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Classic Railroad Quiz (at least 50 years old).

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Posted by wanswheel on Thursday, June 4, 2009 8:17 PM

N&W had a Cannonball train in 1949, New York to Norfolk, one sleeper.

http://imagebase.lib.vt.edu/view_record.php?URN=ns3688&mode=popup

Roy Acuff might sing Wabash Cannonball, depending on the whether.

http://www.jazz-on-line.com/a/ramw/1938_223.ram

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Posted by al-in-chgo on Thursday, June 4, 2009 6:13 PM

IIRC the Wabash Cannon, while old enough to fit this site, was not really a legendary train. The Wabash named its train in the late 1940s hoping that some of the glamour of the folk song would rub off.  That came home to haunt N&W in the late Sixties when they filed with ICC to discontinue the train, but were met with a great deal of opposition from people who had been told by media that the train was the last survivor of a glorious tradition.  The "tradition" was only about 20 years old. 

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Thursday, June 4, 2009 10:01 AM

The LIRR "Cannon Ball" ran between Long Island City and Montauk on Fridays only, and may have been an all-parlor car consist.

The other would be the N&W "Wabash Cannon Ball" between Detroit and St. Louis, which ran until April 30, 1971 and had no first-class accomodations at the end.  It may have had a parlor car at earlier dates.

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Posted by KCSfan on Thursday, June 4, 2009 6:31 AM

Upon checking to see why there was no recent activity on this thread I was chagrined to see that Mike had declared me the winner of the last question and I was the one at fault for not posting another. Sorry about that guys but here's my long over due question.

Over the years many railroads had trains that were either officially or unofficially named "Cannon Ball". To the best of my knowledge only two remained by the mid 1950's. What railroads ran the last two Cannon Balls, what were their routes and what first class accommodations were available on each of the two trains?  

Mark

 

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Posted by Texas Zepher on Thursday, May 28, 2009 9:24 PM

 Since Mark already listed my first choice, I'll guess the Perth & Amboy.

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Posted by wanswheel on Thursday, May 28, 2009 9:21 PM
Mark, yes it was C&A, however John Quincy Adams referred to it as the Amboy and Bordentown Railway, which was descriptive until 1834. That was Cornelius Vanderbilt's first train ride too. I guess it's your turn. --Mike
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Posted by KCSfan on Thursday, May 28, 2009 8:29 PM

Mike,

Was the railroad the Camden & Amboy?

Mark

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Posted by wanswheel on Thursday, May 28, 2009 10:31 AM

That's right. Now what railroad?  Here's a large hint:

From New York to Philadelphia by John Quincy Adams

Friday, November 8, 1833

Blessed, ever blessed be the name of God, that I am alive and have escaped unhurt from the most dreadful catastrophe that ever my eyes beheld! We arrived at New York at half past six this morning. I took leave of Mr. Harrod, his daughter, my niece Elizabeth, took a hack with Mr. Potter, and crossed from the East to the North River, put my baggage into the steamboat Independence, Captain Douglas, and walked to the City Hotel. I found that my wife and family proceeded thence last Monday on their way to Washington. There was a card of invitation to attend a pubic dinner to be given to Commodore Chauncey to-morrow; to which I wrote a declining answer. I then returned to the steamboat, which left the wharf at eight, and landed the passengers at Amboy about twenty minutes past ten. The boat was crowded almost to suffocation, and people of every land and language seemed congregated in it — among the rest, a whole tribe of wild Irish, whose language I now for the first time heard spoken. The only persons of the passengers whom I knew were David B. Ogden, of New York, and Dr. McDowell, whom Dr. Condict introduced to me last winter at Washington, and who was then a Professor at Princeton College, but has since left it and has removed to Philadelphia. There were upwards of two hundred passengers in the railroad cars. There were two locomotive engines, A and B, each drawing an accommodation car, a sort of moving stage, in a square, with open railing, a platform, and a row of benches holding forty or fifty persons; then four or five cars in the form of large stage coaches, each in three compartments, with doors of entrance on both sides, and two opposite benches, on each of which sat four passengers. Each train was closed with a high, quadrangular, open-railed baggage-wagon, in which the baggage of all the passengers in the train was heaped up, the whole covered with an oil-cloth. I was in car B, No. 1, and of course in the second train. Of the first ten miles, two were run in four minutes, marked by a watch of a Mr. De Yong, in the same car and division with me. They stopped, oiled the wheels, and proceeded. We had gone about five miles further, and had traversed one mile in one minute and thirty-six seconds, when the front left wheel of the car in which I was, having taken fire and burned for several minutes, slipped off the rail. The pressure on the right side of the car, then meeting resistance, raised it with both wheels from the rail, and it was oversetting on the left side, but the same pressure on the car immediately behind raised its left side from the rail till it actually overset to the right, and, in oversetting, brought back the car in which I was, to stand on the four wheels, and saved from injury all the passengers in it. The train was stopped, I suppose within five seconds of the time when our wheel slipped off the rail, but it was then going at the rate of sixty feet in a second, and was dragged nearly two hundred feet before it could stop. Of sixteen persons in two of the three compartments of the car that overset, one only escaped unhurt — a Dr. Cuyler. One side of the car was stove in, and almost demolished. One man, John C. Stedman, of Raleigh, North Carolina, was so dreadfully mangled that he died within ten minutes; another, named, I believe, Welles, of Pennsylvania, can probably not survive the day.
Captain Vanderbilt had his leg broken, as had Mr. West, minister of the Episcopal Church at Newport, Rhode Island; Mrs. Bartlett, wife of Lieutenant Bartlett, of the U. S. Corps of Engineers, and her sister, dangerously hurt; her child, about three years old, is not expected to live; Mr. and Mrs. Charles, of St. Louis, Missouri, severely cut and bruised; a Mr. Dreyfuss, of Philadelphia, cut in the head and sprained in the back; and six other persons, among whom are Dr. McDowell and a young lady with him, gashed in the head and otherwise wounded. The scene of sufferance was excruciating. Men, women, and a child scattered along the road, bleeding, mangled, moaning, writhing in torture, and dying, was a trial of feeling to which I had never before been called; and when the thought came over me that a few yards more of pressure on the car in which I was would have laid me a prostrate corpse like him who was before my eyes, or a cripple for life; and, more insupportable still, what if my wife and grandchild had been in the car behind me! Merciful God! how can the infirmity of my nature express or feel the gratitude that should swell in my bosom that this torture, a thousand-fold worse than death, has been spared me? At my request, a coroner's inquest was called upon the deceased. The other dying man was left at Hightstown, three miles beyond where the disaster happened; and, after a detention of nearly three hours, the train was resumed, and, leaving the two broken cars behind, the rest proceeded to Bordentown, thirty-five miles from Amboy. The coroner's inquest, held by a magistrate of the court, had been sworn, and I had given my testimony before we left the fatal spot. Several of the wounded were left at Hightstown. The rest were transported on cushions from the cars over the railway to Bordentown, and thence with us, in the steamboat New Philadelphia, to Philadelphia. On reaching the wharf, the Rev. Mr. Brackenridge came on board, and told me he had heard I had been seriously injured by the accident on the railway. Apprehensive that such rumors might circulate and reach my family, I wrote on board the steamboat to my wife, at Washington, and to my son Charles, at Boston, and dispatched the letters to the post-office at Philadelphia. We landed at Chestnut Street wharf between six and seven in the evening, and I took lodgings with Mr. Potter, at the United States Hotel. I resolved to proceed on my journey to-morrow morning, but called and spent an hour of the evening at Mr. John Sergeant's...

http://www.masshist.org/jqadiaries/doc.cfm?id=jqad39_178

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Thursday, May 28, 2009 10:04 AM
wanswheel

Actually former President and incumbent Congressman in 1833.

That would be John Quincy Adams

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Posted by daveklepper on Thursday, May 28, 2009 3:31 AM

Andrew Jackson?

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Posted by wanswheel on Wednesday, May 27, 2009 11:51 PM

Actually former President and incumbent Congressman in 1833.

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Posted by Texas Zepher on Wednesday, May 27, 2009 9:33 PM

wanswheel
Five months after Andrew Jackson's ride on the B&O in 1833, who was the second President to ride a train and on what railroad?

Do you mean who was the person that road a railroad five months after Andrew Jackson....who later became president?   Jackson's term didn't end until 1837, so another president could not have ridden the railroad five months after that be it in 1833 or 1834.....

Van Buren hated railroads and is the one who at one time tried to get them outlawed.  Probably mostly because he was invested in canal companies, but it could have been because he road on one.

My guess would be Polk, he seems a progressive kind of guy.
 

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Posted by wanswheel on Wednesday, May 27, 2009 8:38 PM

http://memory.loc.gov/service/pnp/cph/3c10000/3c16000/3c16400/3c16412v.jpg

Five months after Andrew Jackson's ride on the B&O in 1833, who was the second President to ride a train and on what railroad?

Mike

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Posted by Deggesty on Wednesday, May 27, 2009 10:20 AM
wanswheel
Well, Mike, you got two out of three. If you look at your fourth link, you will see, in the background the object that was publically unveiled--the headquarters building of the L&C. The locomotive in the picture is fouling Lancaster's Main Street; the Southern's Kingville-Rock Hill-Marion line crossed Main Street a little bit north. A few years ago, the L&C bought what was left of this Southern line that was south of Lancaster, adding not quite two-thirds to its length. Thus, the railroad now serves another of the Springs mills, in Kershaw.

As to Springs Park, it was really a nice place in the mid to late forties. I do not remember just what year it was, but our Sunday School teacher took us up there twice. For its size, the railroad gave a nice ride. There were two WWII fighter planes and one WWII bomber there; I do not remember just what they were; we could get into the cockpits and pretend that we were flying them. Another attraction that I remember was a duckpin alley.

I regret that I never did get a copy of the L&C timetable or of the L&C diner menu (if so desired, you could order filet of flounder or floundering filly, along with many other interesting items).

W. F. (Bull) Halsey was in charge of obtaining Emperor Hirohito's white horse to satisfy General Jonathan Wainwright's desire to own it.

Now, how will you amuse us today?

Johnny

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Posted by al-in-chgo on Tuesday, May 26, 2009 4:44 PM

That Lucius Beebe, he could sure turn a phrase.  But some of his paragraphs were godawful. 

 

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Posted by Deggesty on Tuesday, May 26, 2009 10:35 AM

wanswheel
Johnny, that's right, your turn.

This question is about a one-of-a-kind shortline. This road was named for its endpoints--it actually ran between them (it has, comparatively recently, been extended beyond one of them, and now passes through the town in which I grew up). Among other Vice-Presidents, such as "in Charge of White Horse Supply" (W. F. Halsey), "in Charge of the Internal Audit" (Lucius Beebe), it had a "Vice-President in Charge of Unveiling."

Name the railroad, the Vice-President in Charge of Unveiling, and the object unveiled.

I could not tell you how many times I passed by the object.

Johnny

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Posted by henry6 on Tuesday, May 26, 2009 8:19 AM

Ahhh  yes...knew you'd know...I did get to ride the remnant Queensboro Bridge car not too long before its demise.  BTW, the conversation I referred to was in conjunction with the release of an upcoming book on the Unadilla Valley RR.

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Posted by wanswheel on Tuesday, May 26, 2009 6:54 AM

Johnny, that's right, your turn. I'm guessing H. E. Salzberg regarded HT&W as scrap metal before he sold it to his son-in-law Samuel M. Pinsly. Readsboro, Vermont was the first terminal before the Wilmington extension opened in 1892, and as far north as the tracks went on the 1948 map.

http://middarchive.middlebury.edu/u?/vtpostcards,728

Sam & Company

http://www.pinsly.com/page1127.html

Henry, I think you're referring to former electric transit, the remnants of New York & Queens County Railway and the Steinway Railway that became bus lines.

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Posted by henry6 on Monday, May 25, 2009 10:12 PM

Just discussing this same family and empire over dinner this evening (obvious with railfan friend)...and it being so easy with Mark's clues...lets add another question mark if only for extra credit:  What NYC enterprise did they also own?

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Posted by Deggesty on Monday, May 25, 2009 9:15 PM
wanswheel

A short line in Arkansas and three in Florida are owned by a company whose president is Harry E. Salzberg's great-grandson. What was the first railroad this company owned, nicknamed the Hoot, Toot & Whistle?

Mike

Everybody should know of the Hoosac Tunnel and Wilmington. It ran north from a junction with the B&M.

Johnny

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Posted by wanswheel on Monday, May 25, 2009 7:17 PM

Taps

http://memory.loc.gov/service/pnp/ppmsca/19200/19278v.jpg

http://memory.loc.gov/service/pnp/ppmsca/13300/13355v.jpg

http://memory.loc.gov/service/pnp/cph/3c30000/3c32000/3c32700/3c32799v.jpg

http://memory.loc.gov/service/pnp/ppmsca/13300/13352v.jpg

http://memory.loc.gov/service/pnp/cph/3g00000/3g06000/3g06200/3g06266v.jpg

A short line in Arkansas and three in Florida are owned by a company whose president is Harry E. Salzberg's great-grandson. What was the first railroad this company owned, nicknamed the Hoot, Toot & Whistle?

Mike

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Posted by daveklepper on Monday, May 25, 2009 11:04 AM

The New York Central operated steam into The Bronx on the Putnam untilo about 1949-1950.   And the New Haven had two steam 0-6-0T shop switchers in operation at the Van Ness Bronx electricl locomotive and mu shop until 1956.  Revernue steam on the NYNH&H ended in 1952 in the Boston area.

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Posted by henry6 on Sunday, May 24, 2009 8:06 AM

I was in the WAG shops when those units were being painted and one stenciled!  Good question, Mark, And, Mike, are there pictures you don't have?!!!

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Posted by KCSfan on Sunday, May 24, 2009 7:40 AM
wanswheel

Mike's nailed this one and it's now his turn to ask the next question.

Mark

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Posted by henry6 on Friday, May 22, 2009 7:36 PM

GOOD SHOW, MARK!

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Posted by KCSfan on Friday, May 22, 2009 6:44 PM

OK here's the next question.

At one time the Salzberg family owned and operated a number of shortlines one of which was the WA&G. Most of these have been long abandoned. Which of the former Salzberg roads was the most profitable and continues to operate today in its entirety and under its original name? Name the RR and its end point terminals.

Mark

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Posted by Deggesty on Friday, May 22, 2009 10:44 AM

wanswheel

That's purty; dig those red counterweights!

Why no connecting rod on the front truck?

I agree with Henry6.

Johnny

 

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Posted by henry6 on Friday, May 22, 2009 7:50 AM

Mike...do you actually own all the neatest pictures in the world?  At least let me nominate you!!

RIDEWITHMEHENRY is the name for our almost monthly day of riding trains and transit in either the NYCity or Philadelphia areas including all commuter lines, Amtrak, subways, light rail and trolleys, bus and ferries when warranted. No fees, just let us know you want to join the ride and pay your fares. Ask to be on our email list or find us on FB as RIDEWITHMEHENRY (all caps) to get descriptions of each outing.

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