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David Read's biography

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Posted by daveklepper on Sunday, June 14, 2015 2:48 PM

ROBERT DAVID READ

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Posted by wanswheel on Wednesday, June 10, 2015 4:36 PM
R. David also wrote about Bakersfield. I wonder what his first name was.
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Posted by daveklepper on Wednesday, June 10, 2015 12:33 AM

Posted on the website www.proaudioencyclopedia.com

 
R. David Read, a Biography – by David Lloyd Klepper
read
R. David Read and his wife, Sharon – Photo Courtesy Sound & Communications Magazine
R. David Read passed on a few days after Easter of 2015, at the age of 79.  Born in his Canada, his first job was as a Western Union messenger boy where he learned Morse code.  After high-school and his family move to the USA, he applied for a position with the Southern Pacific Railroad, hoping to combine his learned knowledge of Morse Code and his love of railroads.  But first, the railroad assigned him as a machinist helper in their main steam locomotive repair and rebuilding “roundhouse” in Sacramento, CA.  Finally, he was able to land a position as telegrapher and tower operator. He advanced to telegrapher/wire-chief for Southern Pacific and moved over to the Santa Fe Railway when SP wished to assign him to a location unfavorable to his family plans. With advancement in technology, he entered the fields of microwave and automation, and was active in the first application of background music and on-board announcements on the Santa Fe’s streamliners, including the Super Chief. He then worked for Rauland-Borg, Dukane Corp. and the pre-Telex Altec Lansing, as well as helping NSCA organize its educational programs. He never left his love for railroads, and his last public-address installation was for the Cumbres and Toltec narrow gauge steam tourist railroad in Colorado and New Mexico.
Recent feature magazine articles were a pair on the new multilevel architecturally distinguished Berlin Central Station: one on sound, video, and communications for Sound and Communications, and one on the physical railroad plant and its role in European transportation for Trains Magazine. Classic Trains has just published his “When Trains ran late and telegraphers earned their pay” in their Summer 2015 issue, along with an obituary.  David was a Sound & Communications Contributing Editor, wrote many features covering industry events and installations, and analyzed industry trends. He also initiated S&C’s “Audio Pioneers” series, covering Lord Rayleigh in S&C‘s February 2000 issue; that series ultimately became “Industry Pioneers,” including this Beranek biography, and concluding with Dr. Eugene T. Patronis, Jr.   He was a member in both the AES and ASA, was`an associate of USITT, and participated in BICSI proceedings, Having kept up his interest in telegraphy, he was a participating member of the Morse Club of America.  He was continually concerned about safety and on occasion lectured on safety at railroad crossings to school children.  His published the following editorial in the Lafayette, Louisiana, Advertiser:
Opinion: Trains Don’t Jump Tracks to Chase Motorists
LAFAYETTE, La. — Back in my younger days, I worked for the railroads and can attest to having witnessed some incredulous acts of stupidity when the public comes in contact with railroad operations.
In about 1955, the SP Railway sent me to work at an interlocking tower in the Fruitvale district of Oakland, Calif. Fruitvale was a tough neighborhood; residents were not exactly paragons of virtue. Fruitvale Avenue crossed, at grade, some 12 railroad tracks, including a double-tracked mainline that carried extensive freight and passenger traffic.
The street was protected by crossing gates, flashing lights and bells; but owing to the frequency of rail traffic, it was all too common for motorists to jog around the gates in a misguided gamble to forfeit their lives in order to avoid having their travel delayed.
One of my duties was to drop the crossing gates as a train approached. Having witnessed all too many near misses, I had taken to throwing the gate activation lever, avert my eyes from the scene and disregard whatever consequences might ensue.
One evening, the sequence of events played out this way: As the gates transversed their arc, a heavy metal rod affixed to the arm was used to stop the downward travel. Hearing the sound of metal grinding on metal, I turned to my vantage point from a second-story window to see what might have transpired. In his haste to beat the gates, a man had driven under the swiftly descending arm and the steel rod had impaled his car, penetrated through the hood, through the air-filter and into the carburetor.
His car had been harpooned!
Leaping from his car, he surveyed his dilemma and commenced shaking his fist in my direction. My actions had probably saved his life, but I wasn’t about to risk a confrontation with an irate motorist; I called the Railway police.
The officer instructed me to raise the gates. When I proceeded to do as I was told, the gate went up accompanied by the car’s hood, air-filter and various carburetor parts. In this case, what could have been a potential tragedy had fortunately evolved into (the auto owner’s opinions to the contrary) a merely humorous incident.
In 2005, Louisiana had 131 railroad crossing accidents. The state ranks sixth nationwide statistically for such accidents. Remember, trains don’t get off the tracks and chase you.
The adage is still – as always: Stop, Look & Listen.
Wednesday, September 27, 2006, Lafayette, Louisiana, Advertiser
 
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Posted by daveklepper on Tuesday, June 9, 2015 10:53 AM

AND THE JULY ISSUE ARRIVED!!!!!

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Posted by daveklepper on Tuesday, June 9, 2015 3:46 AM

Have not received my copy yet.   Hopefully his spirit will appreciate his article being published.

I did get the fact that he was born in Decedmber 1935, so was in fact 79 at death.  His 1949 telegraphy experience must have been with Western Union in Canada, and not the SP, which came later.

THANKS

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Posted by wanswheel on Monday, June 8, 2015 10:51 AM
Sorry Dave, I can’t find anything new except

When Trains Ran Late — and Telegraphers Earned Their Pay

Sit in with a telegrapher on SP's San Joaquin Division on a typically busy night in the 1950s
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David Read's biography
Posted by daveklepper on Sunday, June 7, 2015 10:06 PM

One of the audio-video magazines stated that David Read was 79 when he passed on shortly after this past Easter.   It also states that he got his first telegrapher job in 1949.  That would make him 13 or 14.  It also states that his telegraphy was with the SP.   This seems improbable.  Also, we know from past Trains and Classic Trains articles that he worked in the Sacramento Engine Overhaul and Rebuilding Shop as a machinist helper and then machinist, on steam locomotives, before he was an SP tower operator (including telegraphy).   His first job of any kind was as a messenger boy for Western Union.   So was he a telegrapher for Western Union as a teenager?

I recall Dave telling me once that we were of the same age, and I am 83.  Working for the SP at 17 and 18 is more realistic that 13 - 14.

If any reader know the facts, please respond as soon as possible.   Thanks.

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