1958 - N&W Men Bemoan Steam's Departure
NW Mailing List
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Sat Jul 19 00:01:21 EDT 2008
The engineer Harry J. Waldron, mentioned in this Roanoke Times article, is
pictured on the 2184 in my revised edition of N&W: Giant of Steam on page 3.
Bud Jeffries
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Subject: 1958 - N&W Men Bemoan Steam's Departure
> Roanoke Times - July 19, 1958
>
> N&W Men Bemoan Steam's Departure
>
> "I was on this engine when it first came out back in 1940." Harry J.
> Walrond, Norfolk and Western engineer remarked last night as he sat
> in the cab of No. 602, a Class J steam locomotive.
>
> Walrond felt blue, because it was the last night - perhaps forever
> - for steam locomotives to pull passenger trains on the N&W.
> The N&W announced Thursday that it is leasing diesels from two
> other railroads, and is taking out of passenger service 14
> streamlined Class J steam locomotives. They are not being retired,
> but they are out of passenger service for the present.
> Walrond was waiting in the hot, black cab of No. 602 - waiting for
> the Powhatan Arrow to arrive from Bluefield. Then he would hook on to
> the Arrow, No. 26, and pull it to Crewe, 130 miles away on the line to
> Norfolk.
>
> "I don't believe there's a railroad in the country that ever had a
> locomotive to compare with one of these in steam." Walrond remarked.
> "I hate to see'em go. If they'd keep these up, there's not a diesel
> that would stand a chance."
>
> Walrond said he's been railroading 32 years. He was fireman on No.
> 602 when it was young back in 1940.
> Walrond's fireman, Berkeley Breedlove of Blue Ridge, didn't have
> much to say. He's a youngster in railroading, been firing only 32 months.
>
> But A. M. Via, conductor of the Powhatan Arrow on its run to Crewe
> last night, felt sad, too.
> "Well, like everybody else," he observed just before he waved to
> the engineer, "I'm sorry to see'em go. Railroading doesn't seem like
> railroading without steam." Via added that he thinks railroaders
> would get used to diesels and like them when they know them better.
> The Atlantic Coast Line's purple and silver locomotives look odd
> on the N&W right-of-way. N&W railroaders have already coined a name
> for the ACL color scheme: They call it "polkberry juice".
> A foreman said they had quite a job mixing paint to simulate the
> ACL purple, but they finally did. They painted out "Atlantic Coast
> Line" and painted over it in silver letters "Norfolk & Western".
> The Pocahontas that pulled out for Radford last night was the
> first passenger train on the N&W main line to be pulled all the way
> from Norfolk to Cincinnati by diesel.
> J. L. Bradley was the engineer. He's been operating diesels
> before, but the ACL engine was unfamiliar one to him, and he looked a
> bit skittish as he yanked on the control and big "polkberry" colored
> machine began to rumble.
> Steam will continue to pull many of the freight trains on the N&W
> for perhaps two and a half years. Then it will be the end of the line
> for them. The N&W announced in June it would buy 268 diesel units in
> the next 30 months. They are to begin arriving in the fall at the
> rate of 12 to 15 a month.
>
>
> -----------------------------------
>
> - Ron Davis, Roger Link
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