Continuing
with our exploration of Virginia’s Museum of Transportation in Roanoke Virginia…
It was on to the rail yard!
There
is a small playground and picnic area off to one side of the rail yard portion
of the museum. It’s right next to the Norfolk
Southern tracks. This old trolley car
sits open for children to explore but I think that it just looks sad and
neglected…
Since I
didn’t see a sign describing the trolley, I decided to find out where it came
from. So I looked up the Glen Echo
Amusement Park. Glen Echo Maryland is
located right next to Washington D.C.
The area was developed as a National Chautauqua Assembly in 1891 and in
the early 20th Century it became the Glen Echo Amusement Park. The park finally closed in 1968, but not
before it had its moment in American history.
Like
many public facilities in and around the Washington area, Glen Echo was
restricted to whites for 63 out of the first 70 years of its history. Then, in June of 1960, a group of college
students staged a sit-in protest on the carousel. Five African American students were arrested
for trespassing.
The
arrests were appealed to the Supreme Court and on the grounds that the state
had unconstitutionally used its police power to help a private business enforce
its racial discrimination policy, the convictions were reversed. (Griffin v.
Maryland) As a result, an 11 week civil rights campaign began. The park opened the doors to all races in the
1961 season.
Several
classic locomotives and a quantity of rolling stock are sheltered under this
long covered ‘train shed’ with the old Norfolk and Western freight depot on the
left. I imagined this scene on ‘live’
tracks with passengers, steam and all of the noise that would accompany the
vision!
Norfolk
and Western Y6a #2156 was built in the Roanoke Shops in March of 1942. The railroad began converting to diesel-powered
locomotives in the late 1950s and the Y6a 2156 was retired from service in
1959. It is the only remaining
locomotive of the Y5, Y6, Y6a, and Y6b classes.
It’s been cosmetically restored but it is no longer operational. I was interested to learn that this
locomotive is on loan from the Museum of Transportation in St. Louis County Missouri.
(Just how do you ‘loan’ something this size!
Only 16
Model Y6a 2-8-8-2 Locomotives were built.
It weighs 582,900 lbs. (291 tons!), developed 5,600 horsepower and could
roll along at 50 mph. The compound
articulated (Mallet) design allowed these large locomotives to be used on track
with tighter curves by splitting the driving wheels into two sets which can
turn independently. When diesel
locomotives took over mainline steam operations, the Y6-type locomotives spent
their last years primarily on mine and coalfield runs.
Just to
better show the massive size of the Norfolk and Western Y6a #2156 locomotive, I asked Laurie to pose next to
the drive wheels. This ‘beast’ is huge
and I can just imagine it charging on down the tracks pulling a big coal train!
This electric
locomotive from the Pennsylvania Railroad (GE GG-1 #4919) is undergoing restoration. It had been completely
painted at the time of our visit with no identifying marks or signage. Locomotive #4919 was manufactured in
1942. It ran almost 5,500,000 miles for the
Pennsylvania Railroad and later AMTRAK before it was finally retired on
February 1, 1981.
A total
of 139 of these locomotives were built by the Pennsylvania Railroad Altoona
Works. All were initially delivered to
the Pennsylvania Railroad. For those not
familiar with electric locomotives, they are powered by electric current provided
from overhead wires. Designed for
bi-directional operation, they were mainly used for passenger trains. As a locomotive for passenger trains, they
could reach speeds of 100 – 110 mph!
This is
Diesel Locomotive Wabash #1009. It was built
for passenger service on the Wabash Railroad.
Between 1949 and 1954, the Electro-Motive Diesel Division of General
Motors built 450 of these E8A units.
This was the 10,000th diesel locomotive built by EMD. Locomotive #1009 was retired from service in
June 1967.
This
locomotive has been referred to as a “bluebird” due to its distinctive pain
scheme. Locomotive #1009 pulled the
Wabash Cannonball, City of St. Louis, City of Kansas City, as well as other
Wabash passenger trains. Its top speed
was 98 mph! Wabash Railroad was leased
to Norfolk and Western Railway in October 1964 and was officially merged with
Norfolk Southern in 1991.
This is
Norfolk and Western Class A Steam Locomotive #1218. It was manufactured by Norfolk and Western
Railroad it began service on June 2, 1943.
Locomotive #1218 was built in just over 2 weeks, a record for the
Norfolk and Western Shops. (Cost = $163,872 or $2,250,000 in 2015 dollars) The #1218
is the last remaining Class A locomotive…
Locomotive
#1218 pulled coal trains between Roanoke and Norfolk (252 miles). She was retired in 1959 but she’s been around
since then. First she was sold Union
Carbide at Charleston W. Va. to serve as an oil-fired stationary boiler. Then in 1963, she was sold to Nelson Blount
and moved to Bellows Falls Vermont to be displayed at Blount's Steamtown
exhibit. Then in 1969, it was obtained
for the Museum and moved to Roanoke and given a cosmetic overhaul before being
put on display. In 1985, she was Birmingham
Alabama for restoration and use with an excursion service railroad. She was finally retired from excursion
service in 1994.
I’d
never seen one of these cars before… This is a Dynamometer Car, Norfolk and Western’s
#514780. Dynamometer cars carried
equipment for measuring and recording drawbar pull, brake pipe pressure, and
other data connected with locomotive operations and train haul conditions. It was a very useful tool for locomotive
design as calculations on the drawing board could be verified in road service. Roadbed conditions, stations and
topographical information were recorded by an operator stationed in a cupola. Information was recorded on a moving paper
chart in ink.
This
old wooden caboose is a Norfolk and Western Class CF #518302. It was built by the Norfolk and Western Shops…
I never realized how much rolling stock and locomotives alike were built by the
railroads themselves! This specific
caboose was built in 1922.
Between
1914 and 1924 381 of this model caboose were built by Norfolk and Western. They were constructed with wood sheathing and
wood roofs with steel under frames. They
were equipped with a cast iron coal stove for heat and oil lamps for lighting. They also were furnished with a refrigerator,
radio and toilet.
This is
diesel locomotive Chesapeake Western Baldwin DS-4-4-660 #662. It may not look all that old, but this 662
was built by Baldwin in Eddystone PA back in 1946! The engine was one of three diesel-electrics that
were placed in service on December 2, 1946. These 3 first-generation diesel locomotives
completely transitioned the Chesapeake Western from steam to diesel power.
The 3 Baldwin
DS 4-4-660 locomotives were retired in 1964 and 2 of them wound up in the
Virginia Scrap Iron and Metal Co. scrap yard in Roanoke VA where they endured a
number of floods and sat rusting for over 40 years. They were donated to the museum by Virginia
Scrap Iron and Metal Co. and the resulting restoration from rusty hulk to
shiny locomotive is truly amazing!
The Chesapeake
Western Railroad can be traced back to its origins in 1871. Known
by locals as the “Crooked and Weedy,” the Chesapeake Western has also been called
the “General Robert E. Lee’s Railroad.” After
the Civil War, Lee was convinced of the economic necessity of a rail line
connecting the Shenandoah Valley with the port of Baltimore. He became the first president of the Valley
Railroad of Virginia which was merged into the Chesapeake Western in 1942.
Just
click on any of the photos to enlarge them.
One more posting about the locomotives and rolling stock at the Virginia
Museum of Transportation will follow soon…
Thanks
for stopping by for a tour!
Take
Care, Big Daddy Dave
I always enjoy seeing the trains. While doing therapy I met a guy who is currently an engineer for NW and I enjoyed talking with him.
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