Jones1945 Maybe 1/5 or even less, Diesel have many supporter too, but I wouldn't become a railfan if steam locomotive never existed!
For history and rail fans...details on President Truman's rail journey to Ottawa to address Parliament. Toured Ottawa and Niagara Falls ... train via Rouses Point. NYC, CASO, CPR, CNR, TH&B tracks.
Additions and thanks to the HAL 9000 in Long Island
I thought everyone would enjoy that Reading and Northern video, it was a fast fourteen minutes, wasn't it? Just a little imagination and it wasn't 2017, it was 1937 all over again.
Pennsylvania seems to be a happening place as far as steam railroading is concerned. It's got a pretty vibrant model railroading culture going on as well.
June 13, 1947
Train: US President Truman Special - 12 Cars En-route to Buffalo
B&O 1401 Combined bagg.& pass.
Pullman Lake Gardner 10Sec.1Dr.2Cpt. HW Sleeper
Pullman Glen Eyre 6Cpt.3Dr. HW Sleeper
Pullman Sun-Gold 2Cpt.1Dr.LngB.SunRm. HW Sleeper
Pullman Glen Cliff 6Cpt.3Dr. HW Sleeper
CPR Avonwick Diner
Pullman Rittenhouse Square 6Cpt.3Dr. HW Sleeper
Pullman Brahms 6Cpt.3Dr. HW Sleeper
CPR Wentworth Official Private car
CN 104 Official Private car
Pullman Waterview 8Cpt.Lng. HW Sleeper
President's Car (No Name)
I don't think this train had any trouble at Customs.
Very nice video Firelock. Watched it twice, putting myself along the Niagara Escarpment sometime in the mid 50's. That's the way it was and it was great ( did not have that open air car of course).
Here is a sample consist of the NYC CASO passenger train #40 Detroit/Windsor to Fort Erie/Buffalo on Aug. 25, 1944.
The very day Paris is liberated. Fierce fighting in France, Allies advancing, Eastern Front collapsing, Pacific War island hopping and Naval Air battles. World in total War.
EQUIPMENT / DETAILS
241 PASSENGERS - CREW: C. ROBERTS
NYC 5369 - HUDSON
DL&W 2028 - BAGGAGE EXPRESS
NYC 4864 - HEAVYWEIGHT RPO
NYC 8656 - HEAVYWEIGHT BAGGAGE
NYC 8420 - HEAVYWEIGHT BAGGAGE
NYC 284 - HEAVYWEIGHT COMBINE
NYC 2459 - HEAVYWEIGHT COACH
NYC 2230 - HEAVYWEIGHT COACH
NYC 2630 - LIGHTWEIGHT COACH
PULLMAN IMPERIAL CHARIOT - 4069E 4 DOUBLE BEDROOMS 4 COMPARTMENTS 2 DRAWING ROOMS
PULLMAN GARDEN VALLEY - 4036 8 SECTION 5 DOUBLE BEDROOMS
PULLMAN SUN-DAWN - 3975B1 2 COMPARTMENTS 1 DRAWING ROOM LOUNGE BUFFET OBSERVATION
PULLMAN NEW CASTLE - 3958 14 SECTIONS
PULLMAN VILLA ROSA - 3411A 10 SECTION 3 DOUBLE BEDROOMS
NYC 2221 - HEAVYWEIGHT COACH
NYC 571 - HEAVYWEIGHT DINING CAR
Firelock76 You know, I'm reminded of something Andy Muller of the Reading and Northern said back in the '90s... "When I run an excursion train with a diesel, even a vintage diesel, nobody notices. But when I run one with a steam engine I stop traffic for miles around!"
You know, I'm reminded of something Andy Muller of the Reading and Northern said back in the '90s...
"When I run an excursion train with a diesel, even a vintage diesel, nobody notices. But when I run one with a steam engine I stop traffic for miles around!"
Jones 3D Modeling Club https://www.youtube.com/Jones3DModelingClub
Jones1945 Firelock76 We can see it now, by the way. Look at Jim Wrinn's last blog about Nickle Plate 765. Look at the photos. How many people would come trackside if that train was pulled by a diesel? Maybe 1/5 or even less, Diesel have many supporter too, but I wouldn't become a railfan if steam locomotive never existed!
Firelock76 We can see it now, by the way. Look at Jim Wrinn's last blog about Nickle Plate 765. Look at the photos. How many people would come trackside if that train was pulled by a diesel?
We can see it now, by the way. Look at Jim Wrinn's last blog about Nickle Plate 765. Look at the photos. How many people would come trackside if that train was pulled by a diesel?
Back then Andy was running excursions with Pacific 425 and Reading T-1 4-8-4 2102. 425's back in action, and 2102 is returning when the restoration's done!
425's a stunner, check this out and go full-screen if you can
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7x_OPQeFrxM
Freight was vouched for by a broker, who also paid all duties and tariffs and then billed the consignee so there were few delays... most of the time....of course any government depending on the mood of the day, or some hot tip or suspicions could hold anything they want at the border until they were satisfied. This still goes on today, more so since 911.
How many of these line abandonments were caused by other lines having CTC installed, allowing them to carry much more traffice than before. Also, I'm not sure of the procedure, but how much did Customs delay trains moving across southwestern Ontario? I'm thinking that once CTC was installed on the Waterlevel Route, the delays across Ontario only made sense for traffic destined for southern Michigan.
You know, if a railroad was in trouble dieselizing certainly wasn't going to save it, there's a lot of "Fallen Flags", too many to mention, that went diesel and died anyway.
But you're right in a way Miningman, it's hard not to equate public apathy as far as railroads are concerned as beginning with the diesel era and the end of the "Big Show" of steam. One rail writer of the time, I don't remember who, said that when diesels had taken over completely railroading was going to be as interesting as a conveyor belt.
How many freight customers remained on CASO during the last years of operation?
The Canada Southern Railway:
One can see from the above graph that the Depression really played havoc with the CASO. The war years bring incredible traffic levels, every year a new record, in both freight and passenger starting in 1939. Canada was at war with Nazi Germany, a full 2 years before the USA declared war. It is this time period between Sept. 1939 and Dec 1941 that has me wondering. The New York Central is going full bore gangbusters and I assume also the Wabash and Pere Marquette across Southern Ontario between Windsor/Detroit and Fort Erie/Buffalo. Border restrictions must have been exceptionally tight and bridges and stations en route must be guarded. I wish there was some writing, some accounts and research on this very strange and perhaps sometimes awkward time period.
The other very noticeable item is that while traffic starts to go down as the war ends it does remain very high still post war and starts to level off at a fairly high plateau around '48-'49. This I believe was a signal of hope for the CASO as it seems that traffic in both passenger and freight will revert to 1920's levels and all will be well.
This is a short lived situation for passenger and although freight traffic 'levels off' at a nice high rate until ~1955, probably due to the Korean War and post WW2 consumerism, and it appears to be quite sustainable, both passenger and freight fall off catastrophically after that. By the time Sputnik is bleeping it's signal to the world the CASO is in survival and deferred maintenance mode.
Interesting also to us conspiracy or skeptically minded types is the very obvious and very pronounced end of the brief plateau of hope post war coinciding exactly with the demise of legions of J3's and Mohawks and Mikes. As dead lines swelled and the guillotine got busy in 52-53-54 so did the fortunes of the railroad, seems almost to the hour! The saviour of the day, the all mighty Diesel, instead appears to have heralded the end and certainly did not postpone it but accelerated it. With the coal smoke, the whistle, the roundhouse and the water tower gone so went the glory and romance but without a doubt the whole dang railroad. GM laughing, got 'em comin' and goin'. Alco chasing its tail.
Raises an eyebrow for sure. To quote Havelock Ellis " Civilization is a thin crust on a volcano". Puts a Geology spin on it for me.
https://archive.org/details/railwaylifecycle00bloo/page/n4
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