LORAM Railgrinder RG414 grinds through a curve as it makes its way south at Nortonville, Kentucky on the CSX Henderson Subdivision on May 23rd, 2022. According to LORAM’s Website: Rail grinding is the cornerstone of virtually every railroad maintenance program. It maximizes the life and value of rail assets through precision removal of fatigued metal, restoration of the rail head profile and removal of rail defects which are the optimization goals of an effective rail grinding program. Jim Pearson
Year: 2022
The Black Hills Central Railway locomotive 108 heads through the countryside as it makes its first trip of the day in stormy, wet weather of the forest to Keystone, South Dakota on my birthday, May 30th, 2022! I for one can’t recall a better way to spend the day then chasing a steam locomotive and they later in the day riding it with family! Despite the wet and rainy weather, it was a great day, and I even got the drone up a few times! A big shout out to Cory Jakeway for all the help on finding my way around on the railroad and rail-fanning with me! Photo by Jim Pearson
It took an upset like this to visualize and explain “Blind Drivers.” In December 1927 the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy narrow gauge Engine #537 rolled off the rails into the snow in the Black Hills.
The pointer focuses on the middle two driving axles, both of which contain blind drivers, wheels without flanges. In the early days all drive wheels were mounted rigid to the frame. With four axles in a row, the flanges would not negotiate the tightest curves in the rail, causing derailments, not to mention adverse wear and tear. The flanged front and rear axles provide enough stability to keep the locomotive on the rails in normal operation. It’s the weight on the drivers, not the flanges that provide the tractive force to move a train.
Advances in locomotive design included lateral motion devices on the drive wheels. #537 was retrieved, taken to Denver, rebuilt with some modern appliances, returned to duty, and performing better than ever.
Thinking back to my Lionel trainset of the 40s, the middle set of drivers also were blind.
Credits: Pix courtesy of Roger O’Keefe as seen in Railroads of the Black Hills, by Mildred Fielder
Did you know the NRHS Alco Historic Photos is the custodian of a collection of almost 300,000 photographic negatives and about 10,000 drawings and documents relating to the ACO and its successor ALCO Products? Take a few moments to browse around the NRHS website and you’ll find some interesting things like this Amtrak RS3.
Congratulations to Cooper Smith our first place and Bill Grady second place winners of our May 2022 chapter photo contest ! A reminder also that our July 2022 contest is currently underway and it runs for the whole month. All the entries may be viewed on the chapter’s website or our Facebook Group.
Each dues paying member is allowed to submit two photographs taken anywhere during the month. Entries with captions should be sent to jim@jimpearsonphotography.com by midnight on August 7th, 2022.
Get out trackside and shoot some pictures!!!
Below are the winners of our March 2022 photography contest and entries! Thanks for everyone who participated and we are currently in the middle of our month-long May contest! Get out and shoot something for the contest!!
by Bill Thomas, superintendent, Hook Line & Singer RR
The last derailment on the Hook Line & Singer RR sends the Board of Directors into finalizing the closing of the line. No livestock was injured.
For nearly 17 years, the Hook Line & Singer Railroad has brought me hours of joy, relaxation, and for a few of those hours, a great deal of frustration and challenge. It has been the gathering place for our chapter at times – where friendships were cultivated and precious memories made, evidenced by the picture bottom left. With the recent move we’ve made to West Lake Street, Madisonville, the Hook Line will join the ranks of fallen flag lines as its rails and ties are removed leaving a lonely roadbed. Mother Nature will soon reclaim the real estate.
But with that comes the creation of a new line, yet to be named. I guess it depends on the towns served and how much money each community along the line can raise to make an impact on the route. So stay tuned over the next year or two for news about re-purposed rail being laid to new vistas and destinations. Who knows, this may turn into a group project! – Bill Thomas, superintendent, Hook Line & Singer RR
Click on photos for a full view!
My records reveal that I’ve used this picture previously. Clearly it is one of my favorites. This is Amtrak’s Coast Starlight, crossing the Chambers Creek lift-bridge near Steilacoom, Washington. South Puget Sound was my stomping grounds until ’04, and a recreational and railroad paradise.
The train is northbound and follows the Sound for about 15 miles, facing great sunsets with the Olympic Mountains to the west. After tunneling under Tacoma’s Point Defiance Park, it will skirt Commencement Bay for another 5 or 6 miles.
This was a warm Summer evening out on the boat, and I had anchored, patiently awaiting a train, any train. Afterward I overnighted a few miles south near the Nisqually Wildlife Refuge. Nature provides a nicely protected breakwater, with the double track railroad a hundred feet or so up the bank, and endless wildlife throughout. A campfire on the beach with hot chocolate and marshmallows is in order.
As luck would have it, rail traffic that evening was light, actually non-existant. As I read my book and watched the daylight wane I felt certain that I was skunked. But low and behold, I heard whistling for the crossing at the ferry dock about a mile south. Another look at the bridge, with the sun now down to about a half-finger on an outstretched arm, and fading fast. Camera ready, here it comes clattering across the bridge. Click. It was then that I realized the sun was tightly packed between the train and the rail. Is that dumb luck or what.? Could I have planned it that way……? Not likely.
– Gary Ostlund
In light of our February program on Hueletts, Gary Ostlund had a timely entry for the PennyRail… (ed)
There were 77 Huletts in use on the Great Lakes. Not just the 4 PRR units at Cleveland. The NYCRR owned 8 at Ashtabula, Joint ownership with the B&O for 2 at Toledo and didn’t own but had total use of the 1 at Buffalo. The picture is NYCRR advertising. – submitted by Gary Ostlund
Congratulations to the winners in our January 2022 Chapter Photo Contest!
1st Place – Bill Farrell, 2nd Place – Cooper Smith and 3rd Place was also Bill Farrell.
Also, at the last chapter meeting it was decided to change the bi-monthly chapter contest to the whole month instead of the last two weeks. This will not affect the October Contest however which will remain October 1-11th, This is to allow judging and printing of the Calendar in time for the November meeting.
Therefore, we are currently in the beginning of the March Photo Contest which runs the whole month. So get out trackside and shoot something! Each dues paying member is allowed to submit up to two JPGs for each contest. Deadline for submissions remain the same, the 7th of the following month.
Here’s the schedule for the current and upcoming contests!
March 1-31, 2022
Submission Deadline: April 7, 2022
May 1-31, 2022
Submission Deadline: June 7, 2022
July 1-31, 2022
Submission Deadline: August 7, 2022
September 1-30, 2022
Submission Deadline: October 7, 2022
October 1-11, 2022
Submission Deadline: October 14, 2022 to allow time for the chapter calendars to be printed in time for the holidays.
January 1-31, 2023
Submission Deadline: February 7, 2022
Winners of the January 2022 Photo Contest and other entries are:
Telltales, are another piece of railroad infrastructure no longer seen along the right-of-way. In the days before air-brakes, hand brakes on each car stopped the train. On a whistle command from the engine, brakemen would scamper from the head end and the caboose, going car-to-car winding down the brakes. Imagine running and jumping aboard a moving train in a wind driven rain or snow storm.
It wasn’t unusual for a train to reach its destination with fewer brakemen than the beginning of the trip. With men on top of a moving train, an immediate problem was warning them of tunnels or other overhead obstructions. Telltales like those diagrammed provided a degree of safety and warning, in that the closely spaced knotted ropes would slap them in the face, sometimes taking a hat along with it. A narrow wooden walkway ran the length of the car. In those early days most cars were box cars and flat cars. After the 1869 invention of air-brakes by George Westinghouse, crewmen no longer needed to expose themselves to such danger while underway.
The walkways and ladders accessing them were retained, however, as it provided a platform for brakemen and switchmen to pass signals to the engineer in switching moves. With the advent of steel boxcars and covered hopper cars, the walkway was a non-skid grid, and over time hand-held radios became the norm.
As trains got longer, faster, and had an expanding variety of rolling stock, moving from car to car was no longer practical or necessary, and rooftop walkways and ladders have disappeared. Tank cars, tri-level automobile transporters and piggy-back equipment, not to mention OSHA helped change the game. Rolling stock now must be completely stopped while personnel board or offload.
Submitted by Gary Ostlund
Credits: Schematic – Union Pacific RR, Artwork – artist unknown, book: Age of Steam by Lucius Beebe & Charles Clegg
As of February 22, 2022, Angela and I will be calling 110 West Lake Street, Madisonville, home. We’ve loved being at 1025 Lakewood Dr. for almost 20 years. We’ve always admired several antique homes in the downtown area and one of those popped up on the market in December. We hesitantly proceeded and fell in love with this 140-year old classic adjacent to CSX’s (former L&N) main line on the Henderson Subdivision – but that had NOTHING to do with it! Some years ago the attic was renovated into a large room with kitchenette, bathroom, bedroom, and storage – perfect for a model train location! And, the back deck offers a fairly good look at passing trains. I’m looking forward to hosting my first train night in the near future! Bill
It’s noisy, bumpy, hot, smells and not a lot of room, but also exciting, fun and awe inspiring to experience a living, breathing steam locomotive from its cab!! Enjoy this still shot of Nevada Northern Railway fireman, Mike Hughes as he tends to the fire on locomotive #81, while Will Ebbert stands on the gangway in the background, keeping an eye on the track ahead, as they head toward Hi Line Junction, outside Ely, Nevada on February 13th, 2022.
Nevada Northern No. 81 is a “Consolidation” type (2-8-0) steam locomotive that was built for the Nevada Northern in 1917 by the Baldwin Locomotive Works in Philadelphia, PA, at a cost of $23,700. It was built for Mixed service to haul both freight and passenger trains on the Nevada Northern railway. Photo by Jim Pearson.
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.