Southern versus N&W Railway mail routes
NW Mailing List
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Wed Feb 13 23:30:17 EST 2008
I don't know when the practice started, but the RPOs on the Southern trains
went through Bristol. They weren't switched.
EdKing
----- Original Message -----
From: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
To: <aschneiderjr at sbcglobal.net>
Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 5:57 PM
Subject: Southern versus N&W Railway mail routes
> From: aschneiderjr at sbcglobal.netTo: "Frank Scheer"
> <f_scheer at yahoo.com>, RailwayPO at yahoogroups.com
> Date: Wed, 13 Feb 2008 16:26:00 -0600
> Subject: Re: [RailwayPO] Southern versus N&W Railway
> mail routes
>
> Did RPO cars run only between their designated end
> points (such as Washingon and Bristol in this case)
> with mail being transferred to another route (Bristol
> and Chattanooga) and another car, in this case of the
> Southern?
>
> In retrospect it seems surprising that the post office
> didn't emulate Pullman and own its own cars, built to
> its own standards, and simply pay the railroad to haul
> them. For routes not meriting a full 60 foot car that
> wouldn't have worked, of course, but it would have
> reduced the risk to a railroad of having a major mail
> route and having to buy cars which would become
> useless if the route was removed. And while the
> individual railroad might have risk if it bought cars,
> the Post Office wouldn't because the mail would still
> be moving on some route. In addition, having its own
> cars would eliminate having to switch cars at
> interchange points like Bristol.
>
> Alex Schneider
>
>
> February 13, 2008
>
> The situation you've described, Alex, about carriers
> left with unneeded capital investment if the Post
> Office Department decided to withdraw service is
> precisely what confronted the Boston & Maine and
> Jersey Central in the mid-1960s. The Post Office
> Department declined to make a long-term commitment to
> the carriers for the service life of replacement RPO
> cars. The Union Pacific was the last carrier to order
> new equipment and did so in 1963. Five years later,
> all of it was excessed.
>
> Back to Bristol: the cars continued through with the
> crew on a southbound train beginning to "lock down
> around Rural Retreat. By Abingdon, the crew started
> to re-hang the racks with empty pouches and sacks
> according to the Bristol & Chattanooga rack diagram.
> When the WASH & BRIS RPO Train 41 crew climbed off,
> the BRIS & CHAT RPO Train 41 crew got on, labeled the
> racks and inserted case headers, and started
> distribution. A similar process was repeated
> northbound for Train 42, with the lock-down starting
> at Johnson City.
>
> A Southern Railway car was always assigned to the WASH
> & BRIS RPO. There was no need to switch in a N&W RPO
> at Lynchburg or switch it out at Bristol for the
> southbound runs, and vice versa for northbound.
>
> In contrast, the other operating procedure where two
> RPO routes met, such as the COLS & NORF RPO East and
> West Divisions at Bluefield, was that a car was placed
> and the crew worked on "advance time," usually about
> two or three hours before arrival of the inbound
> train. Upon arrival, one RPO was switched out and the
> other switched in. The small amount of working mail
> that had to be connected between the two routes was
> made via platform carts in the 15 or so minutes of
> dwell time. Usually at these junction points, other
> equipment in the train consist was being switched in
> or out, too, so the station time wasn't entirely the
> result of changing RPO cars.
>
> There's a lot more detail that one could get into, but
> this covers the two basic operating scenarios for RPO
> routes. If you have other questions, please ask.
>
> Good evening,
>
> Frank Scheer
> f_scheer at yahoo.com
>
>
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