Customize Consent Preferences

We use cookies to help you navigate efficiently and perform certain functions. You will find detailed information about all cookies under each consent category below.

The cookies that are categorized as "Necessary" are stored on your browser as they are essential for enabling the basic functionalities of the site. ... 

Always Active

Necessary cookies are required to enable the basic features of this site, such as providing secure log-in or adjusting your consent preferences. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable data.

No cookies to display.

Functional cookies help perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collecting feedback, and other third-party features.

No cookies to display.

Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics such as the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.

No cookies to display.

Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.

No cookies to display.

Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with customized advertisements based on the pages you visited previously and to analyze the effectiveness of the ad campaigns.

No cookies to display.

Fred Silvis, president of the Western Michigan Old Engine Club in Scottville, demonstrates how to start a Kahlenberg engine.

Story and photos by Kevin Howell

During the first week in August, a 22-acre field on the south side of Scottville will spring noisily to life with chugging, smoke-ring blowing, bellowing machinery.

They’re the sounds of 50 old engines and tractors on display in the 47th annual Old Engine and Tractor Show, Aug. 5-8, in Scottville Riverside Park, 700 E. Scottville Road. The show is hosted each day from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. by the Western Michigan Old Engine Club.

Advertisement for Stapleton Realty. The heading reads Outdoor Enthusiasts. There is a photo of a new-looking pole building with a tall bay door and a regular entry door. There is a cement pad with a picnic table in front of it. The ground is flat and there is a line of evergreen trees behind the building. The description reads: 2 Acres. Minutes to Crystal Mountain. 37-foot by 47-foot pole building on the Benzie Manistee snowmobile and A.T.V. trail. Finished inside. Well and septic and a full camper hook up. Insulated, Paneled and heated 29-foot by 28-foot shop area with an exhaust fan and a new furnace. 12-foot side walls and a 10-foot bay door. 14-foot by 8-foot heated, carpeted office or bunk area and a shower in the bathroom. Also a utility room with a utility sink and washer and dryer hook ups. near the Betsie River and M-115. $189,900. m.l.s. number is 1926929. Contact Christine Stapleton on her mobile phone by text or call. 231-499-2698. Click on this ad to be taken to the website. Equal Housing Opportunity. Designated REALTOR.Roadside Cabins. Modern Amenities. www.highway31cabins.com. Highway 31 Cabins conveniently located along US highway 31 between Ludington and Manistee. 10400 North U.S. Highway 31, Free Soil, Michigan. Call 231-464--5351. Click on this ad to be taken to their website.Grand Traverse Regional Land Conservancy ad is an aerial view of the Betsie Bay channel leading to Lake Michigan, a.k.a. Frankfort Harbor, from the viewpoint of Elberta and a view of Elberta Beach, with the Frankfort Coast Guard station and a marina on the far right. Words superimposed on the photograph are: Protected Land means saving your favorite places." and the conservancy just saved 36 acres and lots of shoreline in Elberta including for a waterfront park. Click on the ad to be taken to the organization's website.

Following a tip from my editor about a particular old engine from a fishing boat in Manistee, I contacted the club for a visit to their base camp in the southeast corner of the park. If you’ve never been, the Pere Marquette River runs alongside a public access and campground before you reach the club’s grounds.

President Fred Silvis and designated club electrician Leo Majeski were sitting at a table in one of the club’s pavilions and drinking coffee when I arrived. With a cup of coffee offered by Silvis in hand, I listened as he told me a little about the engine in question.

“This is our inventory of stuff here on the grounds,” he said, pulling out some papers. “It’s a Kahlenberg, a three-cylinder. I don’t know the year, but the (previous) owner we got it from was Ron Walters of Walters Fisheries (in Ludington).”

Silvis relayed the story he had heard, that the old engine had originally come from the fishing tug Judy Ann, a 42-foot steel-hulled boat in Manistee.

“I guess when the guys went to get it, they had it all unbolted,” Silvis began, “but when they went to lift it, the engine had so much fish goo around it, the whole boat came out of the water with it.

“They rapped on the boat a couple times, and the boat dropped down into the water.”

The Kahlenberg and the Franklin

The Kahlenberg is the chug-chug-chugging engine, as described by Majeski. When used on the fishing tug, he said the diesel engine delivered 45-54 horsepower and could manage about 10 knots on the water.

“When the Kahlenberg goes, everybody on the grounds can hear it; it’s a noisy engine, got a lot of power,” Majeski noted.

Though they don’t know the specific date the engine was donated to the club, Silvis and Majeski speculated they’ve had it for at least 25 years, about the same time the club received another old engine, the Franklin, the smoke-ring blowing machine stored in the same barn as the Kahlenberg.

The Franklin, another diesel engine, has a big flywheel and is started by injecting ether to get its single cylinder running.

“This was a salt brine engine,” Majeski said. “It takes about three people to start it.”

Silvis interjected, with a laugh, “Ha-ha, try six!” Then he added: “Martin Marietta donated this engine to us from Eastlake, Michigan.”

The two old engines are among dozens stored on the grounds; some run sawmills, planers, shingle makers, grain grinders, oil rigs, washing machines, cider presses and other machinery.

Image for Engine Club revs up for big show is of Old Engine Club member Leo Majeski as he cranks the siren on a 1925 La France Fire Truck at its home at Riverside Park in Scottville.
Old Engine Club member Leo Majeski cranks the siren on a 1925 La France fire truck at its home at Riverside Park in Scottville.

Oh, and there’s also the 1925 La France fire truck from Belden, Michigan, with a hand-cranked siren you could probably hear clear down to Detroit.

“When we take this across (the grounds), I get to ride up front and crank the siren,” Majeski said, with big kid’s grin.

All the old engines are brought out for display and demonstrations during the annual show, as well as for Youth Education Day in September when busloads of fifth and sixth graders descend on the grounds.

For the annual show, club members bring their private collections of tractors and other machines to display. The 35-member Rusted Nuts and Bolts Club will ferry another 25 pieces of equipment from Wisconsin to Ludington on the S.S. Badger.

When all those old engines fire up, it’s bound to be a raucous and entertaining weekend.

Origins of the Old Engine Club

Western Michigan Old Engine Club got its start 47 years ago at a farm south of Ludington owned by Fred Donahue. According to Silvis: “It was a hit-and-miss club, named after old Maytag washing machine engines. They would run for a while, then when they get to a low rpm; they would fire ⸺ that’s the hit ⸺ then they’ll miss, miss, and miss, then BANG, they’ll hit again.”

As the club grew in membership and machines, the group relocated to White Pine Village for several years. When the club outgrew that location, members contacted the City of Scottville. In 1990, the club moved to Riverside Park.

“They sold us this on a land contract; it’s actually a 100-year lease for one dollar a year with the stipulation that if anything happens that the club is dissolved, everything goes back to them,” Silvis said.

The club now has about 230 members comprised of locals and folks from around the country. New members are always welcome, according to Silvis.

In addition to the big annual show in August, the club also puts on antique and garden tractor pulls from spring into fall. The next Antique Tractor Pull is July 17.

Show admission for seniors ages 65 and older on Thursdays is $5, kids under 12 are free, and adults are $6.

For online information and a schedule of events go to: www.oldengineclub.org.

Kevin Howell is a transplanted freelance writer from Indiana residing in Mason County. He loves the Michigan woods, lakes and especially Michigan craft beers, not necessarily in that order. Contact him at kevin@ytci.com.

Read more about the local use of the Kahlenberg engine HERE.

Write A Comment