#611 - 42, 2012
My father and grandfather were both railroad men. Dad spent
most of his working life at the Norfolk & Western Railway. Our house always
had N&W note pads, pencils, pens, maps, umbrellas, calendars and
commemorative railroad spikes. For years my father’s morning ritual, no matter
what the day of the week, started with a call to the local rail dispatcher to make
sure the train carrying parts to the Ford Motor Company assembly plant in
Norfolk had arrived on time. All that went away when my father died in 1995. None
of the members of my generation of Bonneys went to work for railroads, so railroads
no longer factored into our daily conversations.
Visiting Roanoke this past weekend, though, was like sticking
a probe on the part of my brain that holds all those railroad memories. Roanoke
was once the corporate headquarters of the Norfolk & Western. Its sprawling
workshops looked like the steel mills of Birmingham and Gary. The buildings
were huge and noisy. Smoke rose from dozens of stacks. Raw steel went in one
end and emerged from the other as rail cars.
The real pride of the Roanoke shops were its locomotives. The
N&W didn’t just buy locomotives out of a catalog. Company engineers
designed and the Roanoke shops built powerful locomotives for the specific
needs of different coal, freight and passenger routes.
The ecology of railroad locomotives is like a lot of other heavy
industrial equipment. It either gets used until it dies or else, when it
becomes obsolete, it gets sold down to smaller railroads or railroads in other
countries. That’s what happened to most of the N&W’s old steam locomotives.
But a few were kept, including #611, one of the fourteen “J” series steam
locomotives designed and built at the Roanoke shops. J series locomotives were
tremendously powerful and remained in service long after most railroads had transitioned
to diesel electric locomotives. On flat terrain a J locomotive could pull a
15-car passenger train at speeds up to 110 miles an hour. The drive struts you
see in the picture above moved so quickly when the train was clipping along
that they were just a blur. When I looked at a film of J series locomotives in
action, the struts moved so rapidly that I wondered why they didn’t just fly
off.
#611 - 16, 2012
Locomotive #611 served the N&W from 1950 until 1959 and is
now part of the collection at the Virginia Museum of Transportation, just a few
hundred yards down the track from where #611 was built.
If it’s possible to describe a locomotive as sexy, #611 is sexy.
Its front is rounded like the bow of a submarine. There's trim of chrome and stainless steel. Its body lines are sleek and
reflective of the streamline moderne style popular in the 1930s and 40s.
And lest you suggest that a train can’t be sexy, the title of
this post, “She is a think of beauty”
is not a typo. It’s what I heard a fellow visitor, a young design engineer from
the Ukraine, say as he contemplated #611.
#611 - 12, 2012
Wow--your photos are fabulous here, Chris! Love these. I am always very much aware of N&W when I'm in Roanoke. RC and his family would never ever complain about being held up by a train coming through town, because that was their livelihood. RC had worked for IBM and was moved to Roanoke from NY state--he worked on projects for N&W, and then, he was hired by N&W to head up their IT dept. He worked there most of his life.
ReplyDeleteHe'd have loved these photos of yours.
Superb post. Thanks!
ReplyDelete