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Combo passenger freight trains??

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Combo passenger freight trains??
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 17, 2006 8:03 AM
I was reading that the last train to run in my area on the San Antonio Aransas Pass RR in the late 60's was a So Pac "combination passenger and freight" train. I was curious if this "combination" was common and what the configuration and probable order of the cars might have been.

Links to pics would be nice!!

thanks
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Posted by nanaimo73 on Friday, February 17, 2006 10:46 AM
"Mixed" trains were quite common on branchlines. The Georgia Railroad ran them until the mid 1980s with a coach ahead of the caboose.
http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/showPicture.aspx?id=231503

Ontario Northland still runs the Little Bear up in Canada.
Dale
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Posted by PBenham on Friday, February 17, 2006 4:53 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by nanaimo73

"Mixed" trains were quite common on branchlines. The Georgia Railroad ran them until the mid 1980s with a coach ahead of the caboose.
http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/showPicture.aspx?id=231503

Ontario Northland still runs the Little Bear up in Canada.
The ON train is the Polar Bear Express, which is one of a select few frontier trains which will stop anywhere a paying passenger asks the conductor to stop and the only train I know of to be described as a mixed train. Ride it if you can. I'm told it is worth the effort to go up into the wilds of Northern Ontario to ride on it. Other passenger trains are operated by VIA in Manitoba, Ontario, and Quebec which will stop virtually anywhere a paying customer wishes. QNS&L also(?) has passenger service on its line in Quebec and Labrador. The Alaska has service of this nature as well, with the only cargo being passenger's gear.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 17, 2006 5:47 PM
Thanks! I'm new at this but I would have guessed the passenger car(s) would have been up front.
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Posted by jimrice4449 on Friday, February 17, 2006 9:42 PM
Your guess would generaly be right (to avoid slack action) if the train was equiped w/ a caboose. The Santa Fe had some psgr cars specifically intended for mixed service that were painted in mineral red rather than green and served as the caboose at the rear of the train.
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 18, 2006 2:26 AM
CNR Prairie Mixed Freight Train

The following cars are part of a 16-car consist of a prairie mixed freight.

* 1392 Locomotive
* 16015 Tender (1392B)
* 46230 Refrigerator
* 172755 Stock Car
* 477871 Box Car
* 509893 Box Car
* 512719 Box Car
* 17913 Box Car
* 6570 Tank Car
* 16040 Tank Car
* 7379 Combine Car (32 Passengers)
* 78185 Caboose

<combine_7379.jpg>

This Combine car was originally built for the Canadian Northern Railway in 1915 as Second Class Smoker #6755. It became part of the Canadian National Railways system when amalgamation took place in 1923. The car served on crack passenger trains, riding behind the baggage car and in front of the coaches.

In 1965, 7379 became work car #72782. In 1987 the exterior of the car and the smoking section were restored so that the car could be used in a movie "The Gunfighters", part of which was also filmed at Fort Edmonton Park. In 1979 the car was painted as an Alberta & Great Waterways passenger car and used in the movie "Silence of the North".
The Combine was refinished inside during the summer of 1995 and the exterior was repainted in the summer of 1996. It was used in an episode of "Jake and the Kid" that was filmed on the property in July 1996.

About Combine Cars

Sleeping cars had their own smoking rooms, but coaches did not. In 1940, 7379 was converted into a baggage-smoker or Combination Car. Cars such as this one were added to trains for extra baggage storage and to provide an enlarged smoking room for the coach car passengers.

The car seats 32 passengers. At night, boards and mattresses were placed across the seats as sleeping accommodation for the dining car employees.

The other half of the car is a typical baggage car used by most Canadian railways. It contains a stove, and a desk used by the mail-express clerk or baggageman to hold mail, paperwork and baggage tags. Often there would be a small metal box with a lock, or a safe; this held express mail or passengers' valuables or possessions. The car was staffed by a baggageman who loaded and unloaded baggage, mail and other goods at the appropriate stations.

This car was probably taken off passenger services on the mainline in the 1940's, and sent to branchlines of the Canadian National System to be used on mixed passenger - freight train services, commonly known as milk runs or locals.

At very small country stations, the baggageman or mail-expressman would put the town's mail in a canvas mail sack, set it by the open baggage door and toss it off onto the station platform. The station agent would load the outgoing mail onto the car.

At the larger country stations, the train would roll in with the baggage door open and empty milk and cream cans stacked up in the doorway. These were being returned to local farmers. The baggageman would exchange them for full cans farmers brought to the station.

Mail and parcels would also be exchanged. The train was a vital link to the rest of the world, and brought all kinds of merchandise and supplies - baby chicks, mail-order parcels from Eaton's and Simpson's, parts and even small machinery. But it wasn't all business for train employees. Depending on their schedule the crew of the local train might stay for coffee, and now and then were invited to share a meal with the residents along the line they served
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Posted by passengerfan on Saturday, February 18, 2006 7:42 AM
UP in the final years of the Butte Special operated an interesting mixed train. Southbound the power and five to seven passenger cars departed the depot shared with the NP and headed for the yard where the freight cars were added behind the passengercars and the train headed to Salt Lake City. I have seen this train powered by E-units and Steam Generator equipped GP-9 units. It was probably one of the few mixed trains to operate a sleeping car.

TTFN AL
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Posted by egmurphy on Saturday, February 18, 2006 3:22 PM
QUOTE: AydansPop: Thanks! I'm new at this but I would have guessed the passenger car(s) would have been up front.

QUOTE: jimrice4449: Your guess would generaly be right (to avoid slack action) if the train was equiped w/ a caboose.

We had a long thread on one of the forums last year about this topic, and it seems to me more like there was no one accepted way of doing it. Practice varied by railroad.

The only mixed trains I rode on (in northern Alberta) had the coach immediately ahead of the caboose. Since the train did switching in the various places it passed through, having the coach at the front would have subjected the passengers to being jerked back and forth several times every time the trains made a setout or pickup.

Regards

Ed
The Rail Images Page of Ed Murphy "If you reject the food, ignore the customs, fear the religion and avoid the people, you might better stay home." - James Michener
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Posted by rji2 on Saturday, February 18, 2006 4:24 PM
The only time I ever rode a mixed train was on the T&NO deadheading from Kaufman, Texas to Beaumont. (I was an extra board telegrapher.) There was no caboose. The crew occupied a combine on the train's rear. It was a night-time run. The combine had a coal stove for cold-weather comfort (?) and open windows for hot weather air conditioning. This was in early 1950, as I recall.
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Posted by AltonFan on Sunday, February 26, 2006 7:40 PM
On some of their midwestern branchlines, the CB&Q had special combines equipped with coupolas for mixed train service.

Dan

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Posted by Mark300 on Monday, February 27, 2006 1:11 PM
The Western Maryland Ry ran a mixed train from Durbin to Elkins WVa back in early to mid 20th century titled appropriately; the 'Durbin Mixed.'

During steam, an Alco/Richmond class H7 2-8-0 or class H8 2-8-0 headed a combine, a number of boxcars, gons, 55 ton hoppers, flats and so forth plus a NE style caboose. On some runs, when perhaps there was only a boxcar & combine, they'd dispense with the caboose.

During the diesel era, substitute an Alco RS hammerhead with the same type consist. They needed the steam generator capability for heating the passenger/combine.

Definitely an interesting type of train filling a niche need to an otherwise inaccessible area. The photos I've seen are picturesque.

Mark
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Posted by nickinwestwales on Monday, February 27, 2006 1:52 PM
Hi guys, PBENHAM mentioned the Polar Bear Express-this is a summer only all passenger consist,the little bear is an all year round mixed train-a great selection of pix of both can be found on Mike Robins` site-key in Ontario Northland on your search engine and go from there.
Mixed trains on this side of the pond were more likely to have the pass. car(s) next to the loco to maintain vacuum brake connections (trad. Brit. freight stock mostly lacked continuous brakes until relatively recently)
Hope this helps,all the best,nick
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, July 4, 2006 9:15 PM
For years up until the 1950s mixed trains provided passenger service on many Class I railroad branchlines and darn near every shortline. They more more prevalent and lasted longer in the rural South than thy did elsewhere in the country. I've recounted several personal experiences below which characterize the typical mixed train of yesteryear.
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Unless you are an ancient railfan like myself you've never seen a mixed train in actual revenue service. Branchline passenger trains always held a certain fascination for me, I guess because by the late 1940's they were fast vanishing and it was obvious that they'd soon be only a memory. Lucius Beebe's book, "Mixed Train Daily", chronicled these relics of the past and was a favorite of mine. Unfortunately I lent my copy to another railfan about 40 years ago and never got it back when he moved away.

The last mixed train that I actually saw was on the Norfolk & Western's Abingdon to Damascus, VA branch. I followed this train from town to town in a 1953 Chevy convertible with the top down (the better to smell that sweet coal smoke) for more than an hour on a balmy summer day in 1956. A beautiful cap stacked N&W 4-8-0 was on the point and a combine trailed the 20 or so freight cars that were in the consist.

Another memorable mixed train that I saw in the 1940's was on the NC&St.L's Cowan to Tracy City, TN branch. This left the Dixie Line's Nashville to Chattanooga main at Cowan and climbed through Sewanee to the top of Monteagle over very steep grades and one reverse curve after another. From there it ran along the Tennesse mountain tops through several more small towns to its final destination. I had the great pleasure of seeing the train at Monteagle one day doubleheaded by a pair of (once again) cap stacked NC&St.L consolidations.

However my fondest mixed train memory is of the Georgia Southern & Florida's (Southern Railway System) Palatka, FL to Valdosta, GA train. I was riding on US Hwy. 301 which paralleled the railroad for many miles through north Florida. I was in the back seat of the family 1941 Buick Century keeping a lookout ahead, as always for hopefuly, an oncoming train. Imagine my surprise when I heard a whistle and looked out the back window to see a train rapidly overtaking us. Glory be it was a mixed train headed by an immaculate 4-6-0 in unmistakable SR green and gold passenger livery. Her tender was proudly labelled "Southern" in gleaming gold letters with GS&F in smaller gold leaf under the cab window. A grinning negro fireman was waving from the cab to us as the train sped by. The consist was maybe 12-15 freight cars followed by a SR combine with a plume of black smoke trailing just over the car tops. The icing on the cake was when that hogger blew a melody on the chime whistle for a grade crossing just as he passed us. Our speedometer showed 60mph so I would guess that ten wheeler had to be doing 75-80 mph. Soon the train was out of sight vanishing in the distance down that long tangent track. A faint trail of smoke hung in the air over the highway and track. What I wouldn't give to have a picture of that train but as usual in those days I didn't have access to a camera. However that glorious scene is etched forever in my mind's eye.
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Posted by leighant on Tuesday, July 4, 2006 9:54 PM
Quote "I would have guessed the passenger car(s) would have been up front."

I understand Texas used to have a law that required all freight cars to be carried IN FRONT of any passenger-carrying cars. Safety reasons. When a car jumps the track a speed, the cars behind it generally keep coming and plow into and through it. A hundred or a dozen freight cars are heavy and massive compared to a passenger car.

I rode a mixed train on the Moscow Camden and San Augustine in about 1964, behind steam. Seven mile run each way from the Carter Brothers lumber company in Camden to the SP interchange at Moscow, Texas and return. Wooden combine/caboose with "JimCrow" segregation signs in the divided coach accomodation, which were ignored.

Good book on Santa Fe mixed trains is Coach, Cabbage and Caboose
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, July 4, 2006 9:55 PM
When a mixed train arrives at a town, the engine has to uncouple from the caboose to do the switching . If tthe caboose or combine is next to the engine, it has to be pushed back and forth on every switching move. Don't think I would want to be knocked around like that - couplings usually are a bump type operation. Much rather be sitting stationary rather than be involved in the shifting! Especially if it's possible to be by the depot so the conductor and passengers can pass the time in more engaging and meaningful routines.

Art
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, July 6, 2006 9:01 PM
In the late seventy's early eighty's Central of Ga used to have a passenger car from Augusta, Ga to Atlanta. The only shot I have of it I am shooting on the shaded side. It was at the end of the train. Phil
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Posted by txhighballer on Thursday, July 6, 2006 9:52 PM
There is a Federal law on the books which states that if you have a mix of cars with graduated release and direct release,the cars with graduated release must be in front of the ones with direct release. I'll bet most of the coaches in mixed train service,if they were on the rear,were set up for direct release,which for comfort purposes they should be.
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Posted by wjstix on Friday, July 7, 2006 1:45 PM
Kalmbach's recent book on modelling passenger train operations points out a key factor is how the passenger car is heated. If it is set up for steam heat, it would have to run behind the engine to get steam from it (either from a steam engine or a diesel with a steam generator). If the car had it's own stand-alone heating system (like a coal stove) it could and usually did run last in place of a caboose.

I would assume whenever possible, the passenger car would be run last, so that the passengers wouldn't have to be jostled around with every switching move the engine made with the freight cars in the train.

BTW the Burlington had some 40' heavyweight passenger cars designed for mixed train service on branchlines.
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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Saturday, July 8, 2006 12:28 PM
An interesting variation on the mixed train could be described as a mainline mixed train. A prime example would be UP 117-118 between Denver and Kansas City, which ran with a baggage car and coach right behind the power and a full intermodal train behind the coach. After May 1, 1971, Southern ran 7-8 and the Piedmont (Washington-Atlanta day train) in a similar manner until they were discontinued.
The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul
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Posted by daveklepper on Sunday, July 9, 2006 3:12 PM
Trains such as the East Coat and West Coast Champion, the Southerner, the Silver Comet, during WWII often had one or PRR box cars modified with steam heat and communications cord connections and stabilized trucks to handle high priority frieght right between the power (GG1 north of Washington, diesel south of Richmond, diesel through to Washington in some circumstances but sometimes an RF&P 4-8-4 Washington-Richmond instead, and of course the diesel on the Southern south of Washington) and the baggage dormitory that was usually ahead of the coaches on these then all-coach lightweight streamliners.

But during WWII at age 13 I also rode the Suncook Valley, with its single 2-6-0 or 4-6-0. I remember it clearly as a 4-6-0, but photos tell me it is a 2-6-0. Anyway, they had one combiniation everything coach, baggage, mail and seats. Open platform on the passenger end and none on the bagge-mail end. I think the short mail compartment, 15 feet of the car, was between the baggage and the passenger sections. Usually I was the only passenger and had the run of the place. The line reversed direction at one point between Concord and Pittsfield, NH, and the locomotive would thus run backwards for part of the trip, but always at the front of the train, because there was a run-around track. And this meant that sometimes the combine would be adjacent to the front of the locomotive, sometimes adjacent to the tender, and sometimes at the rear of the train. Coal stove for heating. Walkover black leather seats. Grey-green exterior. One time I rode the train, the combine was in for shopping and the crew at first was unwilling to let me ride, because the rented replacement was a B&M regular baggage car with only wood fold-down longitudinal bench-type seats, but I convinced to let me ride with my 25cent half-fare ticket. Most business was coal for a sporting goods factory in Pittsfield that was making military stuff, and often hopper cars were the only freight cars carried, but sometimes one or two box cars also, never a train length longer than ten or twelve cars.

The Missouri Pacifics mix train from Witchita to Herendon had an old heavyweight combine as the coach and the caboose, and between it and the diesel, GP-7, was a 10&6 lighweight sleeper, which I rode, throught o Denver on the Colorado Eagle. I rdoe it to Palmer Lake, which was not regular stop. There were some box cars and a tank car on the train, trailing the passenger equipment. The porter forgot to wake me up in time to detrain at Colorado Springs and the conductor stopped the train at Palmer Lake because he felt the towerman there could get me a taxi back to Colorado Springs. The towerman was about to go off duty and he gave me a ride back. Good old D&RGW service!

The mixed train from Charlottetown, PEI to Moncton, for connection with the CN Ocean, used a car ferry, and the switching at both ends was done by the road locomotiove, again, a GP-7. The ferry served lunch, the coach was a regular CN day-nighter lightweight. It was located right behind the locomotive, and it and the locomotive usually occupied the center track with freight cars on the left and right tracks. Autos were also accommodated, if I remember correctly.

The international meter-gauge interurban from San Moritz Switzerland to Tirano Italy was powered by two powerful motor mu cars, wood, arch roof, double headlight and European looking, cream and green, in 1960, trailing a mixture of four wheel box cars, gondolas, eight wheel skeleton cars supporting standard gauge 4-wheel condolas. No trouble for me riding the front platform with the engineer. He even arranged a photostop on the spiral bridge. Stops in villages usually saw the train standing on the center of the main street while farmers came at place goods into box cars or removed consignments for them. An Italian couple insisted on my sharing some of their excellent food, which amused the engineer. I knew enough French to get by. The engineer was apologetic that the old equipment was still in service and that the promised delivery of the new shiny red more powerful and faster power coaches had been postponed, and I replied in my residual highschool french that i was very happy to sample the old equipment since I could come back in the future and enjoy the new.

The standard gauge connection at Torano, Italy, in those days, was still a two-wire and rail ground three phase ac operation to Sondrio. The Italian couple and I board the trough Milan car, which was at the end of the three car coach train, with something like a steeplecab with two side-by-side pantographs up front, and so we went off to Sondrio, where our through car was switched to the back end of an articulated double-end streamlined Italian version of the Electroliner for a fast trip to Milan along the shores of Lake Como.
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Posted by Texas Zepher on Friday, July 14, 2006 5:54 PM

 AydansPop wrote:
I was reading that the last train to run in my area on the San Antonio Aransas Pass RR in the late 60's was a So Pac "combination passenger and freight" train. I was curious if this "combination" was common and what the configuration and probable order of the cars might have been.

Links to pics would be nice!!

Well, I don't have any links to pictures but on the DVD below there is some excellent footage of the AT&SF Wichita to Pratt Kansas "mixed train daily".   There are even have shots of switching the coach in Pratt on the "fly".

http://www.hobbylinc.com/htm/gfg/gfg20002.htm

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