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Re: Mose Siskin part 2
Warren Stephens
I left out one local owner. C. E. James. He built the railroad with Sage money and later bought it for himself. When James passed his son sold to the Chambliss syndicate. Mr. James also built the Chattanooga Traction Company.
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WDS
On Jul 1, 2020, at 12:41 PM, Warren Stephens <wdstephens@...> wrote:
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
Warren Stephens
How many pleasant Saturday mornings I have spent at Collinsville. You will of course know why but we’ll leave the rest to wonder. I still go over there at least once a year. As for the picture, sorry I can’t post it. I have amassed a sizable collection of TAG pictures and other material with hopes of publishing a TAG book. Some day I hope you can have a copy through the book. I would be happy to let anyone come by and look through these. I did let David Steinberg have copies of the diverted Pelican for his Chattanooga Terminal Station book but he has yet to find a publisher. I had hoped to self publish but as an airline employee I have my wallet clamped shut at the moment. Does anyone know a decent rail related publisher?
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Warren D. Stephens
On Jun 30, 2020, at 3:15 PM, Byron Osborn <bosborn10@...> wrote:
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Mose Siskin part 2
Warren Stephens
As for who ran the TAG, the TAG had a series of absentee owners. The investor Russell Sage, the railroad investor Newman Erb and the Coverdale syndicate. Only Siskin and earlier the Chambliss syndicate, were local. Of the last three presidents - or day to day managers- of TAG, two were former Southern executives. The last was former SOU ex. vp Macon Tollison.
Warren D. Stephens
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Mose Siskin
Warren Stephens
Mose was on the board of directors but his brother Garrison owned the TAG. There is a document in the SRHA archives which lays out pre Southern ownership. Some stocks were registered to Garrison personally and Siskin Steel was shown as the owner of some. Same difference just a tax issue I suppose. I only had the opportunity to speed glance this file once at Kennesaw. This was during an SRHA modeling meeting. Mrs. Sally was overwhelmed with people coming in and just pulling stuff off the shelf and going through drawers. As she was visibly upset I didn’t ask for a proper copy. On one hand I believe I did right by not asking her at that time but I regret not getting a copy. Then the unpleasantness occurred and the archives were moved. I really need a copy of that file for my TAG book but am unsure how to proceed to get it.
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Warren D. Stephens
On Jun 30, 2020, at 8:59 PM, Rodney Shu <rodshu@...> wrote:
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
Rodney Shu
Didn't Mose Sisken own or run the TAG?
From: main@SouthernRailway.groups.io <main@SouthernRailway.groups.io> on behalf of Byron Osborn <bosborn10@...>
Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2020 2:15 PM To: main@SouthernRailway.groups.io <main@SouthernRailway.groups.io> Subject: Re: [SouthernRailway] Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities Thanks Warren. Can you post the photo. Sounds interesting. My home town is Collinsville and I visited the TAG line several times in Gadsden and Leesburg.
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
Byron Osborn
Thanks Warren. Can you post the photo. Sounds interesting. My home town is Collinsville and I visited the TAG line several times in Gadsden and Leesburg.
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
Stephen Warner
Marv, When I started riding SR in '64, I used 41/42, 45/46, 17/18 regularly, along with many Oakdale turns on 28/27. My first ride down the CS was in '69 as Mgt. Trainee. However, I knew little of what was to come just a few years later in this "Master Plan" for the System. (I also noted the plan for IC/CGA's 9 & 10, which we jointly worked in '67 in Bham, just a pair of years ahead of this). I didn't know how many combined trains the Washington Div. handled at that time - these were heavy trains. Monroe must still have been a busy place for a few hours a day then. I often rode the four E units south from DC on my trips back to ATL that this consist describes. Also recall the "gap" that SR/Claytor made by amputating Tenn. between Va. and Ala. Old DWB strategy that I recall well. Thanks.
Stephen
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
Warren Stephens
I was born and raised on the east side of Lookout Mountain in Chattooga County, GA. I miss it back there. Especially when I am sitting is Atlanta traffic. I hope God smiles on me and lets me go home some day. The photo I am referencing was taken 15th of March, 1955. Southern train #42 can be seen crossing Tuscaloosa Ave. which runs through the interchange trackage on the south side of the TAG yard in Gadsden, Alabama. The train is being diverted over TAG due to a derailment on the AGS at FT. Payne. Based on what we know about the interchange layout from the old SOU Rome, GA to Attalla, AL line, the train would have either had to back all the way from Atallah or it was dragged to Gadsden by another locomotive which was then cut off. Sadly any evidence of this is outside the photo. There is a lot of clutter in this photo. There is a garbage truck stopped at the highway crossing and someones laundry is on the line at the housing projects built adjacent to the TAG yard. I know people love clean roster shots and wedge shots but personally I love pictures with this kind of Norman Rockwell humanity. The clutter in no way detracts from the image, and the train is not hidden in any way. There were 15 coaches and 13 are visible in the shot. This list was in the rough handwriting of the person who owned this picture. If there are any discrepancies, it is most likely not the accuracy of his notes, but rather my inability to decipher his penmanship. Please feel free to let me know if anything is amiss. At any rate the car consist is noted below. Warren D. Stephens PRR Cars: 6149 baggage and mail, 9842, 55991, 2328, horse car 5810 L&N: 1508 SOU: 568 express, 6460 mail, 31 postal, 751 combine N&W: 1660, 1644, 1022 diner Pullman Co.: Carson Newman College, Emory & Henry College
On Sunday, June 28, 2020, 07:15:26 PM EDT, Byron Osborn <bosborn10@...> wrote:
I lived along the AGS in north Alabama. I am interested in the make up of the passengers trains that used that route. I believe the two were the Birmingham Special and the Pelican. Can anyone help? Thanks
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
George Eichelberger
Marv:
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I need to check to see how large that file is? It took a long time to load which tells me it must be BIG. To help save space for attachments, give it another short while for people to download then delete the file if you can. Ike
On Jun 30, 2020, at 9:10 AM, Marv Clemons <mclemonsjr@...> wrote: I should mention that clicking onto the PDF will save it to your downloads folder. Marv
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
Marv Clemons
I should mention that clicking onto the PDF will save it to your downloads folder.
Marv
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
Marv Clemons
Love those master consists, Ike. Here's a copy from 1969 showing all Southern and CofG trains in the final stages of their great disappearing act.
Marv
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
George Eichelberger
From SRHA Archives Presidents’ File Box 662 File 11670, the consist(s) of Southern Railway train Nos. 1 and 2 as of 11-15-71.
I have to search for the slide but I think (!) I have a photo of a SP sleeper that had come through NOLA . In the early 70s, it was not uncommon for the trains to have a N&W (blue) coach. Ike
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
Tracey Green
So I think this is on topic, but how were the Crescent Sisters used on the Crescent? That is, how many on a single Crescent train? Did every Crescent carry one? Were they ever used on any train other than a Crescent? I have a fondness for those if for no other reason than I have a photo of me in front of Crescent Moon in Spartanburg in 1972.
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
David, Some answers to your question #1: From american-rails.com website With most historical information per Bill Haithcoat >>Edited & removed<< >>Edited & removed<< Ike, Understood & removed. BR, Rahl
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
George Eichelberger
I realize these book pages have already been distributed by the list BUT…..
Aside from the fact SRHA would not want to see pages from books it produced and copyrighted simply copied and distributed we all owe the authors and copyright holders of any book the thanks for researching and writing the books we have by observing their ownership rights. We do not want to see the SouthernRailway.io group have copyright problems from anywhere. Please do NOT simply scan and post copyrighted material! Ike
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
David,
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
SouRwyFan
David, Some observations on your question #2: As for a late 1960's Crescent /early 1970's Southern Crescent, The PS 56 seat coaches and diners, they didn't hold up well and were out of service by mid 60's. Budd diners would have been the norm. The Crescent would have run regularly wit a master room-2 drawing room-tavern lounge. Be careful with using 52-seat coach numbers as there were three different built car series which had the same window arrangement but obviously had different roofs, ends, etc. Since there were only three 11BRM cars (Made from Sleeper-Lounge-Obs cars) they were the exception and probably rarer than say even a 14-4 sleeper. Also, Bag-Dorm-Coach Bedford is #705.
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
Warren Stephens
I have pictures of at least three diversions of the Pelican over TA&G due to derailments on the AGS. Two in the mid 50s and one in the mid 60. I think I have the consist of at least one of those. I’ll try and dig that info out tomorrow. As I recall the mid 50s trains were still just classic passenger trains. The mid 60s train was more head end and a little threadbare.
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Warren D. Stephens CofG and TA&G fan
On Jun 28, 2020, at 7:42 PM, SouRwyFan via groups.io <blackaerocoupe@...> wrote:
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
Byron Osborn
I lived along the AGS in north Alabama. I am interested in the make up of the passengers trains that used that route. I believe the two were the Birmingham Special and the Pelican. Can anyone help? Thanks
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Re: Southern Passenger Train Consist Similarities
Bill Schafer
David:
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The Royal Palm, the Peach Queen, and the Piedmont Limited of the 1960s all carried a lot of head-end traffic, typically in heavyweight cars. The Palm usually had lightweight coaches, but the coaches of the other two trains were usually heavyweights. To recreate the consists of these trains would depend on what other heavyweight cars are already available. A PRR X-29 boxcar, heavyweight Southern RPO, and heavyweight Southern baggage car would look right at home on these trains, but you’d also have to add a modernized (or not so modernized) heavyweight coach to maintain a correct consist. Lightweight Pullmans of the kind used on the Southern Crescent would be okay. If your goal is to create the most authentic consists with the least number of different cars, it would seem to me that your original idea of offering the Southern Crescent (to the late-1960s/1970s folks) or the Southerner or Tennessean (to the folks interested in a prewar consist) is the course that will keep you the most sane. Even the Tennessean consist had heavyweight Pullmans in it from the outset. It never was a pure streamlined train, despite the publicity. —Bill
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