Freights: No Clearance Cards at West Roanoke or Bluefield?
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Sat Oct 9 10:33:40 EDT 2004
Here's a curious Special Instruction from Radford Division T.T. No. 7,
effective 4/24/1938.
"104. All trains must get a Clearance Card before leaving terminal stations,
except Sylvatus, Christiansburg, Blacksburg, Fries Junction, Narrows, Suiter,
Saltville, freight trains at Bluefield and West Roanoke."
Strange indeed !
Requiring a train to get a Clearance Card before departure was the train
dispatcher's way of "hanging on to" a train and not letting it get out on the main
line without the dispatcher's knowledge. If the dispatcher had no orders for
the train, he would instruct the operator to "Clear Ex 2106 West with no
orders," and the operator would issue a Clearance Card stating "I have no orders
for your train."
The exceptions for the first seven locations (Sylvatus through Saltville) can
be explained by the fact that only one train would be on the branch at a
time, and that the "coming back" train would be operated by the same crew as the
"going out" train. So there was no issue about meeting opposing trains in
these situations.
But how about trains entering the main line at West Roanoke and Bluefield?
Why no Clearance Card?
When a westbound left West Roanoke, the first open telegraph office which
handled train orders was at Elliston, almost twenty miles to the west. When an
eastbound left Bluefield, the first open telegraph office which handled train
orders was at Blake, ten miles to the east.
And, at the time, there was no telegraph office (i.e. train order office) at
the west end of Roanoke Yard or the east end of Bluefield Yard.
Granted, at the time this was all double track, automatic block territory
with (what we would today call) "Rule 251" in effect, so the only real issue of
"superiority" was that of following trains (e.g. a freight getting out ahead of
a first class train running behind schedule, or ahead of a passenger extra
running with a train order schedule, or ahead of a section of a first class
train running in sections.) But still, how about the matter of a last-minute slow
order which may have cropped up?
How did the railroad manage the practice of "no clearance cards" for freight
trains in these instances?
There are probably no firm answers at this point in time, just musings about
"verbal releases," etc. Nonetheless, I offer up the topic...
-- abram burnett,
of the trans-susquehannite diaspora
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