Amazingly as well cabooses carried spare coupler and drawbar components as well as the nessecary jacking equipment to lift and replace the springs on a frieght car. I will try to find the list I saw of all the equipment required on a CPR caboose the total of which actually weighted several tons.
AgentKid
So shovel the coal, let this rattler roll.
"A Train is a Place Going Somewhere" CP Rail Public Timetable
"O. S. Irricana"
. . . __ . ______
I've heard an unverifiable story that the caboose cupola came about because the crew was assigned a 'crew car' with a hole in the roof. The rear brakeman stacked up a couple of boxes, set a chair on them and surveyed the rear of the train from his new elevated vantage point. Somehow, somebody with some clout heard about it and ordered a lookout to be built with a proper roof and windows - and the rest is history.
What folks who were born after FRED took over as the rear-end brakeman don't realize is the amount of 'non-radio communications' gear that was carried in the caboose that isn't needed now. Fusees were used in any situation where the train might be overtaken during poor visibility. Rear end flagmen had flag, lantern and torpedoes. A portable telegraph set was carried, and could be tapped into the trackside wires in case of need.
These days everybody communicates by radio, and non-radio communicating devices have vanished from the scene.
Chuck
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Today trains run with two man crews, a conductor and an engineer. Years ago trains ran with 4 or 5 man crews, an engineer and fireman in the cab, and a conductor and brakeman in the caboose. A long train might require a 'head' brakemen who would ride in the engine cab, or in a 'doghouse' built on the tender deck. The conductor was the guy running the train, as I understand it now, the engineer is no.1 and the conductor is more like a fireman/brakeman.
Remember there was no radio for most of railroading's history, no electronic devices to detect hotboxes or air pressure problems etc. Things were much more 'hands on'. Even a simple act of taking a siding was done by hand - the fireman would have to get down on the ground to throw the switch so the train can head into the side track, then hop back on the engine as the train headed in. Once the caboose was in the clear, the brakeman in the caboose would throw the switch back for the mainline. Same situation when the train left the other end of the siding to go back on the mainline.
The caboose as noted became a home-away-from-home for the rear-end crew, they ate and slept there. If a conductor was assigned a caboose he liked he might keep it for many years, taking it on himself to repaint the interior, add shades or curtains to the windows etc. BTW the engineer and fireman didn't eat or sleep in the caboose, they went to a local beanery to eat and slept in a hotel or Y or boarding house of some type.
The caboove was more than a rolling office. It was also a place to watch the rear half of the train as it went around curves. The crew would look for smoke from hot boxes or sticking brakes. They would also be on the lookout for shifted loads or other things that could be a problem. At one time the caboosr was assigned to the conductor and would be changed at the end of a run. The train crew would sleep and eat in the caboose while away from home.
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
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