"Takin' Twenty" with the Virginian Brethen by Skip Salmon

NW Mailing List nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Thu Sep 23 19:35:13 EDT 2010



Skip, I have enjoyed your "Takin Twenty" with the Virginian Brethen since the first post. I have a question for the Brethen. In the video "Virginian Vignettes" there are two separate instances of Navy troop train movements that are heading toward Norfolk pulled by Mikados, since the trains appear to be made up of heavyweight Pullmans. I have lived around the Norfolk, Virginia Beach area all my life, and it appears to me that these trains are beyond Norfolk's Union Station and on tracks toward the Sewells Point yards. Did these military movements unload at Sewells Point, which was adjacent to the Naval Air Station and ship piers?



Date: Thu, 23 Sep 2010 08:34:54 -0400
To: nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Subject: "Takin' Twenty" with the Virginian Brethen by Skip Salmon
From: nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org




Last night, on the last day of summer this year, I had the pleasure of "T akin' Twenty" with nine of the Brethren and Friends of the Virginian Railway. GNP engineer Raymond East was able to join us. I brought for "Show and Tell" an N&W "Rules and Instructions for proper firing of coal burning steam locomotives" (16 pages from July 1, 1949) and passed it around. Raymond, who once fired the old #4 (now the last VGN Steam Locomotive left), commented when I asked him if he had ever seen one of these on the VGN: "All they ever gave me was a short handled shovel and instructions on how to open the firebox door!"

Also passed around was the September/October "NS Biz". This issue highlights "Coal Fuels the World". It features NS coal handling operations including exported coal. The country that receives the most NS coal is Brazil with France, Italy, Spain, India, Belgium, UK, China, Egypt and Turkey close behind. Also this issue tells about NS' new business opportunity with Marcellus Shale gas drilling and the "NS Go Green" program. The Brethren commented that the only green they remember being associated with the VGN were "the bananas in those ice cars".

The Jewel from the Past is from September 23, 2004: "Unlike the N&W Business Cars that were famous for their bars, 'Slick' Inge said that he saw no bottled liquor, but he couldn't vouch for what was in the paper bags that the VGN officials brought on board their cars with them at night".

I told the Brethren that the video for the night was one that I had been trying to get for a long time. Last Saturday as I approached Riverside Crossing, a coal train was just turning on his head and ditch lights at the east end of Kumis, telling me that he had just received a signal to come east. I rushed to one of my favorite spots, climbed the bank and shot the NS 9384 Dash 9-40CW and UP SD70 5971 pulling 100 loads of coal across the Yateman's Viaduct. This is the VGN Bridge that crosses above the N&W tracks just east of Singer on the N&W. I got the rear of the coal train as it crossed the high trestle above the Roanoke River from Mr. Greene's property. Me, trespass???

The ebay report this time includes the following VGN items sold: 1955 #22 Timetable for $40.00; Two H. Reid 1961 hardback "Virginian Railway" books, one for $34.33 and the other for $37.36; a 1949 Public Timetable for $17.29 and a bogus Lionel Zippo lighter with a VGN EL-C in blue and yellow on it for $16.37.

"Gibby" Davis remembered going to Moneta from Roanoke on the VGN Passsenger Train in 1942 and 1943 with his grandfather to get "vegetables". He clearly recalls that some of the "veggies" came in Mason Jars and were a clear liquid. W. W. Scott as a lad, said he did not wear shoes from May first until Labor Day. Glen McLain said that he went wore no clothes "until he was about 7, when my Dad got me a cap, so I could look out the window!"

I was able to give all the Brethren a Norfolk Southern pocket protector for their pens. Scotty suggested that the Brethren keep all of their $1,000 bills in these. Glen said he wore one as clerk on the VGN, but it definitely was not NS or VGN.

Several of the Brethren are planning to attend this Saturday's "Big Lick Stamp Club" special issue of a first day cover celebrating the 100 year old VGN Passenger Station in Roanoke. I will have these with the Saturday post mark, for sale as a fund raiser for the Station Project.

Our regular waitress, Princess, was on vacation last week. Raymond East, who can be seen greeting all of the waitresses as he makes his way to the back where we meet, told her this week "You haven't been yourself lately, we've noticed the improvement!"

Ken McLain, the official "Takin' Twenty Joke Man" brought this one to us last night: "What's the difference between a Yankee Zoo and a Southern Zoo? On the cage in a Yankee Zoo, it will have the name of the animal and their scientific name in Latin. A Southern Zoo will have the name of the animal and a good recipe."

Time to pull the pin on this one!

Departing Now from V248,

Skip Salmon


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