Wednesday, May 31, 2017

Pennsylvania Railroad Steam Locomotive #5538 at Chicago, Illinois in 1946

ID # 9,630
Built by the Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1945.

"Skokie Swift"

ID # 1,802


"Skokie Swift"

Chicago Transit Authority articulated rapid transit car 54, at Dempster Street terminal. Built by St. Louis Car Co. in 1947, car was rebuilt for high-speed service in 1966.

California 4 a day

ID # 8,522
From the January 5, 1922 issue of the Chicago Tribune.

Sunday, May 28, 2017

Economy is a cheerful note in train travel

ID # 11,657
From the May, 1950 issue of Trains Magazine.

Union Pacific Railroad Steam Locomotive #X4012 on way to Steamtown U.S.A. (Bellows Falls, Vermont)

ID # 6,010
ID # 6,011
ID # 6,012

The "Big Boy"

ID # 1,109


THE "BIG BOY"

The world's longest and heaviest single-unit locomotives, the giant articulated 4-8-8-4 "Big Boys," were built for the Union Pacific Railroad by the American Locomotive Company. Each weighed 1,200,000 pounds in working order with her tender. This example, No. 40I9, was nearly 86 feet long 132 feet with tender. These power factories were designed to pull heavy fast freight Over the Wasatch Mountains without the use of helper engines. Because of their great length and power, they worked mostly in the mountainous area of the West, and used extra-long turntables. According to Union Pacific motive power experts they could make up to 80 miles per hour, but developed their top horsepower at 30 miles per hour. Nearly all of the Big Boys have been scrapped. One of them is on exhibition at the National Museum of Transport, St. Louis, Missouri.

UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD

Saturday, May 27, 2017

Trouble with the Indians

ID # 907


TROUBLE WITH THE INDIANS

As the Union Pacific Railroad builders pushed westward across the great plains in the middle and late 1860's, the Sioux, Cheyennes and other warlike tribes united to block the iron horse. The Indians made a desperate, futile effort to stop the white men's wholesale slaughter of buffalo herds which supplied their food, clothing and shelter. The Federal Government had solemnly pledged that So long as the Indians were peaceful, buffalo hunting would not be permitted south of the Arkansas River. But white men broke that treaty, railroad builders formed an alliance with the friendly Pawnees, and war was on. As shown in this painting, rails were torn up, ties destroy, trains wrecked, plundered and burned; and hundreds of men on both sides were killed. Blood sprinkled the route from Omaha, Nebraska, to Promontory Utah, where U. P. rails finally joined those of the eastward-advancing Central (now Southern) Pacific on May 10, 1869.

KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY

New York Central Railroad Steam Locomotive #1038 at Rochester, New York in August, 1919

ID # 2,185
Built by the Schenectady Locomotive Works, April, 1890, builder # 3065.

New York Central Railroad Steam Locomotive #1770 at Rochester, New York in 1919

ID # 2,137
Built by the Baldwin Locomotive Works in June, 1900, builder # 17776.