[N&W] Re: NW Y3 becomes ATSF ?? becomes VGN USE
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Tue May 25 22:35:38 EDT 2004
Whoops ! The PRR references in my collection identify #1737 as the first K4.
Never did meet a PRR fan who could explain their non-sequential numbering,
though.
Jerry Crosson
_____________________________________________________________
John,
In a book titled "Norfolk and Westerns Magnificent Mallets" by William
Warden, the following information is provided concerning "wandering" Y class
engines:
Y's that went to ATSF and eventually to the Virginian:
N&W road #, ATSF road #, Virginian road #
2021 1790 738
2022 1791 739
2015 1792 737
2026 1793 740
2014 1794 736
2029 1795 741
2035 1796 742
2042 1797
I don't believe 2042 ever made it to the Virginian.
This book also includes one nice photo of Virginian 740 taken in 1949. I
believe copies of this book may be available in the commissary.
Incidentally, if you are ever in the Chicago area, the last remaining Y3
(actually a Y3a) #2050 is on display at the Illinois Railway Museum in Union
Illinois if you want to see one up close.
Jason Maxwell
___________________________________________________________
Uh, Harry -
Pennsy didn't use the dash in locomotive classes as did N&W. You speak of
the K4, G5 and M1a classes. Similarly, their most famous electrics were the
GG1, P5, and E44 . . .
David P. Morgan rather whimsically suggested that Pennsy kept all its unused
steam locomotive numbers in a battered old top hat turned upside down on a
table in the mechanical department offices in Philly; when Altoona was going
to need a number for a new locomotive someone reached in the hat and pulled
out the next one. But they never pulled out any dashes for the
classifications . . .
EdKing
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