more on Abingdon Branch pax cars

NW Mailing List nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Sat May 16 07:23:54 EDT 2020


I think they are buckets to carry sand, as there was no place along the branch to service the locomotive other than water in the latter days.

The box under the running board, haven’t a clue, it appears on the 396, but not 382, perhaps Ed King can chime in on that. Perhaps a storage box to carry extra oil/grease, as like the sand, no place to service on the branch? Merely speculation, of course.

According to several sources, the mail and passenger service was discontinued in Virginia as of May 20, 1962. North Carolina however made it last a bit longer, until November 1963.  BMg No. 10 was the last of those remaining, retired and sold for scrap in September 1963. By the end of service in Virginia, I feel certain that the combine was all that the train carried after May 20, 1962 and the combine was placed in to handle the few remaining passengers. 

Very nice photos Rick, thanks for sharing. 

Ken Miller

> On May 16, 2020, at 5:20 AM, NW Mailing List via NW-Mailing-List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org> wrote:
> 
> Rick,
> 
> Thanks for sharing those neat pictures. I don't know what those round cannisters or cans are. What is the box under the running board above the crosshead area?
> 
> Roger Huber
> Deer Creek Locomotive Works
> 
> 
> On Saturday, May 16, 2020, 04:11:08 AM CDT, NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org> wrote:
> 
> 
> Here are photos from 1957 of the Abingdon branch mixed at Green Cove.  M 396 was the subject of the photographer, but I was able to determine that the postal-baggage is BMg 10 and the coach is Pg 1600. 1600 and 1601 were the only Pg coaches in 1957 which had coal stoves for branch line service.  Number 10 was the last BMg set up for US Mail service (1961-62 drawing).  There are photos in books of a Ph coach on 201-202, evidently as a substitute car.  I could only find that of the Ph class, only 703 and 704 listed as "not air conditioned" on a 1952 drawing.  As for when two cars were replaced by a combine, I would date that from when the US Mail contract ended.  Can anyone fill in that date?  There is a photo in Ferrell's book, page 173 of  the train with a combine which looks to be a BPe.  Somethng else is curious in the photos.  Does it look like there is enough space between the head end car and the coach for another car? If you have Link's "Last Steam Railroad in America" on page 78 there are three passenger cars in the consist.
>  
> When I acquired these negatives 30 years or more ago, I had only printed one.  I was always curious what the cans or barrels on 396's pilot deck were.  Look at the other two  photos and figure out what that was all about.  The photographer was W. Raymond Hicks.  I bought all 20 or so of his N&W negs.  He was from Maryland and his B&O and WM negatives numbered in the hundreds.
>  
> --Rick Morrison
>  
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