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TRAIN WECK IN Granitville,SC
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Mourners honor Chris Seeling <br />(The following story by Clif LeBlanc appeared on The State website on January 12.) <br /> <br />COLUMBIA, S.C. -- The engineer in Thursday’s fatal Graniteville train wreck was eulogized Tuesday as a good-hearted fellow who had railroading in his blood. <br /> <br />Christopher Glenn Seeling, 28, left a circle of remembrance that drew about 150 mourners to Columbia’s First Presbyterian Church, many from his railroad family. <br /> <br />As the gathered sang one of his favorite hymns, "Rock of Ages," Seeling’s polished poplar wood casket lay adorned in a spray of red- and peach-colored roses with white carnations. <br /> <br />A harpist filled the sanctuary of the 210-year-old church with the comforting tones of Seeling’s favorite instrument. <br /> <br />The life of Chris Seeling began in Fort Wayne, Ind., but he had become "a good old Southern boy," his brother Eddie Schmidt, 19, wrote in the funeral bulletin. <br /> <br />Seeling, a barrel-chested 6-footer, learned to love hunting and fishing. But his love of the rails was born into him, said Joe Teague, who grew so close to Seeling he considered him family. <br /> <br />"Whenever he heard the whistle, his stepdad would haul him over there, about a mile from the house," Teague, a West Columbia contractor who built Seeling a home here, said in an interview. <br /> <br />"His fascination with trains was on a bigger scale than most young boys," Teague said. "He wanted the real thing." <br /> <br />A family Amtrak vacation trip in 1989 was the final step in setting Seeling onto a career path. <br /> <br />He will be buried Friday in Indiana, where his passion was sparked. <br /> <br />During Tuesday’s service, the Rev. Neal Mathias recalled Seeling’s final train ride. <br /> <br />"Last Thursday morning, lots of things went wrong," Mathias said. "Lots of things came undone." <br /> <br />Yet the minister asked the mourners to follow Seeling’s lead by turning to God for guidance and solace. <br /> <br />Brian McLaughlin was the first engineer to train Seeling as he prepared to become a Norfolk Southern engineer. <br /> <br />McLaughlin said Seeling was filling in for a vacationing engineer the night of the Jan. 6 accident. "I told him to be safe," McLaughlin said. <br /> <br />It would become the last of their scores of conversations, personal and professional. <br /> <br />"We’re just going to miss him in Columbia — terribly." <br /> <br /> <br />
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