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From the 1920's through 1937 billboard reefers were some of the most colorful freight cars to ever grace an American railroad. Billboard reefers came about when freight car leasing companies realized they could make more money by letting the companies leasing their cars paint billboard style ads on the sides of the cars. The railroads didn't like this for whatever reason and complained to the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC), which issued a ruling which effectively eliminated the billboard reefer from America's railways
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Reefers-shorty-Anheuser-Busch-Malt-Nutrine_ACF_builders_photo_pre-1911.jpg
Chris,were billboards removed from all reefers by1937,or just no new ones allowed anymore?
If Gregg Mahlhov was still around he could straighten this all out
Most all of the paint schemes you may have seen are usually accurate (taken with a grain of salt of course). If a company wanted to "lease" a car and have their logo painted on the side of a reefer, there were plenty of operators that would allow them to do so. Just because a car advertized beer or meat or whatever, it didn't mean that is what it had inside (unless the car was OWNED by the shipper and/or it was in restricted service). A billboard car could have anything inside. The following shipping companies were known for having billboard adverts (but there were a great many others, these are just some of the larger companies): American Refrigerator Transit ARTUnion Refrigerator Transit URTXNorth American Dispatch NADXNorthwestern Refrigerator Line NWXThe larger meat packers also owned their own cars and they were usually restricted for shipping their own product. The following are examples of some of the larger meat packing companies who had billboard cars:Swift SRLXRath RPRXArmour ARLXWilson WCLXMorrell MORXIt was the shippers who actually got billboard reefers banned. Usually, the railroad didn't care what the car said on it. If a company ordered a reefer to be delivered, the railroad delivered a reefer. If that reefer went to a meat packer or beer producer and had a competing companies logo on the side, the railroad didn't care, but the shipper did.In July 1934, the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) enacted regulation #201 banning billboard advertisements on LEASED freight cars. Then again in 1937, the ICC banned all billboard cars from interchange service bringing the billboards to an end.