Fritz’ Bingaman, longtime enthusiast of sport cars and former stock car and dirt track driver.  One of this country’s top machine designers, who has spent years in the heavy industry fields, Bingaman has forsaken all other work to concentrate on the development of an aggressive American sport car in the 1,500 cc class.


Chassis layout and suspension were his basic considerations and the body was designed afterward to functionally enclose the real machine hidden underneath.  Bingaman has developed a vehicle designed for roadability and handling qualities, rather than dreaming up a futuristic custom creation and then engineering the needed members underneath the skin. 

He has aimed at that segment of the sport car field which is currently represented on the American scene only by adaptations of Detroit Iron and the now defunct Crosley.  According to Bingaman, the level of U.S. sport car competition has reached the point where a limited-production, American-built automobile in the 1,500 cc category should find a market if it is designed in the true sport car tradition and has proved it has the guts to match imported equivalents. 

Consequently, he found that the Multiplex Manufacturing Company of Berwick, Penna., had the facilities to construct such a car, and is ready to offer limited production of such a model when such action should be warranted.  With the support of Ben and Fred Crispin of the 50-year old concern, the original model was evolved but not without many labor pains.

This first car, subjected to much testing and road work, was the one raced at Floyd Bennett.  Its exceptionally rigid tubular truss type chassis carries a front suspension which, although composed of normal components of ‘A’ frames and leaf springs, is unusual in that the arrangement is a departure from usual Detroit geometry. 

The individual suspension layout, which makes use of Monroe tubular 50/50 shocks, is such that the track doesn’t change and the wheels remain vertical at all times.  The soundness of the theory is proven by the fact that after thousands of miles of testing and racing, the 5.90-15 Goodyear tires show very little wear, and roadability and handling are superb. 

A wheelbase of 85 inches uses a front track of 46 inches and rear of 45 3/8 inches.  Total chassis weight with the Singer engine is 980 pounds.  The center of gravity is 1 3/4 inches above the centerline of the wheels, with a minimum ground clearance of 5 1/2 inches. 

 
The steering was reworked from a standard Ross box giving two turns lock to lock.  A Borg-Warner rear end and transmission also are standard.  This original car with aluminum body scaled 1,925 pounds wet, with weight distribution divided at 52% front, 48% rear.

From the first test run the design proved not only feasible, but practical and promising.  With any newly designed vehicle, trouble spots are to be expected and the Multiplex developed a major problem when power plants were considered.  At first, to stay within the American market, a modified air cooled Harley-Davidson 74 Twin was fitted.

The coupe, which weighs 1,705 pounds, is fitted with quality appointments.  Styling resembles the Cisitalia done by Farina.  Price, with a delivery date of approximately one month after placing an order, is in the $4,000 bracket.  This model, Bingaman says, will have a top speed of 126 mph.  No price has been set on the roadster and the Multiplex company is considering selling the bare chassis, since any engine can be fitted.

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April 3rd 1953 - first sports car model taken to NY for testing


Although few cars were ever produced, there's an abundance of brochures and marketing materials found for them.

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Multiplex 186 Brochure #1 (1953-1954):

The Biggest Little Car In The World

Built By: Multiplex Manufacturing Company, Berwick Pennsylvania

A real sports car designed by a prominent car enthusiast and engineer.  This car can serve the dual purpose of racing and conventional driving.

Among the outstanding features of the “186” are its air cooled twin motor, tubular steel frame design construction and aluminum body.

Custom built, many of the owner’s wishes may be incorporated, in minor changes here and there, to suit particular requirements.

Due to the design of the car, it is light in weight and has superior road-ability and cornering characteristics.  The type of suspension and the low center of gravity are also important factors in obtaining these results, as well as the weight to horsepower ratio, which in the case of the “186” is 18 lbs per horsepower. 

 This is a truly significant first in motor car design, and naturally means economical operation.








Sunday, April 5, 2026

Resources - Facebook Photo Albums


There are so many photo albums on my fb page that I can have difficulty finding the right album myself.  This page is an index - hopefully each link will take you directly to the correct album.  However, that doesn't always work with facebook - it just depends on the device, and how facebook is working that week.

This link will take you to all of the facebook albums:


"Searching For" - An album of photo requests


ALBUMS BY TOWN:


ALBUMS BY THEME:
ALBUMS BY HOLIDAY:

ALBUMS BY EVENT:


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Work Notes
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Update this, redo it, something...
Where To Find - an album of the blog indexes



Combine Snow Geese albums
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.3322632737752851&type=3
2020 https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.3322632737752851&type=3

Fort Augusta Album
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.382789283848077&type=3


Barn Owls Albums
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.474204001373271&type=3

Sunbury Albums
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.717912737002395&type=3

North'd Historical Society
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.684784356981900&type=3

Lewisburg
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.953741873419479&type=3

Resource: Dallin Aerial Surveys


The Dallin Aerial Surveys

The  Dallin Aerial Survey Company was based at the small Philadelphia Municipal Airport, near where the International Airport stands today.
From  1924 to 1941, Dallin Aerial Survey Company took thousands of aerial photographs throughout the Mid-Atlantic region.   Using open airplanes and specially-designed aerial cameras with 8x10 inch glass plate negatives, the clarity of these images is an absolute marvel.   These photos  are a valuable resource for historians and genealogists today.

Most of the aerial images were taken from between 400 and 1,500 feet altitude, with the camera mounted on the side of the fuselage, facing forward, at an angle of about 45-degrees.


  J. Victor Dallin was a former member of the Royal Air Force and veteran of the First World War.  
 

Dallin Aerial Survey Of Sunbury RR Shops in the 1936 Flood

A crop from the above photo - showing the incredible details available from these photos.

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WHERE TO FIND THE DALLIN AERIAL SURVEYS
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My FB Posts With Images and Crops:


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1897-1991





 "In 1924, Colonel J. (John) Victor Dallin (1897-1991)founded the Dallin Aerial Surveys Company. Dallin was a Royal Flying Corps-trained pilot who served in World War One; in the latter stages of the war, he was sent on aerial photography service for reconnaissance missions.

After the war, in 1919, he put that experience to use when joined Bishop and Barker, a firm which did some aerial survey work. In the 1920s, he worked at the Philadelphia Aero Service Corporation, which operated a flying school in South Philadelphia. In 1924, he left to establish his own company and started Dallin Aerial Surveys as a single proprietorship.

Dallin Aerial Surveys produced photographs like this image of Center City Philadelphia, featuring City Hall, which was taken at 5:40 A.M. on June 24, 1934. Its clients included newspapers, businesses, municipalities, and private individuals, who contracted with the company for aerial images of factories, private estates, schools, country clubs, towns, airports, rivers, and newsworthy sites and events.

During its years of operation, the company produced not only oblique photographs of various sites for commercial purposes, but did a considerable amount of aerial photogrammerty (aerial mapping of a city, specifically the city of Philadelphia). In order to carry out his work, Dallin designed several specialized cameras and mounters. A camera used for film negatives in the 1930s had a thirty inch lens so that high vertical views could be made without flying excessively low over urban areas.

The Dallin Aerial Surveys Company closed in 1941, reportedly because he rejoined the armed services for WWII. Today, the company's photographs live at Hagley Library in our collection of Dallin Aerial Survey Company photographs (Accession 1970.200). Our Digital Archive also more than 7,800 images from the Dallin Aerial Survey Company collection. The majority of the photographs concentrate on the Mid-Atlantic region covering a period from 1924 to 1939. 

To learn more about the Dallin Company and the collection, visit our online exhibit A Bird's Eye View of the Delaware Valley: The Photography of the Dallin Aerial Survey Company"

Resources - Online Digital Photo Archives

 

Tips for searching:
 Search by county - such as "Lycoming",  "Northumberland", etc
Always search towns as town, PA and then also as town, Pennsylvania
Add the word "postcard" to a google image search 

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ONLINE DIGITAL PHOTO ARCHIVES
A List
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Find an Index to the Facebook Photo Albums on my Valley Girl Views Page, here:


Archives:

More: College Libraries often have digital archives - and sometimes college libraries in other states have images from our area.  For instance, some of our local maps are found in the University of Texas Archives.  The same is true of public libraries in other states. 



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ABOUT MY OWN ARCHIVES
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Folders by town, on my external hard drive

Hands down the question I get asked most often is "Where did I find these photos".    When I don't answer, or tell you I don't know - I am not trying to be difficult.  I really don't remember where most of them came from.  

Folders By Theme, on my external hard drive

Often the answer is "A folder on my hard drive.".   That's not helpful, I know. It's hard enough to keep track of what the photos are of, let alone where they came from.  

Often what you see on facebook is the process of me sorting photos from my flash drives and cdroms onto my external hard drive.  I typically pull a folder or two over to my laptop, then sort them into the external drive by town and or theme.  

In addition to all of that, I have a folder on my laptop labeled "VGV WORK".  That's where the projects I am currently working on are stored.  And that's where I save all of the random things I find while researching something else - because of all the ways I collect photos, I collect the most while researching something unrelated.  I'll be searching for one thing, find something else, and save it to my work folder. Then I try to sort that work folder out once a week, "or so".  

Some of the other places I have found photos:

  • libraries and historical societies.
  • buildings /Restaurants with historical photos on the walls.
  • old books

I am a genealogist, and decades ago, I was one of the first in our "circle" of acquaintances with a portable handheld scanner - before cell phones.  People would ask me to come to their homes and scan photos for them, and I would take the opportunity to scan anything they had of local interest, that they were willing to let me scan. 

After writing this blog for years now, people regularly send me photos and papers.  There's a small group of elderly women who get together regularly (for another purpose) and they talk about my posts.  Over time, one of the women learned how to contact me, and now the others bring her things to send to me.  I have never met any of these women, but I love them, and when they send me a question, I can guarantee you I put answering their question as near to the top of my list as  I possibly can.  :-)

Then there are postcard sites, ebay listings, auction listings, photos shared on facebook..  AND there are dozens of photo archive sites.  

I usually cannot tell you where a photo came from.  But I can give you a list of sites I would recommend checking, if you are looking for photos of a certain town or event - those are the sites I have listed above.