Author: Ryan Scott

  • BNSF 6872 GE ES44C4

    Burlington Northern Santa Fe BNSF 6872 GE ES44C4 working as a DPU on a K train stoped at CSX Howell yard for some fuel with Norfolk Southern NS 7607 and a UP unit on the lead in Evansville, Indiana on January 8, 2022.

  • NS 7607 GE ES40DC

    Norfolk Southern, NS 7607 GE ES40DC leading a K train into CSX Howell yard with a UP in trail and BNSF on the rear as a DPU on top of the hill in the background you can see Reitz High School in Evansville, Indiana on January 8, 2022.

  • CSXT 3142 GE ES44AC-H

    CSX Transportation CSXT 3142 GE ES44AC-H leading 1025 south through Howell yard in Evansville, Indiana on January 8, 2022.

  • NS 4290 GE AC44C6M

    Norfolk Southern NS 4290 GE AC44C6M leads an empty coal train north as the train does a little street running down Main Street in Brownsville, Pennsylvania on November 8, 2021.

  • CSXT 3176 GE ES44AC-H

    CSX Transportation CSXT 3176 GE ES44AC-H leading a loaded coal train over the Monongahela River on the NS Mon Line as the conductor that is on the front walkway will throw the switch onto the NS Loveridge after crossing the river in Brownsville, Pennsylvania on November 8, 2021.

  • RBMN 2530 EMD GP39RN (GP30)

    Reading Blue Mountain & Northern Railroad RBMN 2530 EMD GP39RN (GP30) and RBMN 2010 are assigned to MPNR for a storage move of tank cars from Middleport to Reading, the crew is running the power down past the single so that it will reset for them to run engine lite to Middleport in the shadows of the valley as the sun rises in Port Clinton, Pennsylvania on November 5, 2021.

  • RBMN 3057 EMD SD40-2

    Reading Blue Mountain & Northern Railroad RBMN 3057 EMD SD40-2 is assigned to PNPV, as the crew gets ready to depart the locomotive servicing facility early in the morning at Port Clinton, Pennsylvania on November 4, 2021.

  • Canadian National CN 89 2-6-0 Mogul

    Strasburg Railroad, Canada Natural CN 89 Canadian Locomotive Company 2-6-0 “Mogul” Locomotive passing Norfolk and Western No. 475 freight train held up in the siding in Strasburg, Pennsylvania on November 7, 2021.

    No. 89 was originally built in February 1910 by the Canadian Locomotive Company in Kingston, Ontario for the Grand Trunk Railway as number 1009. In 1919 it was renumbered 911. In 1923, the Grand Trunk was merged into the Canadian National Railway (CN) with 911 being one of the thousands of locomotives working for this new railroad. In 1951, 911 was renumbered 89. Most of 89’s career on the CN is unknown; it appears that it spent the latter part of its working life in Quebec before being retired in the late 1950s and being stored in a deadline of locomotives in Montreal.

    In 1961, No. 89 was purchased by New England seafood magnate and steam locomotive collector F. Nelson Blount and moved to North Walpole, New Hampshire, in the United States. No. 89 found a home in the former Boston & Maine North Walpole roundhouse and starting in 1965, would begin operating on the Green Mountain Railroad and would be moved across the Connecticut River to Bellows Falls, Vermont. No. 89 quickly became Blount’s favorite locomotive and he would often be found at the throttle until his death in 1967.

    In July 1972, the Green Mountain Railroad sold No. 89 to the Strasburg Rail Road outside of Strasburg, Pennsylvania.[1] This is a linear village along the Great Conestoga Road, stretching about two miles along a path later known as the Strasburg Road. The population was 2,809 at the 2010 census. The move from Bellows Falls to Strasburg was overseen by Strasburg employee Linn Moedinger. During a stopover in Penn Central’s Buttonwood Yard in Wilkes-Barre, No. 89 was stranded when Hurricane Agnes caused the Susquehanna River to flood much of the area. No. 89 spent several days submerged in the rail yard but emerged with little to no damage.

    Upon arrival at Strasburg, No. 89 faced east and would remain that way until the turntable at the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania was installed in 1973. No. 89 frequently operated in tandem with Pennsylvania Railroad 4-4-0 No. 1223 on Strasburg’s half-hour trains until it was taken out of service in the early 1980s for major repairs. During these repairs which lasted the majority of the decade, No. 89 was completely rebuilt from the ground up including major boiler and running gear work. Emerging from its rebuild in November 1988, 89 returned to pulling the half-hour trains, being joined by former Norfolk & Western 4-8-0 No. 475 in 1993. In October 2003, No. 89 was modified and repainted to its 1950s Canadian National appearance with the tilted monogram logo. In 2008, 89’s tender logo was re-lettered to read “Strasburg Rail Road,” in keeping with Strasburg’s policy of historical authenticity. -From Wikipedia

  • NW 475 Baldwin M class 4-8-0

    Strasburg Railroad, Norfolk and Western NW 475 Baldwin M class 4-8-0 Locomotive. N&W 475 is going off into the sunset in Strasburg, Pennsylvania on November 7, 2021.

  • Reading & Northern RBMN 270/275 EMD F9A/F7B

    Reading Blue Mountain & Northern Railroad RBMN 270/275 EMD F9A/F7B recently parched from the Norfolk Southern looks good in their new or modified paint scheme. I really wish I could have seen these two run but I am glad to just see them here at the depot in Port Clinton, Pennsylvania on November 4, 2021.