Right on Gavrilrock I was there in the end to, I started in 1971. The employee’s wore that railroad out, because the Crown family felt that the Union Pacific would rebuild so why put any money in the railroad.
We hadn’t had a raise in three years, with no hope until they were forced to, also back pay was forced on them buy an arbitrator.
They wanted to run crews thirty days on and thirty days off, can you believe that, you could end up anywhere on the system.
No the employees and middle management wanted that railroad to survive it was their life!!
I’m thankful that this was bumped up or I would never have seen it.
Yes we are on time but this is yesterdays train
QUOTE: Originally posted by AMTK200 The Rock Island was always seemed to be overbuilt, poorly ran and most of all went places everyone esle did. I'm surprise why DRGW didn't buy the Denver-Omaha/Kansas City Line why was that?
QUOTE: Originally posted by jumanly Rock Island had incredibly good employees and many darn good managers. It had few reasonable union leaders, however, who led good employees down the path to unemployment. Most of the Union leaders kept their positions with successor lines and cared little of the troops they had led. They were "frozen at the controls" when management tried to show new ideas to save the Company, they couldn't respond with anything except status quo.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding QUOTE: Originally posted by bobwilcox After World War II and the rise of intercity motor carriers the Midwest had to many railroads. In Iowa you did not need to go more than 8 miles to reach a railroad. The people at the Rock Island and Milwaukee were unlucky. The Northwestern, Soo, Q, IC, GMO, Wabash, Katy, MP, Frisco, ATSF and Cotton Belt were lucky. Did all these railroads have lines into Iowa?
QUOTE: Originally posted by bobwilcox After World War II and the rise of intercity motor carriers the Midwest had to many railroads. In Iowa you did not need to go more than 8 miles to reach a railroad. The people at the Rock Island and Milwaukee were unlucky. The Northwestern, Soo, Q, IC, GMO, Wabash, Katy, MP, Frisco, ATSF and Cotton Belt were lucky.
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Originally posted by mudchicken Naimo & Murphy: If you look in the GLO index in the National Archives II and CRIP's 1918 Valuation papers, you might find that they did indeed. Tucked in with the GLO Filing Map for the BCR&N we found a portion of a CRIP Val Map ozalid (Marked "VOID" in grease pencil by an ICC Examiner in the Appraisal Section) - It was for Section Section 35, T 94 N, R56W; 5thPM In Yankton County crossing CB&Q. I often wonder what the University Libraries in Norman and Iowa City might have buried in those piles of correspondence paper.[%-)][%-)][%-)] Might explain why they had a Dakota Division about that time. (Also what makes hours of map research interesting as well [:D]) [banghead][banghead][banghead][:D]
QUOTE: Originally posted by daveklepper And if the railroads had been nationalized would there be any argument whatsoever about keeping long distance passenger trains?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Tharmeni DMcCortney - since no one has jumped in to do it, let me welcome you to the forum. Don't be a stranger.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MARYHANNA Yes, The Rock Island was a mighty good road(like the song Said). They had bad management. Good management would of exploited their strenghts and offset their weaknesses. For example, The Rock had the best route from Kansas City to St. Paul. UP still uses the line. UP upgraded the Tucumcari line. They never exploited whatever atvantages they had.
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