File:LMS freight containers on lorry and rail wagon (CJ Allen, Steel Highway, 1928).jpg|Transferring freight containers on the
London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS; 1928) File:Gueterwagen anagoria.JPG|Freight car in railway museum
Bochum-Dahlhausen, showing four different UIC-590 pa-containers File:Conex box.jpeg|Side of Vietnam era U.S. Army steel 'CONEX' box container (3D) File:Maersk Line containers in late 1960s (7312784586).jpg|In 1975, many containers still featured riveted aluminum sheet-and-post wall construction, instead of welded, corrugated steel.
Origins Containerization has its origins in early
coal mining regions in England beginning in the late 18th century. In 1766
James Brindley designed the box boat 'Starvationer' with ten wooden containers, to transport coal from
Worsley Delph (quarry) to Manchester by
Bridgewater Canal. In 1795,
Benjamin Outram opened the Little Eaton Gangway, upon which coal was carried in
wagons built at his Butterley Ironwork. The horse-drawn wheeled wagons on the gangway took the form of containers, which, loaded with coal, could be transshipped from canal
barges on the
Derby Canal, which Outram had also promoted. By the 1830s, railways were carrying containers that could be transferred to other modes of transport. The
Liverpool and Manchester Railway in the UK was one of these, making use of "simple rectangular timber boxes" to convey coal from Lancashire collieries to Liverpool, where a crane transferred them to horse-drawn carriages. Originally used for moving coal on and off barges, "loose boxes" were used to containerize coal from the late 1780s, at places like the
Bridgewater Canal. By the 1840s, iron boxes were in use as well as wooden ones. The early 1900s saw the adoption of closed container boxes designed for movement between road and rail.
Creation of international standards The first international standard for containers was established by the
Bureau International des Containers et du Transport Intermodal in 1933, and a second one in 1935, primarily for transport between European countries. American containers at this time were not standardized, and these early containers were not yet stackable – neither in the U.S. nor Europe. In November 1932, the first container terminal in the world was opened by the Pennsylvania Rail Road Company in
Enola, Pennsylvania. Containerization was developed in Europe and the US as a way to revitalize rail companies after the
Wall Street crash of 1929, in New York, which resulted in economic collapse and a drop in all modes of transport.
Mid 20th century innovations In April 1951 at
Zürich Tiefenbrunnen railway station, the
Swiss Museum of Transport and the
Bureau International des Containers (BIC) held demonstrations of container systems for representatives from a number of European countries, and from the United States. A system was selected for Western Europe, based on the Netherlands' system for consumer goods and waste transportation called
Laadkisten (lit. "Loading chests"), in use since 1934. This system used
roller containers for transport by rail, truck and ship, in various configurations up to capacity, and up to in size. This became the first post World War II European railway standard of the
International Union of Railways –
UIC-590, known as "pa-Behälter". It was implemented in the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, West Germany, Switzerland, Sweden and Denmark. The use of standardized steel
shipping containers began during the late 1940s and early 1950s, when commercial shipping operators and the US military started developing such units. In 1948 the
U.S. Army Transportation Corps developed the "Transporter", a rigid, corrugated steel container, able to carry . It was long, wide, and high, with double doors on one end, was mounted on skids, and had lifting rings on the top four corners. After proving successful in Korea, the Transporter was developed into the Container Express
(CONEX) box system in late 1952. Based on the Transporter, the size and capacity of the Conex were about the same, but the system was made modular, by the addition of a smaller, half-size unit of long, wide and high. Conexes could be stacked three high, and protected their contents from the elements. From 1949 onward, engineer
Keith Tantlinger repeatedly contributed to the development of containers, as well as their handling and transportation equipment. In 1949, while at Brown Trailers Inc. of
Spokane, Washington, he modified the design of their
stressed skin aluminum 30-foot trailer, to fulfil an order of two-hundred containers that could be stacked two high, for Alaska-based
Ocean Van Lines. Steel castings on the top corners provided lifting and securing points. In 1955, trucking magnate
Malcom McLean bought
Pan-Atlantic Steamship Company, to form a container shipping enterprise, later known as
Sea-Land. The first containers were supplied by Brown Trailers Inc, where McLean met
Keith Tantlinger, and hired him as vice-president of engineering and research. Under the supervision of Tantlinger, a new Sea-Land container was developed, the length determined by the maximum length of trailers then allowed on Pennsylvanian highways. Each container had a frame with eight corner castings that could withstand stacking loads. Tantlinger also designed automatic
spreaders for handling the containers, as well as the
twistlock mechanism that connects with the corner castings.
Modern form Containers in their modern 21st-century form first began to gain widespread use around 1956. Businesses began to devise a structured process to use and to get optimal benefits from the role and use of shipping containers. Over time, the invention of the modern telecommunications of the late 20th century made it highly beneficial to have standardized shipping containers and made these shipping processes more standardized, modular, easier to schedule, and easier to manage. Two years after McLean's first container ship, the
Ideal X, started container shipping on the US East Coast,
Matson Navigation followed suit between California and Hawaii. Just like
Pan-Atlantic's containers, Matson's were wide and high, but due to California's different traffic code Matson chose to make theirs long. In 1968, McLean began container service to South Vietnam for the US military with great success.
Modern ISO standards ISO standards for containers were published between 1968 and 1970 by the International Maritime Organization. These standards allow for more consistent loading, transporting, and unloading of goods in ports throughout the world, thus saving time and resources. The International Convention for Safe Containers (CSC) is a 1972 regulation by the
Inter-governmental Maritime Consultative Organization on the safe handling and transport of containers. It decrees that every container traveling internationally be fitted with a CSC safety-approval plate. This holds essential information about the container, including age, registration number, dimensions and weights, as well as its strength and maximum stacking capability.
Impact of industry changes on workers Longshoremen and related unions around the world struggled with this revolution in shipping goods. For example, by 1971 a clause in the
International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) contract stipulated that the work of "stuffing" (filling) or "stripping" (emptying) a container within of a port must be done by ILA workers, or if not done by ILA, that the shipper needed to pay royalties and penalties to the ILA. Unions for truckers and consolidators argued that the ILA rules were not valid work preservation clauses, because the work of stuffing and stripping containers away from the pier had not traditionally been done by ILA members. Marc Levinson, author of
Outside the Box: How Globalization Changed from Moving Stuff to Spreading Ideas and
The Box: How the Shipping Container Made the World Smaller and the World Economy Bigger, said in an interview: Because of delays in the process, it's taking a container longer to go from its origin to its final destination where it's unloaded, so the container is in use longer for each trip. You've just lost a big hunk of the total capacity because the containers can't be used as intensively. We've had in the United States an additional problem, which is that the ship lines typically charge much higher rates on services from Asia to North America than from North America to Asia. This has resulted in complaints, for example, from farmers and agricultural companies, that it's hard to get containers in some parts of the country because the ship lines want to ship them empty back to Asia, rather than letting them go to South Dakota and load over the course of several days. So we've had exporters in the United States complaining that they have a hard time finding a container that they can use to send their own goods abroad. ==Description==