Indeed,
Any woman working for the railroad earns my respect.
There is a tourist line in England called the "Severn Valley Railway". Isaw their volunteer video posted on Youtube, which featured a woman working in the signal box (towers, we call them here) at Bridgnorth (the terminus of the line) who is called a "Lady Signalmen", who, I gather from the video, is a volunteer.
For those interested, here is a link to the video.... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eV8Tosivq9I
Cheese
Nick! :)
rrnut282 wrote:My wife and I volunteer on a tourist line and we BOTH qualified as brakemen. She knows to ask for 3-point before going in to lace the hoses, and has her own switch key so she can bend the iron, just like everyone else. If I was worried about her, I'd tell her to stay home.
Mike,
Evidentely when the word tourist is mentioned, in reference to you and your wifes volunteering as brakemen, it must have been during tourist season in a climate in a part of the country that was not like a winter here in the midwest where for 30 years I tied up thousands of air hoses hoses when they were so stiff from the cold that it took two hands to bend the hose to make a connection and at times seen brakemen in that weather that took all the strengh that they had to get the switch handle over.No job for a woman unless her a lady wrestler.
As one person in this forum mentioned. Working in freight train service as a brakeman or switching yards is a Whole Different "ball of wax".
I seen a brakeman get between two cars when opening couplers when the slack in about 15 cars between him and the engine run back in toward him. Not a good spot for a brakeman of either gender. I can still picture that in my mind.
drywall wrote: Mike, Evidentely when the word tourist is mentioned, in reference to you and your wifes volunteering as brakemen, it must have been during tourist season in a climate in a part of the country that was not like a winter here in the midwest where for 30 years I tied up thousands of air hoses hoses when they were so stiff from the cold that it took two hands to bend the hose to make a connection and at times seen brakemen in that weather that took all the strengh that they had to get the switch handle over.No job for a woman unless her a lady wrestler.As one person in this forum mentioned. Working in freight train service as a brakeman or switching yards is a Whole Different "ball of wax".I seen a brakeman get between two cars when opening couplers when the slack in about 15 cars between him and the engine run back in toward him. Not a good spot for a brakeman of either gender. I can still picture that in my mindI would like to clarify my Post above being a little more specific.-As to the brakeman that used poor judgement: When the coupling was not made he gave the signal to engineer to pull back to seperate the cars and which did happen but this was done but on a very slight incline which led to the slack between the cars to run back down just as the brakeman was opening the knuckles on the two draw bars {couplers}. I learned later that he had about 8 months as a brakeman.And as for hard throwing switches : Snow in the trailing points made a hard job for brakeman to get them over.
I seen a brakeman get between two cars when opening couplers when the slack in about 15 cars between him and the engine run back in toward him. Not a good spot for a brakeman of either gender. I can still picture that in my mind
I would like to clarify my Post above being a little more specific.-As to the brakeman that used poor judgement: When the coupling was not made he gave the signal to engineer to pull back to seperate the cars and which did happen but this was done but on a very slight incline which led to the slack between the cars to run back down just as the brakeman was opening the knuckles on the two draw bars {couplers}. I learned later that he had about 8 months as a brakeman.
And as for hard throwing switches : Snow in the trailing points made a hard job for brakeman to get them over.