N&W seasons greeting
NW Mailing List
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Fri Dec 6 05:29:59 EST 2013
I remember when it arrived at Abingdon,and that was in early 2008 I
believe. I was also there helping flag the crossing at Fuller St. the
day the movers lifted it off the tracks and onto a flat bed for a trip
up the street to its current location. I remember it well because
that was in the fall of 2008 when I was the signal maintainer there.
It was in awful shape at that time, and looks much better now.
It probably was "just a caboose" to the townsfolk. I doubt by that
time there were any wooden ones left.
As for me, I prefer the steel Virginian cabs! I think they had a
beautiful styling, and an old conductor told me they were the best
riding of all of them in his opinion!
Ben Blevins
On 12/5/13, NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org> wrote:
> As a tourist attraction it has been quite successful in that very few
> families that have their picture taken in front of it have a member who is
> NW knowledgeable. Be gracious, it is in a highly visible spot and speaks to
> the railroad's importance to this region.
>
> Mike Pierry, Jr.
>
> On Thursday, December 5, 2013, NW Mailing List wrote:
>
>> Why in tarnation would the Town Fathers of Abingdon have put that garish
>> piece of junk on their square?
>>
>> I can understand why they didn't want an N&W wooden caboose (viz.
>> maintenance problems,) but the N&W steel cabin cars from the 1920s
>> numbers
>> 5184xx) were much more typical of equipment that ran through Abingdon and
>> one of them would have certainly made a more pleasing display.
>>
>> Methinks politicians and "public policy" types must have made the choice
>> on this dog, without the benefit of input of anyone with a fig of
>> historical consciousness !
>>
>> -- abram burnett
>> the quintessential curmudgeon
>>
>>
>>
>
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