According to Colorado Rail Annual Number Ten by Cornelius W. Hauck, the C&S made a 1938 inventory of the remaining narrow gauge engines. Next to No. 6 is the note "Held to be sent to World's Fair, New York. (Due flues 2-40)."
Hauck notes that during a July 7th, 1938 general meeting "the 6 had been set aside for [the World's Fair], but the suggestion was made that the 9 was in better shape and might well be used instead." As we know, that was in fact done.
It seems No. 6 had one more shot at life when in the same year the C&S offered locomotives for display to towns along its line. Unfortunately, a note to the Superintendent of Motive Power states, "We now find that none of the towns are agreeable to accepting this engine. You may therefore scrap engine 6, which will complete the AFE." She was scrapped in 1939.
But that's not the end of the story. A small part of No. 6 lives on. According to Jason Midyette's book One Short Season, during work in 2005 to bring No. 9 back to life for a short time on the Georgetown Loop, it was discovered that "ENG 6" was marked on the inside of the lead drivers. It appears, to my assumption, that in the process of sprucing up No. 9 for the World's Fair, the lead drivers needed replacing and No. 6's were in better condition and thus were swapped.
Photo of No. 6 from The Pictorial Supplement of the DSP&P


No comments:
Post a Comment