Sunday, December 31, 2017

Catskill Mountain Railroad Diesel Locomotive #401 at Kingston, New York on July 4, 1989

ID # 24,978
Built by the American Locomotive Company. 
Ex Green Mountain 401.
Ex Illinois Term 1056.

Strasburg Railroad Diesel Locomotive #33 at Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania on September 25, 1989

ID # 24,531

Septa Red Arrow Car Division


ID # 23,942
SEPTA RED ARROW DIVISION

Brill-built Red Arrow car no. 81 in latest Southeast Pennsylvania Transportation Authority colors westbound on Naylor's Run trestle, Media - Sharon Hill Line, in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, October 1973.

Photography by George Metz

M.&ST.L. Modern & STream Lined

ID # 22,805
From the January, 1954 issue of Trains & Travel Magazine.

Wednesday, December 27, 2017

Cohoes City Railway Trolley #4


ID # 9,083
Four 8 bench cars like this one and 1 - 9 bench car came to the Albia Car Barn and were renumbered  in the United  Traction numbers 31-31-32 & 35
The 9 bench car was numbered 34
3 - closed cars came to Albia & were renumbered 38-50-52
These open cars were built by Jones - in 1892

Canadian National Railways Steam Locomotives #46 at Shops

ID # 5,950
Built by the Montreal Locomotive Works (ALCO) in 1914.

NORTH SHORE 171


ID # 1,847
NORTH SHORE 171

A four car Chicago North Shore & Milwaukee train with No. 171 in the lead races across the countryside at Knollwood, Ill. October 18, 1962.

Photo by Skipper Clark

Pennsylvania Steam Locomotive No. 5244


ID # 1,087
PENNSYLVANIA NO. 5244

No. 5244, an 0 5-0 switcher, built in 1916 at the Pennsylvania Railroad's famous Juniata shop in Altoona, Pennsylvania, was the last of nearly 130 years of Pennsy steam engines to remain in service, in her old age she was leased to the Union Transportation Co., an 18.87-mile freight line serving the Fort Dix, New Jersey area. A framed enlargement of this photograph, showing her on a Union Transportation trestle, is hung outside the office of the PRR president in Philadelphia, together with her red-and-gold, keystone-shaped number plate, as a  sentimental remembrance of the Steam Age. The Pennsylvania Railroad did more than any other system in the world to develop the steam locomotive. Even after the PRR itself had been completely dieselized, No. 5244 continued to pull trains; but the extreme difficulty of repairing steam locomotives in the Diesel Age made it necessary to scrap her in 1960.

PHOTO BY DAVID PLOWDEN, RAILROAD MAGAZINE

Monday, December 25, 2017

Schenectady Locomotive Works Specification Card, New York Central & Hudson River Railroad #786

ID # 9,003

Canadian Pacific Train at Ottawa Station on August 30, 1958

ID # 5,954

New York Central Railroad Steam Locomotive #2153

ID # 1,798

East Broad Top


ID # 1,086
EAST BROAD TOP

No. 15, a 2-8-2 type, was built by Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1914 for a narrow gauge shortline, the East Broad Top Railroad & Coal Co., which dates hack to 1871. The company's narrow-gauge engines could not travel on standard gauge tracks, so Baldwin delivered them over the Pennsyhania Railroad on specially-built flatcars. No. 15 served continuously until the line was abandoned in 1956. She went back into service in 1960 when part of the line was revived as a tourist attraction. East Broad Top is one of the very few active narrow-gauge carriers in America today. Owning eight Baldwin steam engines, it operates steam-powered passenger trains regularly during the summer and early fall out of Rockhill Furnace (Orhisonia), Pennsylvania, where she is pictured here on a tourist run.

PHOTO BY JACK EMERICK

Saturday, December 23, 2017

Seminole Limited

ID # 9,010
From the January 12, 1922 issue of the Chicago Tribune.

New York Central Railroad Steam Locomotive #2041 at St. Thomas, Ontario, 1942

ID # 5,928

New York Central Railroad Steam Locomotive #2041 at St. Thomas, Ontario, 1942

ID # 1,801

Jersey Central Camelback


ID # 1,085
JERSEY CENTRAL CAMELBACK

This 41-2 (Atlantic) type engine, which Brooks Locomotive Co. built in 1901 for the Central Railroad of New Jersey, was one of several hundred "double-cabbers" that operated mostly in the East over a period of about seventy years, beginning in 1880. The middle cab resembled a camel's hump or Mother Hubbard's hood and was, therefore, called a Camelback or Mother Hubbard. In some Camelbacks the rear cab was so rudimentary that it was almost nonexistent. While this arrangement gave the engineer working on mid-boiler a better view of the track ahead, it lessened cooperation between him and his fireman shoveling coal in the tender behind. It was virtually impossible for the fireman to communicate with the engineer while the train was running, although the engineer could signal by bell or whistle; and in an emergency the fireman could stop the train by setting the air brake. Built for speed, Camelbacks pulled the fastest passenger trains on the Camden-Atlantic City run.

BALTIMORE AND OHIO RAILROAD