QUOTE: Originally posted by espeefoamer I don't know about cities, but the state of Nevada has a Virginia & Truckee steam loco on its State seal.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Clevelandrocks Palmer Mass
QUOTE: Originally posted by Kozzie I was recently having a yarn with Ed about the Houston City Crest. I noticed on the official City of Houston website that crest/seal for the city had a steam loco on it! (For a view of the Houston City seal, go to www.cityofhouston.gov then click on City Government under the About Houston tab.) So I asked Ed about it, and he explained to me that the loco was on the seal due to the huge role the railways played in the development of the city. He said that at one point, 18 different railroads entered Houston! [:0] So, to all you Forum Folk, does any other city "up over' have a loco on their seal/crest? [;)] Dave
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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)
Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com
QUOTE: Originally posted by edblysard Macguy, Currently, UP, BNSF, and KCS(TexMex) Class1 roads. Prior to the SP/UP and Santa Fe BN mergers, it was those five, BN, Santa Fe, UP, SP and KCS, along with the Katy(MKT), the Missouri Pacific, theTexas and Mexican, (prior to KCS purchase) and the joint operation of the Rock Island and CB&Q as the Forth Worth and Denver, plus four local lines, the now gone HB&T, the Houston North Shore Railroad, GH&H and us, the PTRA.. At one time there was three passenger stations in Houston, SP's Grand Central, torn down in the 60s, now a Amshack, the Katys station at Main street, and Union station, (now Enron Feild , then Miniute Maid Park, a baseball stadium) host to the Rock Island, Missouri Pacific, the Santa Fe and the CB&Q, plus the local street car line, the GH&H and the Houston North Shore railroad, one of, if not the last, electric freight railroad/interurbans built, (now the UP's north shore district). I will do a little digging and see if I can come up with all the railroads that have enter the city, keep in mind that Texas had one of those odd laws that required any railroad doing business in the state to incorporate inside Texas, hence the Rock and CB&Q formed the Forth Worth and Denver, and of course, the Texas and Pacific, Texas and New Orleans....so several of the roads were formed just to operate inside Texas. Ed
QUOTE: Originally posted by M636C Dave, Don't forget Junee Municipality in New South Wales has a green streamlined 38 class on their crest! A side elevation of the whole locomotive and tender! Peter
QUOTE: Originally posted by drephpe Hate to correct Ed, but Burlington and the Rock did not form the Fort Worth & Denver (nee Fort Worth and Denver City) under the Texas law. The FW&D was the Texas subsidiary of the Colorado & Southern formed under the Texas law, and it ran from Fort Worth northwest through Wichita Falls and Amarillo to the state line at Texline out past Dalhart in the Panhandle, with branches to Abilene, Lubbock and a few other places. C&S (FW&D) purchased the failing and incomplete (Cleburne-Mexia had been built) Trinity & Brazos Valley in 1905 with the provision that they would sell 1/2 interest to CRI&G (Chicago Rock Island and Gulf) within a year, which they did. They jointly ran over the line using trackage rights over GC&SF between Cleburne and Ft Worth and over MKT between Waxahatchie and Dallas. The line was complete to Houston in 1907, but failed in 1914 and was forced into receivership. In 1930 it was reorganized as the Burlington-Rock Island Railroad Company (B-RI), with operating authority in alternating 5 year periods, with RI taking the first turn in 1931. Dallas-Fort Worth was RI operated jointly by B-RI. This whole arrangement lasted until RI's closure in 1980, and BN bought the half interest in B-RI from the RI trustee, retaining rights over the MKT into Dallas, and BNSF got the MKT Waxahatchie line as part of the UP merger-related deals. The DFW line had been operated by MKT under a Directed Service Order associated with the bankruptcy, and Dallas Area Rapid Transit and the City of Ft Worth got it as part of the breakup (this is the TRE line), and BNSF still has rights, as does UP. By the way, the Dallas Union Terminal Co. had RI running its trackage (allegedly because it was by that time "impartial" with respect to the big RRs running through there--all the freight lines save SP went through UTCo) at the time of the bankruptcy and, like the B-RI, maintenance got so bad on many days they couldn't get ATK in and out of the remaining station tracks because of poor maintenance on the pneumatic switch machines, and of course the freight operators had the same problems on the 3 outside freight tracks. Probably more info than you want. By the way, (back to Ed's post) it's a fascinating study to look at all the SP/T&NO predecessors and subsidiaries that came into Houston, including the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos & Colorado (1853); Houston & Texas Central (1856); Houston East & West Texas (a former 3' gauge line); Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio (1870); Dayton & Goose Creek (technically in the suburbs); Texas & New Orleans (1859); and San Antonio & Aransas Pass. And, not only is a locomotive on the Houston seal, but also a replica runs across the outside wall behind the outfield at Minute Maid park as part of the show when the Astros hit a homer.
QUOTE: Originally posted by drephpe BIG. Not sure as to actual size but Ed may know. Interesting replica of wood burning 19th century steam loco on seal--has no visible means of support (i.e., no tender). Runs anyway. Maybe Enron also altered the laws of Physics.[(-D][:-,]
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