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The Freight Wreck at Altoona

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  • Member since
    April 2010
  • 163 posts
Posted by NorthCoast RR on Thursday, November 15, 2012 8:02 PM
I didn't Google search....I sourced it from a hard copy of 'railroad magazine', June 1978. I guess at that time, this editor had no knowledge of the author.
Thanks for the clarity....long live N scale brother.
  • Member since
    December 2001
  • From: Northern CA Bay Area
  • 4,387 posts
Posted by cuyama on Thursday, November 15, 2012 6:47 PM

NorthCoast RR
A poem I thought i'd share.....author unknown.

Not correct. A quick Google search suggests that the author is Vernon Dalhart, a country singer of the early 20th Century. At least, he recorded it first in 1926. One may even find recordings on-line by Dalhart and others. 

  • Member since
    February 2008
  • 8,851 posts
Posted by maxman on Thursday, November 15, 2012 6:46 PM

Apparently originally recorded in 1926: http://labornotes.org/2011/10/altoona-freight-wreck.

Musical version here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8XoB9DoRHxg

More modern singers here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ODudxVNfGt4

  • Member since
    April 2010
  • 163 posts
The Freight Wreck at Altoona
Posted by NorthCoast RR on Thursday, November 15, 2012 6:08 PM
A poem I thought i'd share.....author unknown.

She had just left the point of Kittanning.,
The freight numbered twelve sixty-two,
And on down the mountain she traveled
And brave were the men in her crew.
The engineer pulled the throttle,
For the brakes wouldn't work when applied,
And the breakman climbed out on the car top,
For he knew that the whistle had cried.

With all the strength that God gave him
He tightened the brakes with a prayer,
But the train kept right on down the mountain,
And her whistle was piercing the air.
She traveled at sixty an hour,
Gaining speed every foot of the way;
And than with a crash it was over,
And there on the track the freight lay.

Its not the amount of the damage,
Or the value of what it all cost;
Its the sad tale that came from the cabin
Where the lives of two brave men were lost.
They were found at their posts in the wreckage,
They died with the engine that fell;
The engineer held to the whistle,
And the fireman to the rope on the bell.

This story is told of a freight train,
And it should be a warning to all,
You should be prepared every morning,
For you cannot tell when He'll call.



Thanks.

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