QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH Express Reefers were AAR class BR and express boxcars were class BX. Both are considered passenger equipment based on such things as high-speed trucks, steam and signal lines, etc. A variation on the same theme would be the express flatcar, class BLF. They were used by MILW, IC, NYC and maybe others for carrying flexi-vans in mail and express service.
QUOTE: Originally posted by WJM2223 The Erie ran expedited perishables in REX Express reefers in its Chicago - Jersey City passenger tains in the '50's. I can recall seeing "Cherry Specials" streak through my home town of Allendale, N.J. like greased lightening on late summer evenings rushing to make the next morning's market in New York when there were too many for the passenger trains to handle in their regular consists. One GP-7 and a dozen reefers was most common. The operators' and dispatchers' voices were quite animated if not raised warning everyone to get out of the way of the "Cherry Special." Talk about "HOT" this was the ultimate. It made for some real excitement around the dispatcher's office in Jersey City. A typical run from Chicago to New York was between 20 and 24 hours, Not bad for friction bearings, seven crew changes and nearly 1,000 miles. The Erie and the Nickel Plate were the East's fast freight champions in the years before and after WW II. Bill McDonald (Erie Lackawanna Hist. Society)
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I tried to sell my two cents worth, but no one would give me a plug nickel for it.
I don't have a leg to stand on.
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