Tuesday, January 11, 2022

The Railroad Riches of Golden, part 9: Last Train

 See Part 1 here.

Last Train

FEBRUARY 24, 2007

    “There is an unconfirmed report that Robert W. Richardson, 96, has died this morning...With his passing, the narrow gauge fans of the world have lost one of their best.” With the last few clicks of his computer keyboard, Steve Walden, host of the Colorado Railroads blog, grabs his mouse and navigates to the “Post” button.   

    Walden got this news earlier from the widely used online Narrow Gauge Discussion Forum.  Such web sources are easy to find nowadays.  Essentially, though, they are the distant descendants of Bob Richardson’s Narrow Gauge News (later called the Iron Horse News), written in a time when few outside of remote western towns had access to the goings-on of the slim gauge in Colorado. 

    The news about Bob Richardson is later confirmed: The man who helped people around the world discover and rescue remains of the Colorado narrow gauge, had indeed died this morning in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania where he went to live with his family after retiring as executive director of the Colorado Railroad Museum sixteen years earlier in 1991.

Bob had been dealing with some intermittent illnesses in the past few years, but by and large, he had lived a long, healthy life and had still been full of humor and his noteworthy memory to the end.  

As the news about Bob’s passing spread, words honoring his legacy travelled far.  Commemoration of his life reached beyond railfan circles with articles chronicling his remarkable life even in major newspapers like The Denver Post.  Ron Hill of the Colorado Railroad Museum, in his reflection on Richardson’s life wrote, “It is no exaggeration to say that he did more than any other person to preserve Colorado’s unique railroad heritage.” 

Less than a year before his passing in the summer of 2006, Bob Richardson took one more trip to “his old stomping grounds” in Colorado to attend a special event named Railfest in Durango.  At 96, he planned to drive himself nearly 2000 miles from Pennsylvania to his former adopted home state, but one friend, Gordon Chappell, thankfully convinced him to take Amtrak to Denver, where Chappell met and drove him to various spots.  

Bob made many stops besides Durango, including a visit to the Georgetown Loop on September 3rd to ride behind the short-lived resuscitation of Colorado & Southern 2-6-0 mogul No. 9.  But little can compare to his stop in Golden where he visited the museum he birthed first with Carl Helfin in Alamosa in 1953 and then reincarnated along with Cornelius Hauck in Golden in 1959.  On the day of what would be his final steps in the Colorado Railroad Museum’s rail yard, likely marveling at the growth of the once-small museum, he was greeted by so many old railroad friends of the Colorado & Southern narrow gauge that he had a hand in saving including C&S stock car 7064, giant C&S rotary snowplow 99201, diminutive C&S caboose 1009, C&S boxcar 8308’s frame and wheel sets, and lastly the crown of South Park locomotive memories, the venerable 1880 consolidation Denver, South Park & Pacific 191.   

Thursday, January 6, 2022

South Park Trivia from CRRM

 The Colorado Railroad Museum put out the following trivia question.  If you know the Alpine Tunnel area you'll likely know the answer!


Wednesday, January 5, 2022

The Railroad Riches of Golden, part 8


The remains of a prodigal come home

    This final story recounts the surprising outcomes of the two C&S cars that Bob Richardson acquired but sold to the ill-fated Magic Mountain resort, boxcar 8308 and refrigerator car 1116.  

1116 at GLRR in 1992
While all that remained of their original forms, due to time spent at the now defunct Magic Mountain park, was their frames and wheel sets with rider cars built on top, the two eventually found use again in this condition.  In the early 1990s, around the time Bob retired and moved to Pennsylvania, Heritage Square, the themed mall successor of Magic Mountain, finally removed the cars from the restaurant where they had served in a stationary position and sold them to the Georgetown Loop Railroad, the tourist line built on the old C&S grade, where longtime operator Lindsey Ashby planned to convert 1116 and 8308 again into active rider cars, named “Grays Peak” (No. 15) and “Torreys Peak” (unnumbered) respectively, and return them to home C&S rails where they were to haul tourists on the reconstructed Georgetown Loop line.  C&S 1116, indeed, experienced this transformation and once again was back in revenue service, while C&S 8308’s restoration was never completed.  However, for boxcar 8308 its story didn’t end there.

Roughly a decade later, in 2004, two events occurred which brought the final complete set of narrow gauge C&S equipment to the Colorado Railroad Museum before Bob’s passing. 

The first event involved two other boxcar remains.  The Great Western Railway, with facilities in Loveland, Colorado, had long ago purchased some dismantled boxcars to use as sheds.  One of these sheds was made up of two narrow gauge C&S boxcars, 8310 and 8301, minus their frames and wheels.  After decades of use, the Great Western was poised to demolish them, but railfan, historian, and engineer Jason Midyette offered to move them himself.  Considering it would cost the railroad nothing, they took him up on the offer.  Midyette kept one, the 8301 which was only a half-car, and moved it for restoration and use as a shed on his personal property, while he donated the full-sized 8310 car body to the Colorado Railroad Museum. The Golden museum now had a C&S narrow gauge boxcar, though with no frame or wheels.  

The second event that completed CRRM’s C&Sng collection occurred the same year when several miles west on Clear Creek, Lindsey Ashby, operator of the Georgetown Loop, parted ways with History Colorado (formerly The Colorado Historical Society), owners of the line, and needed to move all his rolling stock.  Since he owned all the equipment, but no longer had narrow gauge track to run it, he sent much of it to Golden, including C&S boxcar-turned rider car 8308.*  In a full circle, C&S 8308 had started it’s post-revenue life at Alamosa’s Narrow Gauge Museum with Bob Richardson, then moved to Golden’s Magic Mountain Resort where it was converted to a rider car and then a stationary restaurant piece.  Finally, 45 years after Bob let her go, after a stint back in service on the Georgetown Loop, C&S boxcar 8308 came back to the Colorado Railroad Museum. 

C&S 8308’s story continues as its bottom half looks to be a perfect fit for 8310’s upper half.  Volunteers at the Museum removed 8308’s added rider shell and have placed 8310's body on top of it.  When restoration is complete, the Golden museum will at last have a fully Colorado & Southern narrow gauge boxcar.

* C&S 1116, which had been numbered 15 at its first time on the Loop, was renumbered to its original 1116 when it returned there.  Later, it was also re-given the Grey's Peak name. 

Monday, December 27, 2021

The Railroad Riches of Golden, part 7


THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1973
GOLDEN, COLORADO
THE COLORADO RAILROAD MUSEUM

Today, seventy one years after she was shipped away from her home state, Bob witnesses DSP&P 191 arrive in Golden after her journey via standard gauge gondola and then motor truck. He is relieved the 2-8-0 made it.  Along the way from Wisconsin, the engine was briefly ‘lost’ when an ice storm caused a break in communication lines with the Santa Fe.  Thankfully, she was ‘found’ and made the rest of the journey without incident.

Despite the cool February Rocky Mountain air, it is still warmer than, as Bob will later write, the “usual zeroish winter weather” of northern Wisconsin where she was shipped from. This may give the Colorado Railroad Museum crew hope that the 191’s wheels can finally be convinced to move.

The 93-year old locomotive rests on a lowboy trailer in the museum yard, waiting for the adjacent crane, it’s tall spindly arm pointed high with cables descending around the engine, to finally reunite 191 with rails on native soil.  With only a stubby running board where a cow catcher pilot once proudly strutted forward, an elongated smokebox added from one of the logging roads where her original shorter one should be, and her original balloon smoke stack long ago replaced with a thin straight one, she lacks some of the distinctive features that would tag her as her former 1880s self, though in reality her main structure has actually changed very little since she left the Baldwin Locomotive Works.

Regardless of her look, she is a gem, the oldest native Coloradan locomotive in the state, the museum’s only South Park engine, and the most authentic DSP&P loco in existence.  It has cost more than $8000 to get No.191, along with her stiff wheels, to this spot, but finally, the cables running up to the crane’s arm, cables that seem so small compared to 191’s 56,000 pound girth, lift her in the air and then ever so gently set her down on Colorado rails.
Denver, South Park & Pacific No. 191 is home.  

But like a stubborn child, her wheels still will not move. 

The Colorado Railroad Museum’s small Plymouth diesel was called on to assist 191’s mobility issues.  The little diesel tugged and pushed, but the 2-8-0’s wheels, doused with penetrating oil, refused to rotate.  The process was continued for several weeks by a surely discouraged crew until the amount of oil used reached into the gallons.  Suddenly, one day, the Plymouth “Peewee” locomotive tugged once more and DSP&P 191’s wheels moved for the first time in four decades.

Despite the thousands of dollars spent to get her to Golden, a cost that was gratefully later diminished by the sale of the other Mexican engine and a few cars to the Huckleberry tourist railroad in Michigan, the engine that struck out its pilot north of Gunnison towards the Pacific, towards a grade that was never completed, and the same engine that was later shipped so far east had finally come to rest in the state that nearly a century ago had called for her birth.

*******

Post-Bob Richardson: One more acquisition and a prodigal returns


It was a triumph and a joy to bring No. 191 back home again in 1973, and eighteen years later Bob made the decision to also go home.  In 1991, after 33 years at the helm of the Colorado Railroad Museum, it was time for Bob to rest on his laurels and retire.  Like 191 did at the birth of the twentieth century, Bob moved east.  While he loved his Colorado narrow gauge relics, even they could not compare to being near family, and so Bob packed up his belongings and settled in Pennsylvania.  

While this tale will now take two short branch lines away from Bob Richardson’s journey, both occurred before his passing.  Two Colorado & Southern narrow gauge rolling stock stories from the post-Richardson era at CRRM bear telling.  The first relates to a car that was saved and then nearly lost by a contemporary of Richardson’s.  The second concerns a twist of fate regarding one of the C&S freight cars Bob himself saved, but later sold after the move to Golden.

The only fully intact C&S refrigerator car  


While Bob Richardson remained a bachelor his whole life, he knew how to pass on a legacy as good parents do with their children.  When he left his position and the state in 1991, the Colorado Railroad Museum that he left behind continued to flourish and save history, including more pieces of the Colorado & Southern narrow gauge.  

One very important piece of C&S rolling stock that came to Golden after Bob’s tenure arrived through a sad demise.  Unlike Bob Richardson and Cornelius Hauck, who built their museum with a vision to outlast themselves, another Coloradan who also amassed large quantities of saved narrow gauge equipment seemed to have lacked such foresight.

  Don Drawer operated a small airport in the Colorado prairie near Fort Lupton, north of Denver, but his dreams revolved more so around trains than airplanes.  In the early 1970’s he started snatching up whatever narrow gauge equipment he could find, moving it to his large property with plans to construct and operate a narrow gauge steam railroad and a fictional town where visitors could come to learn all aspects of train operation.  He named his railroad-to-be the Sundown & Southern.

By 1972, when Bob and Cornelius were just learning of their chance to acquire No. 191, Don had already amassed over 200 pieces of rolling stock, including C&S refrigerator car 1113, last used on the Rio Grande Southern.  Unlike her sister survivor C&S refrigerator 1116, acquired by Bob back in 1954 and later sold to the failed Magic Mountain resort, 1113 was not cut up and turned into an amusement park piece.  Instead, Drawer had her moved to Fort Lupton just as she was found in Ridgway, Colorado after being on display there for roughly two decades since the demise of the Rio Grande Southern, still fully intact as she was designed: an old, but authentic, narrow gauge refrigerator car.
The Bogies and the Loop

Drawer’s lack of foresight will later be evidenced, but he certainly made up for this in tenacity.  For just one example, his growing collection, that included C&S 1113, was in need of an engine and he set out to get one.  In an epic move, Don traveled to Central America in order to personally escort a steam locomotive,* business car, and caboose from the country of Guatemala to his Sundown & Southern.  On his way north, tragedy struck when the business car was ransacked by vandals and thieves while the train sat on the track overnight.  Numerous fixtures and historical features were stolen.  Don refused to let this setback stop him and he continued north with plans to restore the engine, committed to his dream because, as the Fort Collins Coloradan newspaper that reported the incident put it that year, “as a railroad nut, he loves it.”

Sadly, the fire in the boiler of Don Drawer’s determination never caught flame.  According to his son Brian, “red tape and county politics” kept his father’s dream from ever becoming reality.  Hundreds of pieces of narrow gauge equipment, in various stages of disrepair, littered his property when he died in the early 2000s, leaving pieces like C&S refrigerator car No. 1113 with an uncertain future.  

The Bogies and the Loop
While the passing of Don Drawer’s dreams and the Sundown & Southern was tragic, he saved lots of equipment that might otherwise have been lost, and when the derelict rolling stock was auctioned off in 2002, it allowed many pieces to get into more steady hands, including refrigerator car No. 1113 which was purchased by CRRM for $500.  Moved to the Museum, the only fully intact surviving C&S refrigerator car was restored in gleaming yellow paint and adorned with the lettering of the line she spent most of her life serving. 



* International Railways of Central America No. 111, later used on the Georgetown Loop

Friday, December 24, 2021

The history of Highline Railroad Park video

Highline Railroad Park in Breckenridge, Colorado is a park dedicated to the history of the DSP&P/DL&G/C&S line over Boreas Pass.  On display are C&S engine No. 9, C&S boxcar 8323, and replica C&S caboose 1012.  Also on display are are a White Pass & Yukon rotary snowplow and a D&RGW flatcar.  This video below shows some brief history surrounding the park and some of the rolling stock on display.

When I first visited Breckenridge in the early 1990s I only saw a sign commemorating the Boreas Pass route.  I was unaware that there was a rotary snowplow on display near a cemetery.  On a return visit in the early 2000s I saw the Rotary Snowplow Park for the first time.  When I was there it was just the White Pass rotary with two C&S boxcars behind it.  Finally, in my family's 2018 trip we were able to see the full Highline Railroad Park with No. 9, the replica C&S caboose, and all the other added signage and playground details.  

I didn't get any footage of the Highline RR Park's museum building.  Sorry!

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

The Railroad Riches of Golden, part 6

Back home again

While a rotary had now made its appearance at the Colorado Railroad Museum, a volunteer to fetch the Mexican engines in exchange for 191 still had not.  This was the first of many mishaps along the journey to get No. 191 back home to Colorado.  Months drifted by with no bites on the volunteer line when Bob finally found his man.  Whether he wanted to or not, it had to be himself.   

In November of ‘72, with his carpet bag and an assortment of tools stowed in the Gutbuster Chevy Carryall, Bob turned the key in the ignition and headed for Mexico.  Knowing that he had to quickly resurrect his fluency in Spanish, Bob tried to read through a couple of Spanish newspapers and magazines that he picked up at a stop in El Paso.  He also worked on his pronunciation by verbalizing Spanish signs along the road as he sped down the highways. Despite the work ahead, he comforted himself in the knowledge that one thing he loved would be in large supply: Mexican food.

Just under 900 miles later, Bob and the Gutbuster arrived in Chihuahua, Mexico where the next mishap occurred.  To begin with, temporary three foot gauge track had to be laid between the engine house where the two locomotives were stored and the nearest standard gauge track with its waiting gondolas, since the narrow gauge railroad’s track had already been pulled up.  This temporary track also had to be laid over top of a 2.5 foot gauge electric mine line in between the two, all of this adding significant time and expense to the job. The next part of the plan was to steam up one of the two engines and use that one to pull the other out of the old engine house and then push it onto one of the standard gauge gondolas after which it would steam itself up and into another one.  As if this was not enough of a challenge, the transfer needed to be done in time to clear the electric mainline before the regular ore train came through. 

After days of work to put down track, the gondolas were finally lined up, and one of the two engines was steamed up to push the other into its gondola before hauling itself into the other.  Before the steaming engine could even pull itself or its partner to the loading site, it ruptured some flues, rendering the loco useless.  More time was lost.  Eventually, they convinced a mine truck driver to pull the two engines out using a cable attached to his dump truck. A diesel locomotive from the nearby smelter then did the work of getting the engines up onto the gondolas.  The work took them to midnight of the final day.  Thankfully, all this, including the removal of the temporary track, was done in time to clear the mainline for the morning’s ore train and the now two-week process was at last complete. Finally, on December 15, the two engines were billed out on the Chihuahua al Pacifico, one off to Golden and the other to Wisconsin.

And this was just the beginning of the difficulties. The next mishap occurred two months later on a very cold February 1973 day in Rhinelander, Wisconsin after the coveted Thunder Lake locomotive arrived.  The logging prodigal, still perched in its gondola, was placed on a spur of the Soo Line Railroad a few hundred feet away from 191’s display spot, but it took close to seven days to make the anticipated switch in the nearly constant snowy weather.  The primary problem was that four decades of sitting out in the open, in addition to the treacherously cold weather during the move, had done a number on 191’s moving parts and her wheels simply would not move. 

As a curious side note, while the workmen attempted to get 191’s wheels moving, a construction worker lit a cigar and tossed the match in the firebox.  Whether he knew it or not, a fair amount of garbage was inside, apparently discarded there regularly by the park’s cleanup crew over the decades.  The lit trash caused light smoke to curl out from the long-dead engine’s stack for several days during the moving process from which some local residents wrongly assumed the engine had been steamed up.

Despite their efforts through the frigid temperatures and blowing snow, nothing seemed to get the engine to roll.  At last, a final decision was made.  The crew greased up the rails and slid her with a winch, wheels locked, onto the lowboy trailer.  After the stubborn engine slowly slid off her 40-year home, she was maneuvered on the trailer around trees, electric poles, and serpentine roadways to reach her waiting gondola. After almost a week’s worth of work, ex-Thunder Lake locomotive No. 5 was at last in her place and No. 191 was moving west by rail towards home.


Wednesday, December 15, 2021

The Railroad Riches of Golden, part 5


 Almost an engine: a rotary snowplow

In the meantime, with still no South Park locomotive at the museum, an event came about that sent it a close second, a rotary snowplow.  A steam-powered rotary snowplow is essentially a locomotive that powers blades to attack snow on the track and launches it out of a chute instead of powering drive wheels.  Machines like this were necessary on the many snow plagued lines of the South Park.  

One of the South Park’s two rotaries, No. 99201 was ordered in 1899 in part to clear the legendary amounts of snow over Altman Pass, site of the Alpine Tunnel, on the way to Gunnison, but the railroad found it weighed too much for this section and could not fit through the tunnel.  Instead, it was stationed at Como and used on other parts of the C&S.  The plow was so big, in fact, that its trucks could be switched between narrow and standard gauges and thus the rotary was used at various times on both.  When abandonment finally came to the narrow gauge, the rotary was standard-gauged again and used in Cheyenne, Wyoming and then spent the remainder of its days infrequently plowing the standard gauged Leadville to Climax route, it’s last run being in front of a diesel in 1965, a late date for anything steam-powered in the US.

In October of ‘72, John Terrill, president of the C&S, finally decided to retire rotary 99201 and donate it to the Colorado Railroad Museum.  The donation, however, came with challenges.  The behemoth machine had to be moved, of course, but while the C&S was happy to assist on its lines, it was necessary, due to the isolated C&S Leadville to Climax branch, to coordinate with the less than accommodating Rio Grande to move it from Leadville to the C&S connection in Pueblo.  The D&RGW refused to move the plow with a dismissive comment that it was “unseaworthy.”  Unfortunately for Bob Richardson, this unhelpful spirit exemplified many of his dealings with Rio Grande management.

On the flip side, Bob found the C&S management a very different story, an example of which was the down-to-earth, kind president John Terrill who went to bat to get the rotary to the CRRM.  After hearing of the Rio Grande’s claim that the plow was not safe to move, Terrill gathered several members of the C&S mechanical department and insisted the Rio Grande conduct an inspection of the rotary with his team at the same time.  It seems that, unsurprisingly, once the C&S put on the pressure, the "unseaworthy" plow suddenly found its sea-legs, and the D&RGW agreed to move it, though they made sure to charge $1400 to do so.

After No. 99201’s move over the Rio Grande and then the C&S, she came to rest at the museum, for

many years outside the museum’s gates, behind a former Union Pacific 0-6-0 engine acquired about the same time.  The museum now had an incredibly powerful symbol of the legendary fights that the C&S fought year after year against snow in the Rocky Mountains.

While this victory with C&S rotary 99201 was in hand, the chance to get DSP&P 191 was starting to look a bit out-of-reach.

Part 6