HiDesertHal
Senior Member
How ya doin?
During the War Years of the early 1940's, my Dad worked for the PRR as a Fireman on Steam Locomotives, such as the heavy L-1, the H-10, and the small switch engine B-6 (Used in the Yards and not on the Main.) We lived in the steel and coal town of Wheeling W. Va. at the time.
The mainline runs were mile-long consists of steel and coal. (A "consist" is the description of what's in the freight manifest.) When my dad had Yard Duty, he would invite me to come to work with him (if I wasn't in School), in the huge Benwood, W. Va. freight yards.
What an experience that was for a 6-8 year old boy! I would climb up into the cab of that hot, clanking, hissing Switcher, and spend the day "helping" the Engineer and Fireman couple together a consist for the next mainline run.
I would become educated on the workings of a Steam Locomotive by watching my dad and the Engineer handle the levers and valves on the boiler backhead, and stomp on the foot pedal that opened the swinging Firebox Doors, so my dad could give the fire grate another layer of "Black Diamonds".
There's no young boy in the world today who can ever have that experience!
All Clear to Mingo Junction.....Whoo Whooooo.....
HiDesertHal
During the War Years of the early 1940's, my Dad worked for the PRR as a Fireman on Steam Locomotives, such as the heavy L-1, the H-10, and the small switch engine B-6 (Used in the Yards and not on the Main.) We lived in the steel and coal town of Wheeling W. Va. at the time.
The mainline runs were mile-long consists of steel and coal. (A "consist" is the description of what's in the freight manifest.) When my dad had Yard Duty, he would invite me to come to work with him (if I wasn't in School), in the huge Benwood, W. Va. freight yards.
What an experience that was for a 6-8 year old boy! I would climb up into the cab of that hot, clanking, hissing Switcher, and spend the day "helping" the Engineer and Fireman couple together a consist for the next mainline run.
I would become educated on the workings of a Steam Locomotive by watching my dad and the Engineer handle the levers and valves on the boiler backhead, and stomp on the foot pedal that opened the swinging Firebox Doors, so my dad could give the fire grate another layer of "Black Diamonds".
There's no young boy in the world today who can ever have that experience!
All Clear to Mingo Junction.....Whoo Whooooo.....
HiDesertHal