|
Title: |
CNJ M2s "Antrhacite Road Mikado" is watered down the track |
Description: |
Central Railroad of New Jersey M2s is watered in Skillman as it pauses with a CNJ/Reading "Joint Freight." Hidden behind the big Mike is a very heavy freight on its way to Elizabethport Yard in Elizabeth, NJ. It was reclassifed a M63 in 1945. Jersey Central had five classes of 2-8-2s built between 1918 and 1925, by Alco, Brooks, Schenedtady, and Baldwin, and numbered between 850 and 935. They were all retired between 1/T‰@OV±qÚi |
Photo Date: |
1/22/1947 Upload Date: 11/25/2008 11:36:55 PM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1760 Comments: 1 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Reading "Mother Hubbard" or "Camelback" |
Description: |
A Reading wreck train or "relief train" as Reading called them sits in a siding in Skillman. Reading No. 1588 was built as a Class I-8b 2-8-0 by the Reading itself in 1912. As built, it was configured pretty much as shown in the photos, with center cab, piston valves and Walschaerts valve gear. It was saturated as built, but was converted to superheat in 1919 and reclassified as an I-8sb. It was off the roster by 1948. To the right are two non-revenue cars. The further one from camera is rebuilt from a gondola while the closer is an old truss-rod coach. |
Photo Date: |
1/22/1947 Upload Date: 11/24/2008 10:40:47 PM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
RDG 1588(2-8-0) |
Views: |
2045 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Reading M1sa Antracite Mike #1724 |
Description: |
Reading M1sa #1724, a 1912 era Mikado, takes on water at the Skillman water spout. The Reading rostered 57 of these units, built by both Baldwin and the Reading itself. CKF referred to them as "typical Reading freight locomotives" in his notes of the time. Sadly, none of these survive. We are on the New York Branch of the Philadelphia Division, a bike ride away from CKF's home at the time in Blawenburg NJ. |
Photo Date: |
1/22/1947 Upload Date: 1/30/2008 11:03:33 AM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
RDG 1724(2-8-2) |
Views: |
2608 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Reading "Motor Train" |
Description: |
Reading Brill Motor Car #4079 makes a stop at Skillman. This gas-electric doodlebug was utilized in Port Reading to Trenton service. Passengers could make a cross platform transfer in West Trenton to a Reading MU for the ride to Reading Terminal in Center City Philadelphia. This unit could seat 32 and had a 11 foot baggage area and a 10 foot RPO. By this time, the Offial Guide shows this only running Bound Brook to Trenton. The auto is the Freericks family's 1933 Plymouth PC Business Coupe. CKF refered to this doodlebug as a Reading Railway "motor train" in his notes. |
Photo Date: |
1/22/1947 Upload Date: 11/20/2008 10:20:09 AM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
RDG 4079(Doodlebug) |
Views: |
3376 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Reading customer Goulard & Olena |
Description: |
Goulard & Olena was one of three Reading Railroad Customers in Skillman NJ (along with the New Jersey State Village for Epileptics and machinery manufacturer Van Zandt, J. P.). Goulard & Olena was famous for their manufacture of rabbit repellent. The car in the shot is a 1933 Chevrolet 2-door Sedan, possibly belonging to the Skillman station master. To see these buildings today, check out this link... http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/showPicture.aspx?id=1034210. |
Photo Date: |
1/22/1947 Upload Date: 1/31/2008 12:05:57 AM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
2251 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Reading Depot |
Description: |
The Reading depot in Skillman was the closest railroad location for CKF growing up and was where he developed a lifelong love of the Reading. He was 12-years-old when he took this photograph. Note the 1933 Chevrolet, the four track main, the Camp Meeting Avenue overpass, and the gentleman at the door, who may have been the agent. Skillman merited this large station building as it was the home to the New Jersey State Village for Epileptics. |
Photo Date: |
1/29/1947 Upload Date: 5/9/2008 2:52:09 PM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1165 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Hand Car House |
Description: |
Looking north east (railroad east) from the Skillman depot, to the left is the hand car house (or motor car shed,) with a section gang car sitting in front of it. This car would be pulled by a small motor car (probably in the shed) to take the section gang to their work, which must have been intense. I have been told that all four tracks had a 75 MPH speed limit. This, and the other shots in this series, were taken with a 620 Brownie. |
Photo Date: |
1/29/1947 Upload Date: 5/11/2008 12:03:45 AM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1950 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
"Big Dutch Mike" under Camp Meeting |
Description: |
When one of the Reading Railroads "Big Dutch Mikes" or "Anthracite Mikados" (probably #1705) comes to rest on the westbound platform track, under Camp Meeting Road. To the left is the hand car house (later, the motor car shed). Closer to the camera, on the left, is the base of the flag stop semaphore. Passengers could pull the lever down to alert a train that they wanted to be picked up. The sign above it explained how to use it. |
Photo Date: |
1/29/1947 Upload Date: 5/11/2008 12:03:58 AM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
2000 Comments: 1 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Reading "Doodlebug" |
Description: |
Reading Brill Motor Car #4077 is seen in front of the grand three-story Victorian depot at Skillman, NJ. Just behind the "doodlebug" is the station's semaphore passenger controlled flag stop signal, used by passengers to request a train stop. Reading had a small fleet of doodlebugs working the New York Branch. #4077 was delivered by J.G. Brill in February of 1927. It was powered by a Cummins 250 H.P. diesel with a tractive effort of 10,100 lbs. It sat 32 in the passenger compartment and also had sections for parcel service and R.P.O. |
Photo Date: |
1/29/1947 Upload Date: 11/20/2008 10:18:47 AM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
RDG 4077(Doodlebug) |
Views: |
3191 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Reading M1sa Antracite Mike #1705 |
Description: |
The Reading had a fleet of 57 Mikes, numbered from 1700 to 1756. #1700 was built by the Reading Shops. The rest were built by Baldwin. Here, CKF has caught #1705 stopped at the water spout in Skillman. "Mikado" meant "Emperor of Japan," and the name came from the first such locomotives being built for Japan by Baldwin. Note the Wooten Firebox. Apperently these were all off the roster very soon after, by 1948. |
Photo Date: |
1/29/1947 Upload Date: 1/31/2008 12:28:20 AM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
RDG 1705(2-8-2) |
Views: |
2027 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Reading Track Gang |
Description: |
Track gang motorcar and trailer being put away at Skillman station. The overpass is Camp Meeting Road. CKF was standing on the eastbound platform (towards New York City). The Hand Car House itself is actually out of frame, across all the tracks to the left, on the westbound platform. It appears as if the men are preparing to move the gang car and trailer over all four tracks to reach the Hand Car House. |
Photo Date: |
1/29/1947 Upload Date: 11/27/2008 1:00:59 AM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1616 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Reading Railway "Crusader" |
Description: |
The Crusader tears through Skillman at high speed behind one of the railraod's two stunning GS1sas Pacific's. This was train #614, which ran from Reading's Market Street Terminal in Philadelphia to Jersey Central's Communipaw Terminal in Jersey City, NJ. Unfortunately, while CKF had access to his parents 620 Kodak Hawkeye Brownie, he'd acquired his own 1/2 frame 127 camera, and many of his pictures of this period were taken on this camera which made today's disposables look like Leicas. |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1947 Upload Date: 11/25/2008 11:36:33 PM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1958 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Reading freight |
Description: |
What appears to be an I8 Camelback (what CKF refered to as "Bunkhouse" Consolidation) heads through the four track territory in Skillman. If not for the fact that this were a road freight Camelback in the very last few months of service, I would never have posted such a poor quality image, but this one seems worth seeing, even in this terrible condition. Image was taken on a 1/2 frame 127 film Leecrest plastic camera, built by Lee Industries of Chicago, ILL, U.S.A. On the back of the camera it instructed "Use any Standard Vest Pocket Film 1 5/8 X 2 1/2 4 X 6.5 cm." |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1947 Upload Date: 11/25/2008 11:36:09 PM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1317 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Baltimore & Ohio #1 "The National Limited" |
Description: |
CKF's notes only identify this train as a Baltimore & Ohio passenger train. I am assuming it is The National Limited based on the shadows and head end cars (but am still working on solving the puzzle as the lack of streamlined cars impugns this idea greatly). If so, this was a Jersey City to St. Louis train. The westbound is about to pass under the telltales for Camp Meeting Road. Power is EA #51 (delivered May 1937) and an unidentified E6(B). It looks as if the E units are blowig smoke, although the angle of the smoke may mean it's actually just a flaw in the image (like the streaks clearly are). |
Photo Date: |
9/1/1947 Upload Date: 11/27/2008 1:00:39 AM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
BO 51(EA) |
Views: |
4119 Comments: 3 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Reading "Relief Train" |
Description: |
A Reading relief train lead by an I-8 class 2-8-0 probably #1588; one of 177 class I-8a through I-8d built by Baldwin and Reading (the last road freight camelbacks built). The class (1501 through 1617) was built between 1905 and 1914. , all of which were off the roster by 1948. It is followed by a flat car, an idler car, a wrecker (maybe one of Reading's 150 ton Bucyrus wreckers), another idler car, a tool car (made from a milk car), and a dining and bunk car (made from an old coach). The wrecker was based at Reading's Erie Avenue Freight Engine Terminal near 4th Street & Erie Avenues in North Philadelphia. |
Photo Date: |
9/1/1947 Upload Date: 11/24/2008 10:41:05 PM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1800 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
RDG 614 "The Crusader" |
Description: |
A streamlined Pacific GS1sas leads The Crusader, train #614 (the afternoon eastbound) past the Skillman depot. I'm told by a fellow who enhanced the pic that this is the #117. In 1947, the Crusader ran twice a day between Philadelphia and Jersey City. The trainset has an observation car on either end. The eastbound side is now tucked into an extention off the tender. In JC, the engine will be turned and placed on the other end, but the rest of the trainset is not turned. |
Photo Date: |
9/1/1947 Upload Date: 11/20/2008 10:21:01 AM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
RDG 117(4-6-2) |
Views: |
2710 Comments: 7 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Reading "Big Dutch Mike" |
Description: |
A Reading M1sa "Big Dutch Mike" leads an Autumn afternoon westbound on the "platform track" as seen from Camp Meeting Avenue overpass. It's a good bet that this freight stopped to do work at pesticide maker Goulard & Olena. Reading's Big Dutch Mikes were Baldwin products (except for the class engine, #1700, from the Reading shops). CKF lived in nearby Blawenburg at the time and would ride his bike to the Skillman depot or get a ride from his mom, who worked at Skillman & Skillman Realty. |
Photo Date: |
9/1/1947 Upload Date: 11/20/2008 10:21:29 AM |
Location: |
Skillman, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
Steam |
Locomotives: |
RDG 170X(2-8-2) |
Views: |
1478 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Pennsy's "Nellie Bly" |
Description: |
This is most likely PRR train #1077, the "Nellie Bly" which ran from New York to Atlantic City in 2 hrs and 45 min and would have received an engine change here from a GG1 to the K4s. For sure, the train is on the track headed down the Bordentown Branch to Camden (and possibly beyond to AC). K4s #5409 was a 1927 product of Baldwin Locomotive Works. The new pilot and relocated headlight are part of post war modernization that CKF said made it an example of "What a good looking locomotive should not look like |
Photo Date: |
10/1/1947 Upload Date: 11/20/2008 4:10:54 PM |
Location: |
Trenton, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
PRR 5409(4-6-2) |
Views: |
2512 Comments: 1 |
|
|
|
Title: |
PRR Bordentown Branch train #2372 |
Description: |
An E6s Atlantic sits in the station with a Bordentown Branch train that has just arrived from Camden. Behind her is a P70 coach. Today this service is run with light-rail DMUs on the New Jersey Transit River Line. The E6s was built circa 1914 and was the Standard Railroad of the World's attempt to build an extremely powerful and yet light passenger engine. While these units were common on the Camden to Trenton trains, they were eventually replaced by gas-electric cars. |
Photo Date: |
10/1/1947 Upload Date: 11/20/2008 4:11:09 PM |
Location: |
Trenton, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
893 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Empty coal from South Amboy |
Description: |
A boxcab P5a motor grinds west with what appears to be empty ore hoppers (probably coming from South Amboy and heading to PA coal fields). When first built in 1933, the P5a was to be an electric K4, but they were soon demoted to freight service (with the arrival of the P5am and then the GG1). Crews did not like the unsafe cab position and they rode very rough. They were built by Altoona, Baldwin, and Lima. They lasted in performing freight duty until the early 1960s when they were replaced by new GE E44s. |
Photo Date: |
10/1/1947 Upload Date: 11/20/2008 4:11:16 PM |
Location: |
Trenton, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
776 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Pennsylvania Railroad H10s |
Description: |
A merchandise freight heads east under the footbridge in Trenton pulled by what H10s 2-8-0 Consolidation is likely bound to Jersey City. The H8, H9 and H10s Consolidations were visibly indistinguishable. H10s appear to have been built by both Altoona and Lima. These were used on light freight and were delivered between 1907 and 1916, lasting all the way until 1957. The number on this engines appears to be 7621, but could be 7624. |
Photo Date: |
10/1/1947 Upload Date: 4/30/2008 1:04:49 AM |
Location: |
Trenton, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
Steam |
Locomotives: |
PRR 7624(2-8-0) |
Views: |
2341 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
GM "Train of Tomorrow" |
Description: |
The Train of Tomorrow visits CNJ's small LCL yard just east of the PRR crossing in Elizabeth NJ on its 86-city tour of the country. Behind it is the roof of the CNJ freighthouse. CKF was 12 when he took this image (probably with a Kodak Autographic Brownie Six-20). The E7(A) was gray/blue and silver, 2,000 horsepower, A1A-A1A, bulldog nosed, and built by LaGrange in April of 1947. E7s are the only engines that both my dad and I railfanned as kids. |
Photo Date: |
10/7/1947 Upload Date: 11/23/2008 1:44:58 PM |
Location: |
Elizabeth, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
Roster |
Locomotives: |
EMDX 765(E7A) |
Views: |
1174 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
GM "Train of Tomorrow" |
Description: |
The Train of Tomorrow visits Elizabeth NJ on its tour of the county. The location is listed as Baltimore & Ohio Freight Yard.... but is actually the small CNJ LCL yard just east of the PRR crossing in downtown. This was a concept train built by General Motors to promote the sales of diesels. It was made up of just invented dome cars, the invention of Cyrus R. Osborn, general manager of EMD at the time. Brand new in 1947, the four-car train had a 28 month tour of the country before being sold to Union Pacific. |
Photo Date: |
10/7/1947 Upload Date: 11/23/2008 1:45:08 PM |
Location: |
Elizabeth, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
EMDX 765(E7A) |
Views: |
968 Comments: 1 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Nassau Tower |
Description: |
Enlarged from a contact print of a 1/2 127 frame - NASSAU was only 4 yrs old in this shot. It had a35-lever US&S Model 14 electro-pneumatic machine with 21 working levers and controlled brand new 45mph crossover turnouts. The tower and plant were rebuilt as part of a World War 2 initiative to replace mechanical towers, here replacing one built in 1900. There is a full five-track crossover with the Princeton Branch entering from the south before turning into the No 5 track. There is also a No 6 track for storing the Dinky. |
Photo Date: |
2/1/1948 Upload Date: 3/18/2008 9:19:45 PM |
Location: |
Princeton Junction, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1829 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Pennsylvania Railroad westbound depot |
Description: |
Enlarged from a contact print of a 1/2 127 frame - The two story depot at Princeton Jct is seen from the north end of the Princeton Branch platform, where a rather unique looking signal head holds four aspects. The rather grand station was torn down (or at least decapated into a single story structure) sometime after this shot. This transfer point would be used by three generations of the Freericks family for at least forty years after this shot. |
Photo Date: |
2/1/1948 Upload Date: 3/18/2008 9:19:57 PM |
Location: |
Princeton Junction, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1814 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Three car train on the "Dinky" |
Description: |
Enlarged from a contact print of a 1/2 127 frame - The Dinky was and is a rail shuttle that runs from Princeton University to the Northeast Corridor at Princeton Jct. It was generlly handled by a two car MP-54 train in those days. This unusual three car train is lead by a combine MPB-54 (Motor Passenger Baggage Car), with two trailing owl-faced MP-54s. |
Photo Date: |
3/1/1948 Upload Date: 3/18/2008 9:20:24 PM |
Location: |
Princeton Junction, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1829 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
LVT Private Car 812 |
Description: |
Image is a composite of two frames. Car #812, a 1914 800 series interurban, stops on its way to Allentown on the Philadelphia Division of the Lehigh Valley Transit Line as long-time LVT motorman Charlie Hauser (and famous LV NRHS member) stands near. This heavyweight was built as the copmany president's prviate car (#999) on the chassis of a wrecked 1901 high speed St. Louis deck roof car. It was converted to a passenger car in 1921 and re# 812, next to the 800 series Jewett interurbans (all of which were later turned into box motors or scrapped, while 812 survived until the end of service in 1951). |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1949 Upload Date: 2/17/2009 1:08:14 AM |
Location: |
Quakertown, PA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
Transit |
Locomotives: |
LVT 812(Trolley) |
Views: |
2444 Comments: 1 |
|
|
|
Title: |
"Liberty Bell Limited" high speed service |
Description: |
A 69th Street bound Lehigh Valley Transit Liberty Bell Limited meets the connecting bus for Richlandtown, which replaced the LVT trolley on that branch. The interurban is one of the former Cincinnati Car Company "Red Devils" (aluminum cars) built for the Cincinnati & Lake Erie. It would be in the 1000 series, built in 1930, sold to the LVT in 1939, retired in 1951 and scrapped at Bethelehem Steel shortly after in 1952. Although hard to see, this car still has 3rd rail shoes, which it will lose in a few months when service is cut back to Norristown. Note the sign to the Quakertown Airport. The station house on the left still exists today. |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1949 Upload Date: 2/17/2009 1:09:36 AM |
Location: |
Quakertown, PA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
Transit |
Locomotives: |
LVT STREETCAR(Trolley) |
Views: |
2028 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Liberty Bell Limited lightweight |
Description: |
One of twelve very modern lightweight high-speed interurbans bought second-hand from the defunct Cincanniti and Lake Erie Railroad, coach-lounge "Red Devil" #1020 was one of seven lounge cars in the order (the others were straight coaches). The motorman's side door was cut in by the LVT. The front trolley pole was added to allow reverse running. The third rail shoes were added for running on the Philadelphia and Western track south of Norristown. It is seen here in front of the Lehigh Valley Transit Depot Ticket Office at 8th and Hamilton in downtown Allentown. |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1949 Upload Date: 2/25/2009 12:36:16 AM |
Location: |
Allentown, PA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
LVT 1020(Trolley) |
Views: |
1603 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Lehigh Valley Transit City-Suburban Car 913 |
Description: |
A Lehigh Valley Transit "Tenth Street Car" pauses to pick up passengers across the street from the interurban and streetcar company's 8th Street and Hamilton Street ticket office in the heart of Allentown's business district, while one of Allentown's finest direct's traffic (and Red Devil #1020 departs behind his arm). Car #913 is a 1918 product of J.G. Brill (one of a group of 39 all steel, center-entrance 2-man cars for the Allentown, Bethlehem, and Easton Division of LVT). Like its order-mates, this car was modernized into a one man, single door car, allowing it to run into the 1950s. They were the mainstay of the Mincie Trail line, the main line between Allentown and Bethlehem. Color scheme was Mountain Ash Scarlet with cream trim. |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1949 Upload Date: 2/17/2009 11:35:52 PM |
Location: |
Allentown, PA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
LVT 913(Trolley) |
Views: |
1714 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
"Liberty Bell Limited" high speed service |
Description: |
A former Cincinnati and Lake Erie "Red Devil" car (or a Cincinnati Car as my dad called them) Liberty Bell Limited waits at 8th and Hamilton St. at the Liberty Bell route depot in downtown Allentown. This was one of 12 lightweight 1000 series Red Devils from the C&LE. Built in 1930 by Cincinnati Car Company, these cars had a top speed of about 80 mph and aluminum bodies. LVT aquired them in 1939 after C&LE abandoned in 1938. They ran until LVT called it quits in 1951, and were scrapped in 1952. This car was running one of the "Expresses" leaving Allentown on the hour from 6 am to 10 pm. It would reach 69th Street in Upper Darby in 2 hours and 22 minutes. |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1949 Upload Date: 2/17/2009 11:07:39 PM |
Location: |
Allentown, PA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
LVT 1020(Trolley) |
Views: |
1652 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Lehigh Valley Train #26 "The Asa Packer" |
Description: |
Location needs to be verified. If location is correct, this is Main Street prior to grade separation and the fence is Johns Manville plant. This is probably train #26, "The Asa Packer" which left Allentown at 4:16 PM and arrived at Manville at 5:39 PM. Second car appears to be a Pullman Standard Osgood Bradley "American Flyer" 1930s lightweight coach. Also note the heavyweight with railroad roof and skirts added for an attempt at semi-streamlining. The other railroads that added skirts to heavyweights also modified the roof. This is a sign of the LVRR. |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1949 Upload Date: 2/19/2009 11:56:56 PM |
Location: |
Manville, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
2633 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Lehigh Valley Transit #421 |
Description: |
One of Lehigh Valley Transit's second hand Kuhlman lightweight city cars pulls past the Americus Hotel. Built for the Huntington-Ashland Railway Division of the Ohio Valley Electric (Huntington, West Virginia), it was purchased by the LVT about 1937. It was built by the G.C. Kuhlman Car Company of Cleveland. It's running on one of the local lines, which at the time were 10th Street Loop, Faireview, Greenwalds, South Bethlehem, Catasaqua-Northampton, Bethlehem-Easton, and South Bethelehem-Hellertown. |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1949 Upload Date: 2/19/2009 11:57:12 PM |
Location: |
Allentown, PA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
LVT 421(Trolley) |
Views: |
1243 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Ex C&LE Lightweight Car |
Description: |
Ex Cincannati & Lake Erie Lightweight "Red Devil" runs in reverse northbound off the Eighth Street Bridge in Alletown on its way from the Farview Car Barn near S. 12th & W. Wyoming St. On most trips, the single end 1000's made a backup move to the car barn and back. This one has just crossed over the Little Lehigh Creek. South Mountain is the hill in the background. The Eight Street Bridge had been the longest and highest concrete bridge in the world when opened in November of 1913. It was built by the Lehigh Valley Transit. The toll was 5 cents for automobiles. Note the 1937 Dodge and 1936 Packard in the parking lot. |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1949 Upload Date: 2/19/2009 11:57:36 PM |
Location: |
Allentown, PA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1556 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
LVT "Red Devil" heads up 8th St |
Description: |
Former Cincinnati & Lake Erie lightweight "Red Devil" running in reverse northbound on 8th Street just above Union Turnpike (on its way from Farview Car Barn) towards the Lehigh Valley Transit Depot on Hamilton. Poor image quality from the 1/2 frame 127 Leecrest Camera is further heightened by this scan being from a contact print of a lost negative. I wanted to share this image, however, as it's interesting to note how this long ago abandoned operation worked. These cars, which were not originally built to be run in reverse, had to be modified for these backwards movements when sold to the Lehigh Valley Transit so that they could be brought up from the car barn where there was no turning facility available. Too bad about the 1946, 47, or 48 Mercury blocking our view of this Red Devil car. |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1949 Upload Date: 2/25/2009 12:35:51 AM |
Location: |
Allentown, PA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1117 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Brill "Master Unit" |
Description: |
The Americus Hotel opened in 1924 and is at 549 Hamilton Street. While you can still find the hotel standing in this location, you can't rent a room in it any more (it's closed) and you can't take a ride on the Brill "Master Unit" that CKF photographed here in local service either. Car #953 was one of ten 950-Series Brill "Master Units" delivered in 1930. They had the large center windshield that made the cars so easily identifiable. Sadly, these units were all scrapped in 1953, even though their sister Red Arrow "Master Units" lasted into the 1980s. |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1949 Upload Date: 2/25/2009 12:36:02 AM |
Location: |
Allentown, PA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
LVT 953(Trolley) |
Views: |
1603 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Cincinnati "Red Devil" passing Brill "Master Unit" |
Description: |
The Liberty Bell Depot of the Lehigh Valley Transit at 8th and Hamilton is the backdrop as Cicinnati Car Company "Red Devil" #1020 in Philadelphia Express service passes Brill "Master Unit" #953 in local service on what appears to be a warm summer afternoon. |
Photo Date: |
6/1/1949 Upload Date: 2/25/2009 12:36:10 AM |
Location: |
Allentown, PA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
LVT 1020(Trolley) LVT 953(Trolley) |
Views: |
1636 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Eastbound Reading Motor Car with Train 657 (probably) |
Description: |
This is one of the Bound Brook - Trenton locals that ran throughout the day. Trains 652, 654, 656 and 666 eastward and Trains 655, 657, 671or 673 westward. All of these were daily except Sundays & Holidays"; there was also a westbound Saturday only train 1659 that stopped in Belle Meade from 12.59pm - 1.01pm. The timetable showed these as "gas electric trains." The car is #4071 a unique baggage/coach combine built by Bethlehem Steel. |
Photo Date: |
11/15/1951 Upload Date: 5/2/2008 1:09:24 AM |
Location: |
Belle Mead, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
RDG 4071(UNKNOWN) |
Views: |
2654 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Balitmore & Ohio's "Capitol Limited" |
Description: |
Train #6, The "Capitol Limited" is on its way through Belle Mead, New Jersey, on the New York Division of the Reading. It is lead by E6 (A) #52 delivered in June of 1941, and EB #52a (paired sets shared numbers) delivered in June of 1937. The train ran Chicago, Pittsburgh, Washington, Philadelphia, Jersey City. This train included an RPO-baggage car, 3 coaches, a diner, 3 sleepers and a parlor car. The first coach came from train 25 "The Columbian" and was a lightweight streamliner. He'd have been "tearin' 'em up." The employees' timetable of 1948 lists The Cap as running 11.5 miles from "GH" Tower near Pennington to Belle Mead in 9 minutes, an average of 76.7mph, then from Belle Mead. |
Photo Date: |
11/15/1951 Upload Date: 5/2/2008 1:09:37 AM |
Location: |
Belle Mead, NJ |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
BO 52(E6A) |
Views: |
4189 Comments: 1 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Southern Railway/Norfolk & Western #41 "The Pelican" |
Description: |
A brand new Hudson Hornet crosses in front of Norfolk & Western/Southern train #151/41, "The Pelican,"#while a N&W J or K2a retreats in the background. FP7 #6144 was delivered to the Cincinnati New Orleans & Texas Pacific in the Fall of 1950. The unit behind it is an G3(B). This picture was taken while the 16-year-old photographer was travelling between Princeton NJ and Sardis MS. |
Photo Date: |
8/1/1952 Upload Date: 11/23/2008 1:44:34 PM |
Location: |
Bristol, VA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
SOU 6141(FP7A) |
Views: |
3224 Comments: 1 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Southern Knoxville Division Mail train #4 |
Description: |
Southern Knoxville Division local mail train #4 from Knoxville is arriving at its final stop of Bristol (crossing State Street). The train has a single rider coach hidden by the two boxcars in the yard. The railroad worker is riding up to where F3 #4151 will be cut off. We are looking south towards the Norfolk & Western position light signal that allowed eastbounds to come into the depot. Delivered in January of 1947, #4151 was later rebuilt to F7 standards, to be retired in the 1969-73 era. |
Photo Date: |
8/1/1952 Upload Date: 4/27/2009 9:54:56 PM |
Location: |
Bristol, VA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
SOU 4151(F3A) |
Views: |
1110 Comments: 0 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Southern's "The Tennessean" |
Description: |
One of Southern's three Otto Kuhler designed ALCO needle nosed cab units is in charge of train #45 "The Tennessean." This picture was during the engine change at Bristol by CKF on his trip from Princeton NJ to Sardis MS. The unit is either Cincinnati New Orleans & Texas Pacific 6401 or Southern 2904 (CNO&TP 6400 had different number boards by this time). If it was the CNO&TP DL107 it had been rebuilt into a DL109 by the time of this shot. It was either delivered 2/41 or 9/42 and was scrapped at Spencer in the Summer of 1954. |
Photo Date: |
8/1/1952 Upload Date: 1/8/2008 10:13:47 AM |
Location: |
Bristol, VA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
SOU 2904(DL-109) |
Views: |
7396 Comments: 6 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Illinois Central #3 "The Louisiane" |
Description: |
Illinois Central #3 "The Louisiane" heads through Sardis on a hot summer morning in 1952. E8(A) #4018 was about two years old, having arrived 6/1950. It was the lowest #d E8 on the IC and was scrapped by Amtrak about 1980. Sardis, an hour from Memphis, TN, is home to Sardis Lake and Sardis Dam, which at the time was the largest earth-filled dam in the world. "The Louisiane" was one of IC's secondary trains, operating with standard heavy-weight cars, but still offered Pullman and dining service. It ran on the Chicago-New Orleans Main Line and would have hit Sardis at 9:14 AM. |
Photo Date: |
8/7/1952 Upload Date: 11/23/2008 1:44:09 PM |
Location: |
Sardis, MS |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
IC 4018(E8A) |
Views: |
1483 Comments: 1 |
|
|
|
Title: |
N&W Work train behind Z1b 2-6-6-2 |
Description: |
A work train is pushed/pulled through Union Station by a Z1b 2-6-6-2. Three employees ride a Jordan Model 2-180 flanger with wings. It has pneumaticly operated "wings" on either side that are extended for ditching and ballast grooming (or snow removal), and an underside mounted flanger for cljaring between the rails. By this time the Z class 2-6-6-2s were relegated to work train duty and local work. Best that can be told from this angle, this is a Z1b, but any help in making gn absolute ID would be appreciated. |
Photo Date: |
8/12/1952 Upload Date: 11/23/2008 1:44:22 PM |
Location: |
Kenova, WV |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1016 Comments: 1 |
|
|
|
Title: |
NW #46 "The Tennessean" at Kemper Street Station |
Description: |
The joint Southern/Norfolk & Western "Tennessean" heads north after its Lynchburg stop, passing in front of the lens of Charles Knox Freericks' Argus A Anistigmat. The train is being pulled by one of N&W's majestic J 4-8-4s. This was a Memphis to New York to train. To its left is a gantry crane. Above it is the Craddock-Terry Shoe Company factory. |
Photo Date: |
8/14/1952 Upload Date: 10/20/2009 12:53:33 AM |
Location: |
Lynchburg, VA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
|
Views: |
1760 Comments: 1 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Norfolk & Western #46 "The Tennessean" |
Description: |
N&W #46, "The Tennessean," slides over Jefferson Street crossing. To the right is the Norfolk & Western General Office Bldg, a 1951 Dodge and a circa 1941 Mack bus in the Safety Motor Transit scheme. The Tennessean ran Memphis to New York. J #608 was built by the Roanoke shops as an unstreamlined J1 in 1944. After the war it was streamlined and converted to a J, one of a total of 14 that N&W owned. Picture was taken on a round trip from Princeton NJ to Sardis MS. |
Photo Date: |
8/15/1952 Upload Date: 11/23/2008 1:45:44 PM |
Location: |
Roanoke, VA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
NW 608(4-8-4) |
Views: |
2531 Comments: 2 |
|
|
|
Title: |
Norfolk & Western's "The Tennessean" |
Description: |
Train #45 "The Tennessean" is readied for departure. This train connected with a Pennsylvania train of the same name, then ran Southern to N&W and back to Southern. The Roanoke police officer sitting under the stairs was there to watch the crossing, especially for upscale Hotel Roanoke guests. Assuming the train's on time, it's about 1:30 PM. #45 left Washington DC at 8:00 am that morning and will arrive at Memphis at 7:15 am the next day. Is that a 1940 Chrysler crossing the plane? |
Photo Date: |
8/15/1952 Upload Date: 7/14/2008 9:11:52 AM |
Location: |
Roanoke, VA |
Author: |
Charles Knox Freericks |
Categories: |
|
Locomotives: |
NW 609(4-8-4) |
Views: |
3151 Comments: 1 |
|
|
|