How come few in York know about S. Morgan Smith anymore?

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This turbine, also known as a runner, was manufactured at Voith Siemens Hydro's West Manchester Township plant in 2006. (See related photos below.) Background posts: Glatfelter, Smith top industrial legacy list, Voith turbine runner legacy of former pastor/entrepreneur, York made big, heavy things - and was immensely proud of it.

A student in my OLLI class at Penn State York wondered why S. Morgan Smith, an industrial giant in the late 1800s, isn't better known today.

The short answer is that no company with Smith connections bears the name of the Moravian-minister-turned-entrepreneur today... .

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In 2004, Exelon Corp. selected Voith to update four units at Conowingo Hydroelectric Station, pictured above. This Susquehanna River dam impounds the river about five miles south of the Pennsylvania line.

Smith primarily lost his name after Allis Chalmers purchased the company and changed its name to the Allis brand.

But those who work for Johnson Controls, Voith Hydro, American Hydro and Precision Components probably know that S. Morgan Smith, directly or indirectly, founded their companies.

Here are a few other questions or comments posed posed by students in my OLLI class:

Q. How did people get across the Susquehanna River before the bridges?
A. One method was the use of flat-bottomed ferries that could be poled across.

Q. Where was the York's Cottage Hill Academy?
A. This finishing school for Southern girls was located on the north bank of the Codorus, across the creek from the Susquehanna Commerce Center. It was on what is now Cottage Hill Road.

Q. The Susquehanna River provided a buffer against possible British attack during the Continental Congress' stay in York in 1777-78. What role did the Codorus Creekplay?
A. No role, but it did have something to do with York's location. York's founders settled the town in 1741 where the Monocacy Road crossed the Codorus.

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The truck transporting the runner out of York, Pa., from the Voith plant in 2006, has 78 wheels and requires two drivers, one in front and one in back. S. Morgan Smith was a predecessor of Voith, now in West Manchester Township.

8 Comments

I am a docent at the Folsom Powerhouse here in California. We are in the process of completing our new visitors center. 4 s.Morgan Smith turbines were used to drive 4 GE AC generators which on July 13, 1895, sent power 22 miles to Sacramento. this was sthe first such transmission in the world and was the proto-type for our present electrical network here in the U.S. I am also writing a condensed book on the power plant and am finding difficulty in locating data on these turbines. Do you have any history or historical items I could refer to? Thank You.

If you tour the Hydro Electric turbines inside the Hydro Electric plants on the Susquehanna River you will notice very huge turbines. Some of these turbines are still the original turbines from the early 1900’s and are still in use. They carry brass plates identifying them with the name "S. Morgan Smith". Most of these dams are open to the public for tours. I have seen the "S. Morgan Smith" turbines in the Safe Harbor hydro electric plant but I believe they can be found in the other hydro plants as well, including Holtwood, York Haven, and Conowingo dams. Talk about clean energy sources, hydro electric plants are the cleanest way I know to produce electricity. Why don't we try to build more hydro plants??

I attended the First Moravian Church on 39 North Duke Street in the city of York for a number of years. Almost everyone in that church knows about S. Morgan Smith because it was the church where he was the preacher back in the late 1860’s and early 1870’s While serving as the pastor of the First Moravian Church, he developed a throat problem that impeded his speech to the point he couldn't preach anymore. He left the ministry and started a washing machine company which later developed into the manufacture of hydro electric turbines. I believe he left the ministry in 1871.

As a member of the First Moravian Church one cannot help but realize the contribution of S. Morgan Smith and his family. There are several beautiful stain glass windows in his honor and his family's honor gracing the sanctuary. One such window is the beautiful stain glass window in the front of the sanctuary entitled, "Christ On the Road to Emmaus". Experts believe this to be one of the finest examples of stained glass in the United States.

You can visit the S. Morgan Smith and family grave site in Prospect Hill Cemetery. It is actually a circle located near the mausoleum. Some of S. Morgan Smith's grandchildren were instrumental in the development of Moravian College in Bethlehem, PA.

For additional information on S. Morgan Smith and the beautiful "Christ On the Road to Emmaus" stained glass window presented in his memory by his wife, Emma Fahs Smith, check the First Moravian Church's website

http://www.firstmoravianchurch.worthyofpraise.org./windows.html

The Chancel Window is unique: A memoriam to Rev. S. Morgan Smith who died Easter Sunday 1903, was given by his widow, Emma Fahs Smith. Noteworthy to this awesome window, apparently is the only motif of Jesus, Cleopas and the third man en-route to Emmaus, designed under the personal direction of John Rudy, exclusively for First Moravian having several special facets: The lapis blue of Christ's tunic, an overlay glass supplied by Louis Comfort Tiffany Studios of New York; the manufacture formula of this special glass was destroyed in a fire at their studios in the early 1910s, and has not been able to be exacted as shown to this day.

Another unique feature is in the man left of Jesus: inserted at the heel of his foot is a triangular blue piece of glass; it is reported that the Rev. S. M. Smith sons, visiting Europe in the early 20th Century visited Prague, Poland seeking the Cathedral that Jan Hus, the founding Father of the Moravian Church preached from when serving his Lord as a Catholic Bishop. This cathedral lay in ruin from decay and neglect. From a rose type window over the chancel, a piece of glass was secured for installation in the Emmaus window.

C. William Dize, a member of our congregation who passed away in recent years and eminent Architect in York recalled in his youth that John Horace Rudy, the artist whose studios created this marvel, and Mr. Rudy gaining in age would visit First Church regularly - sitting and visually drink in its artistry. He was reported to say that it was one of the most beautiful commissions he ever undertook and was glad it was around the corner from his offices so he could visit at will whenever the spirit spoke.

James, thanks for all the enlightening info.

York's Moravian congregation plays an informational role in its Revolutionary War story because of the diaries their pastors left behind. Eyewitness accounts of the Continental Congress' visit to York are rare but the Moravian pastors did an admirable job of preserving a record for future generation. Not to huckster, but check out my "Nine Months in York Towns." Jonathan Stayer also referred to the Moravian diaries in his honors thesis at Messiah College, still the most authoritative work around on Camp Security.

- Jim McClure

Dear Sirs:

I'm about to quote for the Puerto Rico aqueduct and sewer authority for project to refurbish one 16" cone valve. The valve WAS fabricated by S Morgan Smith co. and has a serie VB2113.

PLEASE LET ME KNOW IF YOU HAVE ANY LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE FOR SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO, USA.

FOR FURTHER ASISTANCE PLESE CONTACT ME. 787-403-1697.

JAMES

James, York's Voith Hydro is a descendant of S. Morgan Smith, and you might direct inquiries that way. Web site: http://www.york.voithsiemens.com/e-york.htm.


Jim McClure

One other aspect of Stephen Morgan Smith not mentioned here: He was a veteran of the Civil War. He didn't carry a gun, though. He was chaplain of the 200th Pennsylvania Infantry, serving from his enlistment on September 3, 1864, through his honorable discharge May 30, 1865.

Dennis,

Yes, thanks for info. Scott Mingus found S. Morgan Smith's diary that Moravian pastors kept and used some of it in our new book. Because it's a pastor's log, Smith has no entries from his Civil War days. But he does tell up to that about the Confederates coming to York.
Jim

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This page contains a single entry by Jim McClure published on April 21, 2008 10:28 AM.

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