Cloquet, Minn., 2-8-0 No. 16 on log hauler Duluth & Northeastern – 1962 – Gary & Justine Ostlund
Credits: Photo by the late Wade Stevenson. Stevenson was a long-time employee in the Milwaukee’s roundhouse in Othello, Washington. A prolific photographer, he travelled far and wide capturing rail history throughout the west. He didn’t drive or own a car, rather, traveled by railroad employee pass or public transportation. I met him at a Milwaukee railfan meet in Kent, Washington and we discussed getting together and motor-homing in eastern Washington. He passed away before we had that opportunity.
Avoiding sparks and popping circuit breakers is what this all about. The crane is part of a Milwaukee Road wreck-train, hard at work in north central Montana. The crane came to the rescue from Harlowton, located at the eastern end of their 440-mile electrified operation through the Belt, Rocky and Bitterroot Mountain ranges.
So, what is that “boxy” contraption at the end of the boom..? That wooden assembly extends a bit beyond the end of the crane boom, so if the boom should brush against the Milwaukee’s 3,000-volt overhead catenary, there will be no sparks. The location of this incident was not electrified, but this crane is called to perform throughout the Rocky Mountain Division, electrified or not. “Safety First” meant you must be prepared. Other cranes in the electrified areas had a similar arrangement.
Wrecks occurring on the electrified lines sometimes wiped-out power poles and wiring. When they did it provided some precarious situations. A major derailment near Superior, Montana destroyed an otherwise undamaged full-length Superdome car because a downed hot wire made contact with spilled diesel fuel. Many times, the circuit breakers would automatically cut the power from the sub-stations. Those operators knew immediately of any mishaps and would cut the power if there was potential for forest or range fires.
The Northern Pacific Railway, that had no electrified lines, placed a similar wooden device on their Missoula based wrecker crane. Why would they do that, you ask? Because the NP and Milwaukee lines ran side-by-side, almost like double track, for many miles in Montana. So, if the NP had to call out it’s crane to do any kind of work on its line, it had protection as if those wires were their own.
Credits: story from The Milwaukee Railroader magazine 4th Quarter2020. Photo by Max Makich, age-13 with his Brownie camera
(Note: With all that glass overhead, those full-length Superdome cars had a diesel-powered 16-ton air-conditioning unit.) – Submitted by Gary Ostlund
A northbound Union Pacific intermodal train awaits inspection to be completed at the U.S.-Mexico crossing between Nuevo Laredo, Mexico and Laredo, Texas at 4:15 pm on December 10, 2021. Historically this was the border crossing and interchange between NdeM and Texas-Mexican Railway. Photo taken from Nuevo Laredo side of the border by Chris Dees.
Just as a reminder that our first Chapter Photo Contest for 2021 will run from 5-31 January 2022!
Each dues paying member is allowed to submit two photographs taken anywhere during the above timeframe. Entries with captions should be sent to jim@jimpearsonphotography.com by midnight on February 7th, 2021.
Dear members, we had the drawing for the Lionel Ready to Run train set at 4:03 pm today. The winner was ticket number 195, Mr. Chris Whittaker of West Louisville, Kentucky. Chris said he would take the train set.