"Takin' Twenty" with the Virginian Brethren by Skip Salmon
NW Mailing List
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Thu Jun 14 12:06:18 EDT 2012
http://www.snopes.com/language/acronyms/shit.asp
David Jacobs
david.jacobs10 at okstate.edu
405-744-8840 (OSU)
405-372-6031 (home)
405-714-3494 (cell)
On 6/7/2012 7:25 AM, NW Mailing List wrote:
>
> Last night, on the 68th Anniversary of D-Day (NEVER FORGET!), I had
> the pleasure of "Takin' Twenty" with eight of the Brethren and Friends
> of the Virginian Railway. The buzz this week was about the photo I
> displayed of the Norfolk Southern Virginian Railway SD70ACe #1069
> Heritage Locomotive. This brought back many memories for the Brethren,
> seeing the big EMD decked out in their colors! I read to them some of
> the comments about this one, made by rail fans: "Finally a VGN EMD;
> absolutely, positively the best one yet!; should be called 'eye
> candy'; all she needs is a pantograph; what I looked forward to the
> most since the beginning of the heritage program; classy!; NS just
> knows how to make rail fanning better;'Bumble Bee'; Officially my
> favorite; and 'I want one'".
>
> For Show and Tell, I took my latest VGN RWY purchase, a short globe
> 1958 "VGN" lantern. When John Grabarek came up from Salisbury, NC to
> "Take Twenty" with us last week, he stopped on his way at an Antique
> Store between Rocky Mount and Boones Mill, and spotted it. I followed
> up and found out that it is one of the last oil lanterns issued by the
> VGN (1-1958 with serial number K4490). This Adlake Kero lantern is
> obviously of lower quality than my other short globe versions, but the
> real deal. Thanks John for the "heads up". It will be displayed at the
> VGN Station.
>
> The first day of this month marked the 55th Anniversary of the last
> VGN steam locomotive used on the VGN when fire was allowed to go out
> of the 251, VGN 0-8-0 class SB. H. Reid tells it this way: Engineer
> John Whitt and Fireman Winfield Sexton "moved five loads of new steel
> materials for the 70-ton hoppers built at a rate of seven daily in the
> Princeton shops". After "Takin' Twenty", this crew discovered
> machinist inspector Roy Jackson Dobbins, "already choking the fire" on
> 251. The crew used FM H16-44 #47 for the rest of the shift...
>
> The Jewel from the Past is from February 16, 2006: "I told the
> Brethren about discussing the merger with Louis Newton, who was an N&W
> Trainmaster at the time. He said before the merger, N&W crews grouped
> Virginian RWY empty hoppers for a once a week transfer back to the VGN
> at Gilbert, WV. On December 1, 1959, instructions were issued to
> discontinue this operation. Newton also said that for about 10 days,
> this could not be done, until all of the former VGN coal tipples could
> be modified by N&W forces to accept the N&W hoppers with the 'peaked'
> ends. This information helps explain why some suspected that VGN
> hoppers did not have 'peaks' to help prevent N&W hoppers from using
> certain VGN customer's coal tipples".
>
> Passed around was the July "Trains" magazine. This one has a great map
> of the month of N&W/VGN coal operations west of Roanoke. Also
> highlighted are the NS Heritage locomotives. Unfortunately the VGN was
> not out in time for this. For a web site to see all the current photos
> of all of the NS Heritage units go to:
> http://www.nscorp.com/nscportal/nscorp/Community/Heritage%20Locomotives/
>
> The ebay report this time includes the following VGN items sold: "N&W
> and VGN in Color" by H. Reid for $19.51; eight photos and negatives
> set for $56.65; Article about Tola, VA Bridge for $15.25; Slide of
> H16-44 #21 in 1959 for $31.00; Slide of #138 in Mullens in 1958 for
> $42.38; and a Slide of #126 and #33 in 1957 for $59.00.
>
> I told the Brethren about a bus trip from Roanoke to Spencer and
> return on July 4, 2012 to see all of the NS Heritage Units and June 24
> and July 7, 2012 NS Steam (behind 630) excursion trips. We may have a
> Road Trip on the horizon.
>
> The "Why was it named Kumis" saga continues: The June 4, 2012 "Roanoke
> Times" featured a photo of the Kumis crossing (US 460) in their "100
> years ago today" feature.
>
> Then there's this: In the 16th and 17th centuries everything had to be
> transported by ship, and it was before the invention of commercial
> fertilizers, so large shipments of manure were quite common. It was
> shipped dry, but if water got to it, it became heavier and
> fermentation began, which produced methane gas, and if someone came
> below deck with a lighted lantern...BOOM. After that happened, bundles
> of manure were always stamped with the instruction "Stow high in
> transit" on them so that any water coming into the hold would not
> touch this volatile cargo, and start the production of methane. This
> evolved the term "S.H.I.T." (Stow High In Transit)which has come down
> through the centuries, and is in use to this very day. You probably
> did not know the true history of this word...I always thought it was a
> golf term.
>
> Time to pull the pin on this one!
>
> Departing Now from V248,
>
> Skip Salmon
>
> CDXXIII
>
> __._,_.___
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