Showing posts with label Research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Research. Show all posts

Monday, September 28, 2020

More on Cycle Trains....

As I've been doing some research lately (on the NHRR's J-1 class Mikados, in case you have any info to share ;^) I came across the following article from the May 2, 1936 issue of Railway Age magazine which covers the New Haven's cycle trains shortly after the first one ran.

Hope you enjoy this additional little journey down Memory Lane . . .

Monday, January 13, 2020

Monday Motivation: More Doing, Less Screwing

Although I've resolved not to do any New Year's Resolutions, that doesn't mean that I don't have an overarching goal for this project in 2020. Sure, I'd like to get a bunch of specific things accomplished (click here for specifics), but it's finally getting through my thick skull that none of that will happen if I don't abide by one simple rule:

More Doing, Less Screwing
  • Less screwing around wasting time on the internet
  • Less brain screwing, over-analyzing Every Single Thing
  • Less screwing up, without learning from it and realizing it's an inevitable part of acquiring experience & building skill
  • More screwing up - if that means you've dived in and actually tried something new
  • More relying on all the dozens (if not hundreds) of articles & videos you've seen already - rather than screwing your brain with more research (with little additional return)
  • More time dedicated to accomplishing something - even if only in 5-15 minute increments
I'm realizing that I've wasted, literally, months - and in some cases, years - researching every possible way to do just about every thing that needs to be done on a model railroad thinking that somehow the Perfect Article which, of course, contains The Answer is just one more book/magazine/video away.

But The Answer never presents itself that way, because there is no "answer" - there is just Practice.

More Doing

I'm beginning to realize that most of the time I've spent doing so much research has resulted in little more than Analysis Paralysis. The antidote?

Less Screwing

Quick case in point - Scenery

I've become pretty adept at benchwork, trackwork, and wiring probably because (surprise!) I've done it so many times. Practice may not make perfect, but it certainly makes for some confidence. And comfort - I've seldom gotten any layout beyond the wiring stage. It's just easier to stay in the comfort zone or, worse, just start over.

Now that I'm at the scenery stage of this layout (and no way am I going to start over) I reverted to an old habit:


I loaded up on books, hoping against hope that SOMEthing in them would make it EASY to do scenery. That, somehow, I’d find the key to doing it “right.”


I even went so far as to distill all that information (which quickly became overwhelming and near impossible to manage) into an outline. Talk about being left-brained!

But here's the dirty little secret: No amount of information is going to make it easy - and, counter-intuitively, often the more information you have, the less able you are to actually do anything! Too much information can be confusing and even conflicting.

Once you educate yourself on the basics, you have to Just Do It (to coin a phrase), and do it again (and again, if necessary). Only by More Doing (and less brain screwing) do you develop skill and - eventually - proficiency.

For example, and by way of contrast to my scenery book collection, I only have one benchwork book, and a couple of books on DCC wiring (I highly recommend the one by Lionel Strang, btw). Trackwork research was just a few articles in MR back in the 80s. I learned those skills from actually doing them rather than reading about them.

Now, far be it from me to discourage you from research. For some folks (and perhaps all Armchair Modelers), that's a big and enjoyable part of the hobby. And when you're brand new to something, it's generally a good idea to learn at least a little about it before diving into the deep end. Treading water is fine for a little while, but you'll enjoy the water a lot more if you learn how to swim.


If you're new to the hobby (or have been "in" the hobby for years, but haven't built a layout yet), I highly recommend one of the beginner's how-to books - one that shows you how to build a small layout from start to finish. I still refer to Sassi's "A Realistic HO Layout for Beginners" since it's so straightforward (and includes New England related scenery and structures).


While such a book gives you a great overview - and is all you really need for your first layout (and may be ALL you should get if you're prone to Analysis Paralysis) - if you want to dig in just a little deeper, the "Basic" series of books produced by Kalmbach are a good choice. There are "Basics" books on benchwork, wiring, trackwork - and, my recent favorite (pictured above), "Basic Scenery for Model Railroaders" by my old "friend" Lou Sassi.

But for a complete treatment of all things scenery-related, you can't do better than getting a copy of the Bible:


Despite - or perhaps because - I have multiple editions of this book, I've only recently been doing any actual scenery. It's all too easy to get overwhelmed by all the information & never get started. And I'm not even getting into all the information available on the internet, in both written and video form. The Information Age can be a left-brain nightmare, if you let it.

The main point of this post is to encourage you to NOT let it. If you tend towards more (brain) screwing, you'll tend towards less doing. You've probably already done enough research. And if haven't done any research at all, search the internet (briefly!) for a basic article from a source you trust, or a You Tube video with lots of recommendations (TrainMasters TV & Model Railroad Academy are good places to start). 

And then go do it. Try out the technique. And if you mess up, trust me - you'll probably spend less time REdoing it than you spent researching it. Bonus: you'll have learned something and built skill you can use for more doing in the future.

The key is to find a balance between the screwing/research and the doing so that you don’t make obvious mistakes, but feel confident enough to start building experience and skill. 

Here's to More Doing in the New Year!

Thursday, August 10, 2017

A Few Words about Wordless Wednesday #182


The pic above is the full-image view of yesterday's shot (the cropped version that's most often seen was used a few posts ago) and it clearly shows NHRR K-1d #356, southbound just south of the Goff Brook bridge, hauling steel girders, ostensibly for the construction of the Baldwin Bridge over the CT River between Old Saybrook and Old Lyme, CT. I'm told that the girders were transported over the Valley Line (due to its noted high clearances) down to Deep River, CT where they were transloaded onto barges and floated down to the construction site.

The bridge was completed and dedicated on December 4, 1948, so I knew that this photo couldn't be any later than that, and - given the trees and foliage - couldn't be "3/48" which was what was written on the back of the photo. I figured the latest it could be was Summer, 1948.

John Wallace then pointed out that the date on the back of the photo is likely even farther off than I thought, noting that the #356 was gone off the Valley Line by spring, 1948 and replaced with #466. I'm not sure exactly when the 356 was replaced, since according to a motive power report commissioned by the railroad, the 356 was on the local on April 20, 1948.

In any event, it's pretty clear that this photo was shot during the summer, not spring, fall or winter. And I tend to agree with John - it's more likely summer of 1947 than 1948.  Contemporary accounts of the bridge's dedication noted that "it was completed in less than two years" and I doubt the support girders would have been delivered only 3-6 months before the bridge was finished.

Solving little historical mysteries like this is one of the most fun parts of prototype model railroading. For just a little while, you're transported back in time (though often down a rabbit hole!). One thing I know for absolute certain though - that house in the background was there then, it's still there today, and now I'm modeling it. And now it looks like I need to get some HO scale girders to add to a few of the trains . . .

Thursday, February 18, 2016

Fun With Research - Old Saybrook Operations, Trains, and Locomotives

If you've read anything on this site so far, you discovered pretty quickly that I'm a sucker for research. In fact, if it wasn't for the fact that I want to recreate in miniature this whole lower Connecticut River Valley region as it was in the late 1940s (at least as much as practicable), I'd probably be content with doing research for its own sake.

But as a prototype modeler, research is a means - albeit a fun means - to an end. The modeling provides the catalyst, and most of the reason, for the research. And, in the case of my latest Saybrook/Staging Saga, the research provided, and continues to provide, the catalyst and reason for all the track changes. What started as an idle curiosity while I was doing some incidental research, quickly blossomed to a full-blown dissection of railroad operations in the Saybrook area. I'd already done some pretty comprehensive research on my main focus - Valley Line freight operations - so segueing to Saybrook operations generally was an inevitable evolution.

Before you can have all this fun though, you have to have some primary research material. Fortunately, I've been collecting this information for a while now . . .

Binders full of NHRR prototype information

If you aspire to model a prototype, here's a list of the basic, primary source material you should have in your library:

  • Railroad rulebooks (includes critical operating rules)
  • Passenger Timetables (includes general, public info on passenger trains)




  • Employee Timetables (includes more detailed information on passenger trains)
  • Freight & Package Schedules (public info on freight trains)



  • Arranged Freight Service books (the employee version, showing detailed info on freight trains and service)
  • Engine Assignment Books (I'm still looking for a New Haven one from September, 1947)
  • Misc
Under that last "category" would be anything else produced by the railroad that provides information on how it operated. In my case, a real treasure is a report the railroad did in April 20, 1948 showing what every locomotive did that particular day.


While this material can be hard to find - and sometimes expensive when you find it - you could do what I've most often done: purchase the original (no matter what the price), photocopy it, and resell the original to recoup funds for the next purchase. I'm a lot more comfortable thumbing through (and sometimes marking up) copies rather than originals. YMMV

So, what's all this have to do with my Saybrook/Staging Saga? Well, I "hit the books" (see end of post for sources used**) and discovered some really cool information about what a typical "day" would look like on my version of Old Saybrook - not only what trains there were, but what actual locomotives were used(!)

Since my "main actors" are the locals, they'll dictate the period of time I'll operate in Old Saybrook (there's no way I'm going to run a full day of 71 trains!). Originally, I thought I could get by with 3 passenger trains and one through freight, in addition to the two Shore Line locals. I could still do that in a pinch, I suppose. But making the track changes in Saybrook and in the two staging yards should allow me to do the following very interesting schedule.

The activity I model in Old Saybrook would start shortly after noon, with an eastbound passenger train:
  • 12:10 - Train #12, the eastbound "Bay State" (NY-Boston), powered by DER-1s (Alco DL-109) #0716 & 0717 towing a parlor car, grill car, and coaches passes through without stopping.
  • 12:14 - PDX-2, the New London to Cedar Hill Shore Line local, powered by DEY-5 (Alco S-2) #0604, arrives from the east.
  • 12:20 - Train #182, the eastbound "William Penn" (Phila-Boston), powered by DER-1 #0728 tows a parlor car, dining car and coaches, and passes through without stopping.
  • 12:26 - Train #11, the westbound "Bay State" (Boston-NY), powered by DER-1s #0739 & 0740 has a parlor car, a dining car (instead of grill car) and coaches, and passes through without stopping.
  • 12:35 - PDX-2, having done its switching, including dropping cars for PDX-1, and received its orders, heads north up the Valley Line to East Haddam.
  • 12:40 - PDX-1, the Cedar Hill to New London Shore Line local, powered by DEY-5 #0612 arrives from the west.
  • 1:10 - PDX-1, having done its switching a leaving cars for PDX-2, departs, continuing eastbound.
  • 1:17 - Train #188, the eastbound "Pilgrim" (Phila-Boston), powered by DER-1 #0743 and hauling a parlor car, dining car, and coaches, arrives, makes a station stop, and continues east.
  • 1:32 - Train #13, the westbound "42nd Street Express" (Boston-NY), powered by DER-1 #0733 and hauling a parlor car, dining car, and coaches, arrives, makes a station stop, and continues west (depending on the timing, both 188 and 13 could be at the station at the same time).
  • 2:07 - Train #14, the eastbound "Bostonian" (NY-Boston), powered by DER-1 #0744 and hauling a parlor, grill, and coaches, passes through without stopping.
  • 2:30 - FGB-2, hauling through freight from the PRR and the car floats at Bay Ridge, NY to Boston, and powered by DER-1s #0722 & 0731, passes through eastbound.
  • 2:43 - Train #177, the westbound "Senator" (Boston-D.C.), powered by DER-1s #0742 & 0735 and hauling parlors, dining cars, and coaches (likely PRR equipment), arrives, makes a station stop, and continues west.
  • 3:05 - Train #22, the eastbound "Yankee Clipper" (NY-Boston), powered by I-5 4-6-4 #1405 and hauling parlor cars, a dining car, a grill car, and coaches (alas, no longer all-parlors) highballs through town.
  • 3:22 - Train #23, the westbound "Yankee Clipper" (Boston-NY), powered by DER-1s #0711 & 0752 and hauling parlor cars, a dining car, a grill car, and coaches highballs through town.
  • 3:40 - PDX-2 arrives back in Old Saybrook from the Valley Line.
  • 4:10 - PDX-2, having finished its switching, departs Saybrook, westbound.
  • 4:17 - Train #174, the eastbound "Colonial" (D.C.-Boston), powered by DER-1s #0755 & 0748 and hauling parlors, a dining car, and coaches (likely PRR equipment), arrives, makes a station stop, and continues east.
Thus, endeth the session.

Whew!

Couple of cool things to note:
  • A very busy 4 hour period on a typical weekday in Old Saybrook. But considering there were 71 trains in a 24hr period, this level of activity isn't too surprising.
  • 10 passenger trains (3 of which make station stops), 1 long through freight, and 2 local freights that swap cars and do local switching.
  • LOTS of DL-109s! To be truly prototypical, I'll need 14 different numbers (heh - maybe each loco could have a different number on each side - then I'd only need 7!). Of course, the engine numbers are all based on one particular day (4/20/1948). Substitutions regularly (and will) occur(red)
  • One steamer: I-5 #1405, on the Yankee Clipper, no less! (could have been pinch-hitting on 4/20/48)
  • Speaking of the Clipper - they pass through Old Saybrook within 17 minutes of each other
  • One long through freight, powered by DL-109s
  • PRR equipment (both the Senator and the Colonial make an appearance)
  • I really need an Engine Assignment Book from before 1948 (preferably Sept. 1946 or 1947). As I noted here, steam was alive and well for a few years after WWII, then quickly declined very fast (all diesel on the Shore Line by spring of 1948).
Hmmm.... I may need even MORE staging than I thought . . .

**Primary sources of NHRR data aggregated:
  • Arranged Freight Train Service Book No. 76, September 29, 1946
  • Arranged Freight Train Service Book No. 79, April 25, 1948
  • Employee Timetable No. 164, September 28, 1947
  • Public Timetable, September 28, 1947
  • "Locomotive Utilization - Tuesday, April 20, 1948"

Friday, August 29, 2014

Research Resources: Hurricane Damage Photos

Prototype modelers have to become pretty adept at research and some of the common resources I've found that help me include Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps (for industry footprints, track layout), city directories (industry types/names), newspapers (events, often a photo resource).  Connecticut residents can access digital versions of Sanborn Maps and the Hartford Courant with a CT State Library Card.  Here's a link to the state library's database page where you can find more information about these resources.

Of course, I've also mentioned how valuable aerial photos are to prototype research - and I've used those extensively. Apropos the last two days' posts on Wethersfield Lumber Co., these aerial photos haven't been all that helpful. They show the buildings from above, but the photos are shot straight down - so all you really get is the footprint of the building. The lack of photos for Wethersfield Lumber (as well as other industries I want to model) has been a continuing source of frustration.

Well, the Blogoverse once again has come to the rescue, in the form of "Haksaw." He submitted a comment to yesterday's blog post pointing me in the direction of photos of damage from the 1938 Hurricane. I knew about UCONN's and the state library's aerial photo resources - and thought I'd mined them pretty thoroughly - but I'd never run across these!  They're aerial photos, but with a HUGE difference - instead of being shot straight down, they're taken at an angle (click here for an example) and from this perspective you can at least get some idea of what things actually looked like.

The Great New England Hurricane of 1938 (aka The Long Island Express, or more appropriately for a New Haven RR blog, The Yankee Clipper) was second only to Superstorm Sandy in property damage, but remains the deadliest hurricane to ever hit the region. Come September 21st, it will have been 76 years since it made landfall. In the days that followed, these photographs were taken to get some sense of the devastation. Fortunately, up around Wethersfield where I'm looking, the most apparent damage is flood damage. The buildings are still intact.

Including Wethersfield Lumber Company.


Above is an overview of Wethersfield ("photograph #00026" that Haksaw referred to in his comment). You're looking north and the diagonal line is the Silas Deane Hwy. Waaaay off in the distance, in the upper left hand corner, is the City of Hartford. Note the Traveler's (insurance co.) Tower - and also note how much LARGER it is than anything else in town (a bit of a metaphor, that). Of course, the main thing that strikes you is the flooding of the Connecticut river as a result of the hurricane. And the fact that there are few trees, and everything is so flat.

(BTW, as with all pics posted on the blog, you can click on them to get a larger view)


As we zoom in, you can see what is essentially the Wethersfield side of my main peninsula. You can just make out the railroad curving from near the lower right corner, going under water(!) the re-emerging to head straight north (and toward the upper left corner). In that upper left corner?  Wethersfield Lumber Co. (unforunately, Ballantine's Beer Distributors wouldn't be built across the street until the next year). Follow the railroad line back south and (barely) make out the Wethersfield station and Gra-Rock at Church Street (near the center of the photo), and then further south, inside that curve of the railroad track, you'll see Valley Coal.

That is an absolutely amazing view for this prototype modeler!


But we were focusing (literally and figuratively) on Wethersfield Lumber.  Here it is! Again, you can just make out the fact that the main lumber shed is the type that the track runs into (confirming the Sanborn map view), and check out all those lumber piles (that would later burn :^(


And, here it is at maximum zoom. The only problem with these photos - and most photos of the era, unfortunately - is that they aren't very high resolution.  So you can only zoom in so far before things go all blurry. But this is FAR more visual information than I've had on Wethersfield Lumber to date - and is certainly enough for me to get started on modeling it, with at least some confidence that it'll be pretty darn close to accurate.

I'm sure I've said it before, and I'm sure you've heard it said more eloquently elsewhere, but one of the pure joys of prototype modeling (and sometimes it's biggest frustration) is the research you have to do to make sure you're models are just right. And the process of searching for and, if you're lucky, actually finding that information is pretty darn close to time travel in my book. The Eureka! moments like these that happen totally outweigh any frustrations or limitations you might feel when following a prototype closely.

Thanks Haksaw for turning me on to this resource. It's certainly given me a great start to modeling the lumber company. Unfortunately, seeing this area being even flatter than I expected, I may end up having to rip out some cardboard lattice and plaster cloth.  All in the time of Prototype Fidelity, of course!

Friday, August 15, 2014

Research Resources: Aerial Photos

After seeing my post on Time Travel with Maps, RichS reminded me in a comment to that post of another resource - www.historicaerials.com.  This is an amazing website that has gathered together many - if not all - online resources for aerial photos from across the country and, better yet for the historic prototype modeler, from different eras.

For what I'm interested in - Connecticut specifically - you can also go to the University of Connecticut (UCONN).  They have aerial photos for different years for most places in Connecticut and most of them are available (as .tif or pdf files) through the UCONN Map & Geographic Information Center (MAGIC) website: http://magic.lib.uconn.edu/ . This link should bring you to a page where all the online Aerial Photograph collections are listed: http://magic.lib.uconn.edu/connecticut_data.html#indexes.

For example, if you choose the 1934 aerials, if you click on Map Preview this will bring up a search box where you can search by address: http://magic.lib.uconn.edu/mash_up/1934_aerial_index.html . Once you've found your area, click on the red flag. One of the options will be to download a file.

For more about Connecticut's aerial photos go to http://www.ctstatelibrary.org/topics/aerial-photos.

But beware: it is SOOOOOO very easy to get "lost" back in time when visiting these sites and lose tons of modeling time. Ask me how I know. But it is really just so cool to take a virtual fly over of the countryside as it was 70 years ago. At least in Connecticut's case, you discover very quickly how few trees there were (it was still very agricultural back then). But even more interesting - and frightening until you realize what happened - is seeing the photos of railroad lines with two trains on the same track heading toward each other! Thankfully, that's just the result of two photos that were taken on separate days overlapping each other. But the first time I saw it, I was pretty shocked!

I hope you'll enjoy these resources and will get some good modeling information from them.  And thanks again to RichS for reminding me of where to find them!

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Tuesday Tip: Time Travel with Maps

If you're a prototype modeler, you probably enjoy finding where old photographs of your railroad were taken. If you're lucky and the trees haven't encroached too much, you may even be able to replicate the scene. If you're really good, you can then morph between the two photos and see the old view morph into the new view and vice-versa (click here to see how Bill Schneider did this to great effect).

Well, today I discovered a way to do that with maps.  We prototype modelers rely heavily on maps to show us where our ROW went, what tracks were there, the buildings, etc.  But depending on what era you model, things could have - and probably did - change dramatically over the years.  If you want to see how, run - do not walk - over to the USGS's Historical Topographic Map Explorer. There you can enter the location you're interested in, click on the map of the location when it pops up, and the software will give you a timeline across the bottom with links to all the maps available for that location, plotted on the timeline by date and scale.

I'm familiar with parachuting into old maps online, but now that I've started playing with this new tool, it's really fun to toggle back and forth between today and "the past."  Bonus: the older your prototype and the earlier it was abandoned, the more fun it is.

So go check it out - but if after seeing the old maps you discover you did something wrong with your trackwork or building placement, don't blame me!

Saturday, July 12, 2014

Trains Through Old Saybrook, 1947

One of the best parts of prototype modeling, IMO, is the fun research projects that it presents.  And while research often highlights how much we have to compromise to fit the prototype into our space (and budget) - e.g. the more you know, the more you know you have to choose what to do without - sometimes research will help you be true to prototype with little, or no, compromise at all.*

Case in point: Modeling Old Saybrook at the south end of the Valley Line - and its dense traffic.  Follow along as I show you how I reduced a daily schedule of 71 trains down to just 4 - much easier to model, and all perfectly prototypical.
Data from Employee Timetable and Arranged Freight Service Book, entered into Excel and sorted by time-of-day.
I finally finished compiling a list of all the trains that would have gone through Old Saybrook on a typical day in 1947 (see above pic - that's just the first page).  As I mentioned in my last post, not counting the two Shoreline Locals I plan to model (PDX-2 New London-Cedar Hill, which serves the lower end of the Valley Line, and PDX-1 Cedar Hill-New London, which exchanges cars with PDX-2 in Old Saybrook), there are a staggering 23 through freight trains and 48 passenger trains during a typical day.

Yikes!

Now, unless I want to model a full 24-hour period (which, considering my main focus - local freights on the Valley Line - operated during the day, is unlikely) I can confine Saybrook traffic to the daylight hours only. 

How do I determine what the "daylight hours" were during October, 1947?  Google, as it often turns out, is your friend. I threw in a quick search and came up with this website which told me just what I needed to know.  During that month, daylight ranged from 5:54a-5:36p at the beginning of the month to 6:24a-4:55p at the end of the month.  So, as you can see from the pic above, I sectioned-off the trains that would have operated during the day.

That little exercise made things a LOT more manageable for freight traffic and a little more manageable for passenger trains.  Turns out, there are only 3 daytime through freights:
  • Boston-Cedar Hill train 9 (BN-9), westbound through Old Saybrook at 7:10 am
  • Boston-Cedar Hill train 3 (BN-3), westbound through Old Saybrook at 8:40 am
  • FGB-2, eastbound through Old Saybrook at 2:30 pm
The remaining 20(!) through freights operated at night.

But there are still 20 daytime passenger trains through Saybrook, from westbound train #401 at 6:40 am to the eastbound Puritan (train #20) at 5:10 pm.  Interestingly, the mid-afternoon features an especially impressive show of famous New Haven Railroad name trains during a short period:
  • 2:43 westbound Senator
  • 3:05 eastbound Yankee Clipper
  • 3:22 westbound Yankee Clipper
  • 4:17 eastbound Colonial
Check out the pic above for a full listing of daytime trains.  That's still a lot of trains.

From a practical standpoint, there's no way I have the space or the equipment (or time or money) to model all of these trains.  The three through freights would be great to have - they had either a DER-1s (DL-109s) or an R-3 4-8-2 on the point, and of course included any freight car you can imagine.  The Yankee Clipper, Senator and Colonial all have very distinct consists so should probably be modeled, but the other passenger trains could be represented more generically - maybe even with just a couple "typical" trains running around and around to simulate the high level of traffic.  

On the other hand, I could just concentrate on representing the trains that would be going by when the two Shoreline Locals are in town exchanging cars - that would still keep things hoppin'!  Assuming the locals met sometime in the early afternoon (based on PDX-2's 12:30 on-call time at New London), I'd only need to model the Pilgrim (1:17p), 42nd Street Express (1:32), and Bostonian (2:07).  Only downside is that I'd only get to see one through freight (FGB-2 at 2:30).

That's just 4 shoreline trains, in addition to the two Shoreline Locals - so much more manageable than trying to model 71 trains.  And I don't have to worry about "night" lighting!

We have to selectively compress so many things on a model railroad, from the Right of Way, to track layout, to structures.  But with the right research - and a little luck - you can model one of the busiest stretches of railroad in the country with just four trains.

Thursday, June 26, 2014

April 20, 1948: A Treasure Trove of Engine Assignments

I'm not gonna lie - while I certainly enjoy sharing the information I'm gathering and organizing it all here in one place, my motives aren't entirely selfless.  The other big reason I do this website/blog and give presentations is in the hope that I'll get even more information.  Thankfully that's been happening here and there, and the result is that I have more information to post/share/etc.

During a recent presentation (and on my 'site), I mentioned that I'm still looking for New Haven Railroad Engine Assignment Books from before 4/24/1949 - and most preferably the one from September, 1947. Well, I'm still looking, but thanks to Mike Ribuffo, via Bill Lupoli, I have a copy of something almost as good - and much more interesting.

As the New Haven Railroad was transitioning from steam to diesel power, it wanted to get a handle on how its new policy was going, especially since (to quote the correspondence) "the motive power situation is changing so rapidly."  So it commissioned a report (to the delight of future researchers like me), asking its Research Department to review the utilization  of all locomotives for one typical day.  The day chosen was Tuesday April 20, 1948.  Here's a sample of the locomotives you would have seen on the Valley Line that day:

  • K-1 mogul #356 was holding down its usual assignment on the Valley Local.
  • J-1 mikado #3022 was on the Air Line Local.

By this time, the Shore Line Locals had already been dieselized:

  • DEY-5 (Alco S-2) #0604 was on the New London-Cedar Hill local
  • DEY-5 #0612 was on the Cedar Hill-New London local and also acted as the New London switcher.

And according to the earliest Engine Assignment book I have, just one year later the Valley Line was completely dieselized:
  • Valley Local was using DEY-3 (Alco S-1) #0947
  • Air Line Local was using DEY-5  #0606
  • New London-Cedar Hill Shore Line Local was using DEY-5 #0612
  • Cedar Hill-New London Shore Line Local was using DERS-1b #0669
So what happened to the steam engines?  Again, the railroad's proclivity for reports comes to the rescue. According to condemnation records that show the final disposition of every locomotive on the New Haven (which makes for some sad reading, btw), it appears that #356 ended its life on the Valley Line, being condemned March 29, 1949.  The #3022 lasted a bit longer, but was finally condemned November 23, 1951 - well into the Diesel Era on the New Haven.

<shakes head to get out of a growing funk>

I'm glad, at least on my railroad, it's always a beautiful autumn day along the Connecticut River in 1947 and New Haven steam power still rules the rails.

Friday, November 29, 2013

More Steam in the CT Valley - The Air Line in particular

"Long time" readers (heh, if you were around last month, you're already "long time") may recall my post on the End of Steam in the CT Valley wherein I do my best to analyze when diesels arrived in regular service on the Valley & Air Lines.  Based mostly on an Engine Assignment Book and photo evidence of a wrecked 3011 in Dividend, I concluded that the end of steam on the Valley must have been between December 21, 1948 (date of the wrecked 3011) and April 24, 1949 (date of the Engine Assignment Book, showing diesels already assigned).

The window for the end of steam on the Airline was/is a little tighter.  Based on a John Wallace photo from "winter 1949" and knowing that a diesel would be assigned by April 24, 1949 (again, based on the EAB), I concluded that the end of steam had to have been sometime between January/February and April.  Considering the (lack of) snow cover in John's photo, my best guess was March, 1949.

What continued to bother me though was my uncertainty about Leroy Beaujon's photo of 3022 in Canaan in the "Winter of 1949."  I didn't expect that the 3022 did any "traveling" so I concluded that it had been assigned to Canaan after it left the Air Line.  So I figured "Winter of 1949" must've meant "December 1949."

Well, looks like I was mistaken.  According to Tom Curtin (NHRHTA board member and one who's as particular as I am about such things), the 3022 did do some traveling - and got to Canaan much earlier than I thought.  Here's what he wrote (quoting with permission):

"Here’s an addition to your info. The 3022 did some traveling in 1948. It may or may not have been the last steam on the Air Line local but it surely was the most regularly used one near the end. That’s the clear evidence from both John Wallace’s and Kent Cochrane’s photos. I don’t know when it last ran there but I do believe steam ran later on the Air Line than on the Valley (perhaps only a couple of months later but definitely later).

"Lee Beaujon’s photo of 3022 on the Berkshire was taken about the same time, perhaps even the same day, as the derailment of 3011 on the Valley. The story is there was a bad storm on or about 12/20/48 (That’s the snow visible in the 3011 derailment photo) which caused some bad flooding along the Housatonic [River], and water on the tracks. The Berkshire [Line, which goes through Canaan] had been fully dieselized since early January 1948 (almost all RS-2s but an RS-1 did show up). The RS-2s couldn’t run with “wet feet” so to keep some kind of freight going there the RR sent 3022 over for a couple of weeks. That’s when Lee got his photo. Casey Cavanaugh who lived in Cornwall Bridge and was a high school student at the time has recollections of this event too.
"Now … since it is pretty sure that the Air Line was still in steam in the winter of 1949, what ran the Air Line local when 3022 was over on The Berkshire? Well, I have no idea but it could obviously have been another J OR perhaps a 3300 (R-1 4-8-2). A 3300 showed up on the Air Line too."
Hmmm.... Very interesting for sure.  (well, to me anyway).  Tom confirms that steam ran later on the Air line than the Valley line.  I'll have to see if I can find any photos of other J-class mikados working the Air Line toward the end, but we know from photos that 3300s also ran on the Air Line, and John Wallace's recollection was that this was especially true during "stone season."  There was a major trap rock quarry on the Air Line at Reed's Gap (Wallingford/Middlefield) and quarrying took place as long as the ground wasn't frozen and the rock wouldn't freeze in the cars.

One of the most enjoyable aspects of this hobby is the research that's involved in modeling a prototype.  There's always some new information to uncover and you can have a lot of fun with all the historical detective work.  While this "breaking news" is best put in the form of a blog post, I'll be updating the "Steam on the CT Valley" page on the website as well (see under "Choosing an Era" in the lefthand column).  That way, this additional piece of the puzzle can be put in its place and provide an ever-clearer picture of what happened on this line almost 70 years ago.

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Choosing an Era: The End of Steam in the CT Valley

One of the first things you need to consider when modeling a prototype is what era you intend to model.  There's been much written about this topic by folks much more knowledgeable than I, but the consensus is that the narrower you define your era, the more plausible your efforts will be.  You don't want your steam locomotives pulling Penn Central boxcars, or modern automobiles set in a Victorian scene.

Defining your era can also be one of the most enjoyable research projects for your model railroad, especially if you're really into history.  Why else would it even occur to you what the proper colors of stop signs and mailboxes were in, say, 1947?  The answers to what "normal" folks would probably consider pretty esoteric questions are the puzzle pieces that make up the mosaic of time and place.  And the more questions you ask, and the more answers you get, the more effective you'll be at conveying that sense of time and place and the more convincing your "time machine" will be.

The "era puzzle" includes many pieces, one of the most important of which - on a model railroad at least - is what type of locomotives you include.  There's a reason why the so-called "Transition Era" between steam & diesel power is so popular - you (think you) can have your cake and eat it too and include both types.  But the limits of that era can vary pretty widely depending on your prototype.  And even when you've picked a prototype that includes what you want locomotive-wise, it may be hard to nail down exactly when those locomotives were last used.  That bit of information is essential to defining the outside limit of your era.

I definitely wanted to include steam engines on my representation of the New Haven Railroad's CT Valley line, so determining when steam power was last used is an essential piece of the puzzle for me.  The Valley line was only a lowly branch of a much larger system, so there'd be no fanfare or documentation of "Steam's Final Run" on the line.  I'd have to figure it out myself.  Here's the process I went (and am still going) through.  Hopefully my experience will inspire you to figure out that part of the puzzle for your own project. . .

With the delivery of Alco FAs and RS-2 roadswitchers, the Steam Era on the New Haven Railroad started to close rapidly and by the spring of 1949 diesels had taken over the Valley and Airline locals.  However, it's unclear when precisely the steam era ended in the Connecticut river valley.  Thankfully, railroads generally kept close track of their locomotive use, but the earliest NHRR Engine Assignment book I have is from April 24, 1949.  It shows the following:
  • Valley Local (HDX-7): DEY-3 (Alco S-1) #0947
  • Airline Local (HDX-12): DEY-5 (Alco S-2) #0606
  • Shoreline Local (PDX-2): DEY-5 (Alco S-2) #0612
(PDX-2 was the local freight between New London & Cedar Hill and at the time serviced the south end of the Valley line from Old Saybrook to East Haddam)

So we know steam had to end before 4/24/49.  What else can we deduce?  Well, based on photo evidence and the recollections of John Wallace (who "wrote the book" on the Valley Line - well, the articles at least, in the NHRHTA's Shoreliner magazine), we know that the most common engines used were K-1 class moguls on the Valley line and J-1 class mikados on the Airline.

According to John, K-1 #466 was the last mogul in use on the Valley line, supplanted by J-1s before the line was dieselized.  He should know - that's him holding down the fireman's box on the 466 below in March of 1948.


Valley Local southbound crossing the Little River from Cromwell to Middletown
Kent Cochrane photo from the Shoreliner Vol. 22 #4, p. 35
That narrows our "End of Steam in the Valley" to between March, 1948 and April, 1949.  But a year is still a pretty large window.  Now, here's an interesting image:

John Wallace collection.
This shows NHRR J-1 mikado #3011 on the Valley Local derailed at Belamose Avenue in Rocky Hill (Dividend), CT.  According to John Wallace, who recalls this derailment, it occurred sometime in 1948, but he wasn't sure when.  He's also pretty sure that this derailment spelled the end of steam engine service on the line, or was pretty close to it.  The snow on the ground says it's winter, but it is unlikely to be winter 1948 since we know K-1 moguls were still being used in March, 1948.  It could be as late as winter 1949, but no later since we know diesels were on-line by April '49.

You'd think the photographer - especially a photographer as meticulous as John - would know precisely when the photograph was taken.  But I just recently found out, even though it's in his collection, John's not the photographer(!).  Turns out, he got the photo from the Hartford Courant after he saw it printed in the paper.

Well now.

Every Thursday night, a bunch of us get together to catalog the NHRHTA's Photo Library for Shoreliner authors and other Association publications.  One of the guys that comes to help out is a professional researcher - Bob Belletzkie (of Tyler City Station fame.).  If the Courant printed the photo in the paper, there would be a date.  Using his research skills and digging through the archives, Bob found the article (actually only a photo and caption) and got the date for us: December 21, 1948.

So the end of steam on the Valley occurred sometime between December 21, 1948 and April 24, 1949.  I may never know the precise date of the last run of steam, but since I plan on modeling Autumn, I now know I can go as late as Autumn 1948.  Since I want to use moguls on the Valley local, the latest I can go is Autumn 1947.  And that's where I ended up.

But I'm still curious to know when the last steam ran, so if anybody has any additional information that could narrow that window of time further - most especially an Engine Assignment Book from before 4/24/49 - please let me know.

So that's the Valley line (so far...) - what about the Airline?  Looks like steam lasted there just a little longer.  Here's another Kent Cochrane photo, this one of the Airline local westbound at Middlefield, CT in April, 1948:

From the Shoreliner Vol. 22 #4 p. 31
And check out this photo John Wallace shot of the same local in the winter of 1949:


New Haven J-1 #3022 on the Airline Local eastbound at Rockfall, CT
And here's the same locomotive in Canaan, CT also in the "winter of 1949," according to Leroy Beaujon (who kindly loaned the photo):


New Haven J-1 #3022 at Canaan, CT.  Leroy Beaujon photo.
Did the 3022 leave the Airline temporarily and get put on a Canaan-area local before going back?  Seems unlikely, and until we get an earlier Engine Assignment book, we may not know for sure.  But we can draw a few inferences (assuming the photo captions are accurate).  "Winter of 1949" could technically mean anything from December 1948 through February 1949 - or even December 1949.  Canaan can get some early snow and it holds on longer, and John's color photo looks very much like late-winter in central Connecticut (notice the melting snow patches).

Seeing these two images together, and knowing diesel #0606 would be assigned by April, it looks most likely that John's photo is of one of the last (if not, in fact, the last) runs of steam on the Airline - perhaps January/February 1949.  If that's true, then Leroy's shot is probably of the engine after it left the Airline for a new assignment in Canaan, perhaps as early as Jan/Feb '49 but more likely December of that year.  In any event, my chosen era of Autumn 1947 is well within the period of time the 3022 was used on the Airline local.

If you've read this far, then you likely appreciate the work fun involved in answering the myriad of questions that present themselves when choosing an era and enjoy seeing how all the puzzle pieces fit - once you actually have the pieces in hand, of course.  But as fun as the process can be, the better and more efficient we become, the more authentic our efforts will be.  So if you have any tips or suggestions of methods you think work better, or what's worked well for you, let us know in the comments below!