Steam in Alexandria in 1958-59?
NW Mailing List
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Sun Dec 9 19:41:50 EST 2007
I'm not an expert on the geography and wasn't even born then, but my bet
would be on the "honorary steam engine" -- an Alco diesel.
Andre Jackson and/or Lisa Burrows
Life is short; update your anti-virus software
----- Original Message -----
From: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
To: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
Sent: Sunday, December 09, 2007 9:50 AM
Subject: Re: Steam in Alexandria in 1958-59?
> Gee Bob...
>
> I dunno. I started Grade school in '61, so I wouldn't be home. It was
> mid morning (9-11am) as I remember.
> I was after '56, because I was just too young. That makes it '57 thru
> '59. It was most likely Spring (70% chance)
> as my mom was doing spring house cleaning, and at the time she noticed it
> and called to me,
> she was cleaning the outsides of the 2nd floor windows.
> We lived less than 1/2 mile from the RF&P/SRR overpass.
>
> could their be any records of SOUTHERN passenger trains that, because of
> a breakdown,
> been pulled by either a J or K?? Maybe even from Petersburg, Bristol or
> somewhere north of where N&W turned over the trains to SRR power?
>
> Their is an 'outside' chance that it MIGHT have been the General.
> When during the year might it have arrived?
>
>
> Mark Lindsey
>
> On Dec 9, 2007, at 9:22 AM, NW Mailing List wrote:
>
> Mark, Ed and all:
>
> According to Lloyd Stagner in his last of Steam
> articles, the final C&O steam run was I think in WV in
> January 1957.
>
> As for Reading and their famous T-1's, there was a
> visitation to the area from one of these but that was
> not until mid-August 1964 I think and was part of a
> Philadelphia-Washington excursion. They tended to stay
> on or near home rails for the most part and the
> Reading Rambles were run from 1959-1964 when they
> ceased.
>
> As an addendum, the General also visited the DC area
> in 1963 as well as 1962, the major difference being
> that from what I have discerned in went no further
> north than Alexandria in 1963 as opposed to staying at
> Washington Union Station and the Navy Yard the
> previous year. If we remember, 1962 was the 100th
> Anniversary of the Andrews' Raid on the old Western &
> Atlantic RR.
>
> I know that the St. Elizabeth's engine, the 0-4-0
> Oil-burning Porter which now resides at the Baltimore
> & Ohio RR Museum in Baltimore, was active on the other
> side of the River until the latter 1960's. I
> personally remember seeing this in operation chugging
> its' way up hill with a car or two of coal, while I
> was stuck in traffic on nearby South Capitol Street in
> the morning rush hour. This was in the 1965-1967
> period. I don't think this engine would have strayed
> over to south of Pot Yard as you describe but that is
> a slim possibility, which also brings up the fireless
> cooker or two which might have been in use at either
> the Alexandria Power Plant or down on the RF&P near
> Cherry Hill. Maybe even the old Buzzard's Point Pepco
> plant had a fireless cooker as well?
>
> Maybe even a real smokey Alco?
>
> I can't figure which, what or if any steam engine
> would have been in the region in that period.
> Something like that would surely have attracted
> attention and other reports would have surfaced before
> this time.
>
> Might it have been in 1962 when W&A "The General" came
> to town?
>
> Bob Cohen
>
>
>> Mark,
>>
>> I don't believe C&O or Sourthern was operating any
>> steam locomotives as late as 1957. Does any one
>> remember when Reading began their rambles behind
>> their 4-8-4 and whether that ever strayed to foreign
>> roads?
>>
>> Sam Putney
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: NW Mailing List
>> To: NW Mailing List
>> Sent: Saturday, December 08, 2007 9:48 AM
>> Subject: Re: Classic Calendar faux pas?
>>
>>
>> Thanks Ed King!!
>>
>>
> D'Oh! RF&P. I totally forgot about them!! (Senility is
> transparent to the user)
>
> So would C&O have run a steam engine into Alexandria
> after 1957? I seem to remember a story about a SRR
> passenger train being brought into Alexandria because
> the Diesels died on the road. Possibly more of that
> senility thing though ....
>>
>> Mark Lindsey
>>
> OK History Buffs! When I was very young, We lived in
> Alexandria, just 1/5 mile from the crossing of
> Southern tracks and Atlantic Coast Line tracks (CSX,
> ATL, Seaboard?). I believe it was spring of 58, but
> possibly '59. Mid morining. Mom was cleaning the 2nd
> floor windows and called me to see a STEAM ENGINE
> coming north into Alexandria. I missed actually seeing
> the engine, but saw the smoke rising from the trees.
> As a Steam engine was by that time an unusual event, I
> was wondering If anybody had any idea what engine it
> was? It almost HAD to be a Norfolk and Western K or J,
> and pulling one of the Southern trains.
>>
>> Mark Lindsey
>
>
>
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> Mark Lindsey
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