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1/4/2025
 
 
 
 
 
Owner: Chicago Burlington & Quincy
Type: Passenger Car
AAR Class: PA: Car equipped to handle passengers.
AAR Type: M500
Detail Info:   Misc Cars
User Notes:   Coach Interior

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CB&Q Observation Interior
Title:  CB&Q Observation Interior
Description:  CWicago Burlington & Quincy Railroad obs|rvation car, date and location unknown, Hedrich-Blessing photograph, Chuck Zeiler collectio. The back of the print was stamped: If this Photograph is used for reproduction, kindly use the following credit line; HEDRICH-BLESSING STUDIO. it was also stamped: Neg. No. 6114-C. Although I could not narrow the car down, the photo does match an interior shot used in the book, The Passenger Car Library, Volume 1 - CB&Q, by W. David Randall on page 49 showing the interior of tho observation end of one of the two cars for the 1936.Denver Zephyr. The two cars were 230 named SILVER FLASH, and 231 named SILVER STREAK, both built by Budd on Job 965, ordered"in December 1935, delivered in October 1936.
Photo Date:  10/1/1936  Upload Date: 6/21/2018 1:31:51 PM
Location:  Chicago, IL
Author:  Hedrich-Blessing Studio
Categories:  RollingStock
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Views:  441   Comments: 0
CB&Q Sleepy Hollow Chair
Title:  CB&Q Sleepy Hollow Chair
Description:  Chicago Burlington & Quincy Railroad publicity photograph, scanned from Chuck Zeiler collection. The information on the back of the print is as follows: Scribbled out was: Photography by Jesse E. Hartman 121 N. Broad St. Philadelphia 7, PA Print No. 105. Below that was stamped; Burlington Lines Donald Ashton Executive Assistant 547 W. Jackson Blvd. Chicago 6, Illinois. And taped on the back on the print was the following; Comfort and convenience are outstandingly apparent in the coaches of the California Zephyr. Cushions constructed of resilient rubber, generously upholstered chair arms, and new-styled, adjustable leg and foot rests promote sound sleep. Note how the recessed backs of the forward seats add extra space for those who wish to stretch out for the night.

The photo illustrates the Heywood-Wakefield Sleepy Hollow seat. Typical railroad coach seats were little more than padded benches, so the development of a comfortable seat was an innovation at the time. Life Magazine ran an article on February 11, 1946 about the seat , and here it is, entitled; Hooton's Chair Harvard Anthropologist measures 3,867 people for a railway seat:

The science of sitting down inched forward a bit last week. The Heywood-Wakefield Company in Gardner, Mass., biggest maker of railway coach seats, perfected one that more nearly fits the seated human body than any yet made. The company calls it the Sleepy Hollow Chair. Nearly everyone else is calling it the Hooton Chair. Reason for this name was that for months Harvard University's well-known anthropologist Earnest A. Hooton, and his staff of statisticians had been prodding and measuring 3,867 volunteers and compiling statistics to determine what U.S. travelers should have under them. His mass of results were used in making a new seat scientifically tailored to the average railroad rider. Meanwhile, experimenting with a wooden chair filled with sand on which people left the impressions of their posteriors, the Heywood-Wakefield Co. arrived at a set of conclusions which, to their dismay, were precisely the same as Dr. Hooton's. The photo captions stated: Fattest man tested in Dr. Hooton's special measuring chair was Adam Reimer, who weighed 325 pounds and measured 56 inches around the hips. Ordinary railway seat is too hard, too vertical for ample Adam Reimer. Few abnormal sizes were measured because they complicated Hooton's computations. New railway seat fits Mr. Reimer better. The deeper cushioning gives with his curves and the inclined seat distributes some of the load against the chair back.

Reprint of article here: http://streamlinermemories.info/Eastern/LifeSleepyHollow.jpg

Photo Date:  2/11/1946  Upload Date: 6/19/2018 7:10:08 PM
Location:  Philadelphia, PA
Author:  Jesse E. Hartman
Categories:  RollingStock
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Views:  249   Comments: 0
CB&Q Coach Interior
Title:  CB&Q Coach Interior
Description:  Chicago Burlington & Quincy Railroad coach interior, print narked C.B.& Q.R.R.Co. Photograph No. #1 Date October 16, 1947, Chicago, Illinois,. Unfortunately, I could not match the interior configuration to any Budd car interior layouts as the drawings I used for reference showed restroom facilities at each end which offset the aisle to one side, thus the door would not be visible. It does appear to be a Budd coach, possibly one of the four coaches from the Second Twin Cities Zephyr, later the Nebraska Zephyr. Print scanned from Chuck Zeiler collection.
Photo Date:  10/16/1947  Upload Date: 6/17/2018 9:35:25 PM
Location:  Chicago, IL
Author:  Chuck Zeiler
Categories:  RollingStock
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Views:  289   Comments: 0
CB&Q Nebraska Zephyr Parlor Car
Title:  CB&Q Nebraska Zephyr Parlor Car
Description:  Chicago Burlington & Quincy Railroad observation bar on October 23, 1947, print scanned from by Chuck Zeiler. Hand-written on the back of the print was the following: Nebraska Zephyr Parlor Car. Stamped on the back of the print was the following: C.B.& Q.!R.R. Co. Photograph # 11 Oct. 23, 1947 Chicago Ill. and Burlington Lines Donald Ashton Executive Assistant 547 W. Jackson Blvd. Chicago 6, Illinohs.
Photo Date:  10/23/1947  Upload Date: 6/21/2018 12:44:53 PM
Location:  Chicago, IL
Author:  CB&Q
Categories:  RollingStock
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Views:  336   Comments: 0
CB&Q Observation Interior
Title:  CB&Q Observation Interior
Description:  Chicago Burlington & Quincy railroad interior public relations photograph, Chuck Zeiler collection. On the back of the print it is stamped: C.B.& Q. R.R. Co. Photograph No. 2, January 12, 1949, Chicago, Ill. It was also stamped: Burlington Lines Donald Ashton Executive Assistant , 547 W. Jackson Blvd. Chicago 6, Illinois. Based on the configuration, I'm guessing this was one of the six dome observation cars for the California Zephyr.
Photo Date:  1/12/1949  Upload Date: 6/23/2018 11:38:41 AM
Location:  Chicago, IL
Author:  CB&Q
Categories:  RollingStock
Locomotives: 
Views:  217   Comments: 0


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