Chicago and North Western 1385

Chicago and North Western 1385 is a preserved R-1 class 4-6-0 "Ten-Wheeler" steam locomotive built by the American Locomotive Company (ALCO) in March 1907 for the Chicago and North Western Railroad (C&NW). The locomotive was mainly used to operate the C&NW's freight trains until 1956, when it was retired from service. In 1961, the original members of the Mid-Continent Railway Museum (MCRM) purchased No. 1385 for $2,600 scrap value, and the locomotive was moved to the museum's original location in Hillsboro, Wisconsin.

Chicago and North Western 1385
No. 1385 waiting to depart North Freedom, Wisconsin in the 1990s
Type and origin
References:[1][2]
Power typeSteam
BuilderAmerican Locomotive Company (ALCO)
Serial number42187
Build dateMarch 1907
Specifications
Configuration:
  Whyte4-6-0
  UIC2′C n2
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
TrucksTruck No. 3
Leading dia.30 in (0.762 m)
Driver dia.63 in (1.600 m)
Tender wheels33 in (0.838 m)
Minimum curve301 ft (92 m) radius/ 19°
Wheelbase:
  Engine
25 ft 10 in (7.87 m)
  Leading6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
  Drivers14 ft 10 in (4.52 m)
Height14 ft 11+58 in (4.56 m)
Adhesive weight126,000 lb (57,000 kg)
Loco weight162,500 lb (73,700 kg)
Tender weight140,000 lb (64,000 kg)
61,500 lb (27,900 kg) (1973-1998)
Total weight302,500 pounds (137.2 t)
Fuel typeCoal
Fuel capacity10 tonnes (9.8 long tons; 11.0 short tons)
9 tonnes (8.9 long tons; 9.9 short tons) (1973-1998)
Water cap.7,500 US gal (28,000 L; 6,200 imp gal)
5,400 US gal (20,000 L; 4,500 imp gal) (1973-1998)
Firebox typeRadial stay (round-top)
  Firegrate area46.27 sq ft (4.299 m2) (102 in × 65+14 in or 2.591 m × 1.657 m)
Boiler:
  Diameter66+14 in (1.683 m)
  Small tubes2 in (51 mm)
  Large tubes5+38 in (137 mm)
Boiler pressure200 psi (1,400 kPa)
Heating surface2,974.00 sq ft (276.294 m2)
  Tubes and flues2,822.00 sq ft (262.172 m2)
  Firebox152.00 sq ft (14.121 m2)
CylindersTwo
Cylinder size21 in × 26 in (533 mm × 660 mm)
Valve gearStephenson
Performance figures
Tractive effort30,900 lbf (137.5 kN)
Factor of adh.4.08
Career
OperatorsChicago and North Western Railroad
Mid-Continent Railway Museum
ClassR-1
NumbersC&NW 1385
DLW 1053
Retired1956 (revenue service)
June 30, 1998 (excursion service)
RestoredMay 27, 1963 (1st restoration)
2011-ongoing (2nd restoration)
Current ownerMid-Continent Railway Museum
DispositionUndergoing restoration to operating condition
Steam Locomotive #1385
Chicago and North Western 1385 is located in Wisconsin
Chicago and North Western 1385
Chicago and North Western 1385 is located in the United States
Chicago and North Western 1385
LocationE8948 Diamond Hill Rd., North Freedom, Wisconsin
Coordinates43°27′31″N 89°52′29″W
Arealess than one acre
NRHP reference No.00000524 [3]
Added to NRHPMay 18, 2000

In 1963, No. 1385 was moved again to the MCRM's present location in North Freedom, Wisconsin. The R-1 locomotive began pulling tourist trains between North Freedom and the end of the MCRM's line in Rattlesnake. In 1981, the C&NW was exploring public relations options before they reached an agreement with the MCRM to lease No. 1385 for their steam program. The first train of the program took place in May 1982, in the form of a promotion of the C&NW's rolling stock upgrades.

From 1985 to 1987, No. 1385 pulled the Circus World Museum (CWM) train between Baraboo and Milwaukee, Wisconsin for the annual circus parade events. The final train of the steam program took place in 1987, during the centennial of the City of Chicago, before the program was discontinued due to a change of leadership and increasing insurance issues. No. 1385 continued to run on MCRM's trackage, and it also pulled mainline excursion trains on other nearby railroads, such as the Wisconsin and Southern (WSOR).

No. 1385 was removed from service in 1998 before it was due for boiler and running gear repairs. Repairs were subsequently halted from a lack of funding, and No. 1385 was stored while the MCRM focused on other priorities. In 2011, the MCRM began to perform a complete rebuild on No. 1385, using a portion of a matching grant the museum received. SPEC Machine of Middleton, Wisconsin was hired to perform most of the repairs on the locomotive. As of 2023, No. 1385’s rebuild is still ongoing.

History

Construction and revenue service

From 1901 to 1908, the Chicago and North Western (C&NW) Railroad ordered 325 R-1 class 4-6-0 "Ten-wheeler" locomotives from the American Locomotive Company's (ALCO) Schenectady, New York plant and the Baldwin Locomotive Works, and they were the most manufactured class of steam locomotives on the railroad.[1] Equipped with 63-inch (1,600 mm) diameter driving wheels and a tractive effort of 30,900 pounds-force (137 kN), the R-1's were the most powerful class of locomotives on the C&NW, until the introduction of the Z class 2-8-0's in 1909.[4] When first built, the R-1 locomotives' route availabilities were drastically limited, so the C&NW had to reconstruct their rail infrastructure to accommodate them.[5] By 1939, the R-1's were permitted to travel all across the C&NW system, when necessary.[5]

While they were primarily used in freight service, some R-1's were also used to pull passenger trains, such as the commuter services around Chicago, Illinois.[4] No. 1385 was one of twenty-five R-1's to be built by ALCO in March 1907—the first of four batches of R-1's to be built throughout that year.[6] The locomotive was mostly assigned by the C&NW to work within the Lake Shore Division, which consisted of lines that led to iron ore mines in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.[4] Beginning in 1915, the C&NW installed superheaters in all their R-1 locomotives, and No. 1385 was one of the last R-1's to receive superheaters, being rebuilt at Ashland, Wisconsin in March 1931.[7][8] No. 1385's last commercial assignment on the railroad was to serve as a yard switcher at Iron Mountain, Michigan in the summer of 1956, before its revenue career ended; it became the very last steam locomotive to operate at Iron Mountain.[4][9]

Since it had several months of flue time left, No. 1385 was towed to Green Bay, Wisconsin to serve as a stationary boiler for a C&NW-owned freight house.[4][9] In the spring of 1959, the R-1 was towed again to Escanaba, Michigan, where its boiler was used to thaw frozen iron ore.[4][9][10] No. 1385 was also retained as a backup for steam-heating passenger trains, since it had been modified with steam-heating equipment.[9][10] By 1961, with the C&NW acquiring electric generator cars, No. 1385's steam-heating capabilities were no longer needed.[10] By that time, No. 1385 was one of only two steam locomotives remaining under C&NW's possession, with the other being fellow R-1 No. 175, and the railroad was looking to have them both sold off.[10]

Early preservation years

In 1960, members of the Railway Historical Society of Milwaukee, Wisconsin entered negotiations with the C&NW about acquiring one of the two R-1's.[4][10] The railroad offered to sell the still-operable No. 1385 for its scrap value of $2,600, while they asked for more money for No. 175, due to its heavier weight.[4][10][11] The Historical Society decided that buying No. 1385 was the better deal.[10] To raise funds, the Society formed the "Enginemen's Operating Club"; each member would be asked to loan $100 to the society for a span of two years, and any member who contributed would be rewarded with privileges to help operate and maintain the locomotive.[4][10] Twenty-nine members contributed to the Historical Society's needs, and they managed to purchase No. 1385 directly from the C&NW on November 24, 1961.[4]

Following the purchase, the Historical Society began to look into relocating out of Milwaukee and into a location with enough space to store their growing collection.[12] After reaching an agreement with the Hillsboro and Northeastern Railway (H&NE) to have their collection stored in Hillsboro, the group changed its name to the Mid-Continent Railway Museum (MCRM).[12] No. 1385 was moved from Escanaba to Hillsboro in early 1962, and while it was repainted for display, it never operated on the H&NE.[12] The museum soon operated a celebration train for its grand opening on May 26 from Hillsboro to the H&NE-C&NW interchange at Union Center.[4][13][14] No. 1385 participated in the ceremonial moment by breaking through a banner, but it wasn't in operation, as it was pushed by another locomotive.[13][14]

By the end of 1962, the MCRM decided to relocate their collection again.[12] Simultaneously, the C&NW obtained permission to abandon their Rattlesnake Line, a 4.2-mile (7 km) branch line that lies between North Freedom and a quartzite quarry near Rattlesnake.[12][14] The MCRM bought the Rattlesnake Line from the railroad on May 17, 1963, and the museum prepared No. 1385 to operate on the branch for their first excursion season there.[14][15] The R-1 performed its first run on the new MCRM line on May 27, and it subsequently pulled tourist trains for the MCRM for ninety-four days.[1][14][15] By the end of 1963, No. 1385 began experiencing boiler problems, so it was removed from service, and the MCRM's trains continued to be hauled by other locomotives, such as Dardanelle and Russellville (D&R) No. 9.[14][16][17] In the early 1970s, work began to return the R-1 to active service.[16]

During the process, No. 1385's original tender, which held a capacity of 7,500 U.S. gallons (28,391 L) of water and 10 tonnes (9.8 long tons; 11.0 short tons) of coal, was found to be in poor condition, so the MCRM searched for a replacement.[16] In 1972, the museum purchased a smaller tender (No. X-263579) from the C&NW, and it was formerly paired with an older R-1, holding a capacity of 5,400 U.S. gallons (20,441 L) of water and 9 tonnes (8.9 long tons; 9.9 short tons) of coal.[16] No. 1385 returned to service for the MCRM on July 29, 1973, and it would be paired with the smaller tender for the next several years.[1][16] A decision was also made to reduce the R-1's boiler pressure from 200 psi (1,379 kPa) to 150 psi (1,034 kPa) for the tourist operations.[18] As the museum acquired and leased other locomotives, including D&R No. 9, Western Coal and Coke No. 1, and eventually Saginaw Timber No. 2, No. 1385 would swap places with them as it rotated in and out of service.[14][17][19] During the 1970s, C&NW's Madison, Wisconsin trainmaster, Chris Burger, familiarized the MCRM, and in doing so, he became fond of the No. 1385 locomotive.[14][20]

Chicago and North Western steam program

By July 1981, following the start of the early 1980s recession and the bankruptcy of the Milwaukee Road, public opinion on railroads around the Milwaukee area was souring, and C&NW management explored ways to publicize their company's still-healthy operations.[14][20] Chris Burger, who was promoted manager of the road's Wisconsin Division, proposed an idea of a steam program to the C&NW’s Vice President-operations, James A. Zito, and the C&NW’s President, James R. Wolfe, and Burger felt No. 1385 would be the ideal locomotive for the program.[14][20][lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 2] Wolfe envisioned the benefits, but he also felt the company couldn't afford to support a full-blown program with the ongoing recession.[14][20] Burger subsequently proposed a limited operation on the Wisconsin Division during the 1982 National Transportation Week, to which Zito and Wolfe approved.[14][20]

Burger approached the MCRM's board of directors about the C&NW leasing No. 1385 for the operation, and he requested the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) to inspect the R-1 for eligibility to operate on the mainline.[14][20] The MCRM board approved the lease, and the FRA gave their approval, but they also stated the running gear needed repairs that required a drop pit.[14][20] Burger contacted the C&NW's repair facility in Green Bay, where railroaders with steam experience, including motive power foreman Al Kawalek, were still employed.[14] To prep No. 1385 for the long-distance operations, MCRM crews extended the coal boards on the tender for extra coal capacity, they paired the locomotive with a Milwaukee Road auxiliary car for extra water capacity, and they installed a multiple-unit device to control diesel locomotives.[21]

The R-1 left North Freedom for a two-day run to Green Bay on April 9, 1982, and the journey was unannounced as to not attract public attention.[21] After it arrived in Green Bay, Kawalek's volunteer crews used a drop pit to strip the locomotive of its driving wheels and axle boxes for reworking, and they made minor repairs to the tender.[21] On May 11, No. 1385 performed a test run northward to Oconto, where it subsequently met a southbound C&NW inspection train led by EMD F7's and hosted by the railroad's Vice President-Transportation, Edward Burkhardt.[20][21] Upon arrival in Oconto, the F7's broke down, and Burger arranged a power switch to have No. 1385 take the inspection train to Green Bay, with Ed Burkhardt sitting behind the throttle.[21]

The 1982 National Transportation Week began on May 16, when No. 1385 pulled the "Prosperity Special" train out of Green Bay bound for Milwaukee.[21][lower-alpha 3] The train, consisting of an EMD GP50, six modern freight cars, a caboose, and two business cars, was intended as a message to the public that the C&NW invested in new motive power and rolling stock, despite the ongoing recession.[20] En-route to Milwaukee, No. 1385 stalled from the multiple-unit device controlling the GP50; the device was set to move in reverse while the control was set to move forward.[20] After being displayed in Milwaukee for several days, the Prosperity Special traveled to Chicago, Janesville, and Madison, before the operation ended in North Freedom on May 25.[21][lower-alpha 4]

Following the success of the Prosperity Special, George Maybee, manager of C&NW's Iowa Division, asked if it were possible for No. 1385 to pull public excursions out of Boone and over the Kate Shelley High Bridge.[20] With arrangements being made, No. 1385 pulled the excursions in Boone in September during the annual "Pufferbilly Days" event with two C&NW F7's and three bilevel passenger cars on loan from Metra, and all trips were filled to capacity.[20][21] Following the Pufferbilly Days event, Burger again asked Wolfe and other C&NW management to initiate a full-blown steam program, and they gave their approval, with Ed Burkhardt backing the program.[21][22] On December 17, the C&NW signed an agreement with the MCRM to lease No. 1385 for the next four years.[21]

The boiler, frame, and running gear of No. 1385 in storage on February 6, 2010

After traveling from Boone to Chicago for display at Madison Street Station, No. 1385 returned to Green Bay to undergo an FRA-mandated overhaul.[21] Kawalek's volunteer crews removed the tubes and piping from the boiler, but due to a lack of available replacement tubes, No. 1385 was shipped on December 13 to the Milwaukee Boiler Manufacturing Company.[21] In Milwaukee, crews replaced part of the rear tube sheet and placed a patch on the boiler.[21] In early May 1983, the R-1 was returned to Green Bay for reassembly, and on May 30, No. 1385 traveled to the Milwaukee-area yard in Butler.[20][21] In Butler, Chamber of Commerce President Jerry Hilton arranged for the locomotive to participate in the "Butler Railroad Days" event by pulling "Butler 400" excursion trips, and No. 1385 carried over 4,500 passengers during the event.[20][21]

In the ensuing years, the C&NW would help groups raise funds by making 1385-led trips available for them to sponsor.[20] No. 1385 would travel across other portions of the railroad's network, traveling as far west as Council Bluffs, Iowa, as far south as Des Moines, Iowa, and as far north as Duluth, Minnesota and Escanaba.[21] The locomotive also ran along routes in Iowa the C&NW acquired from other companies, such as the Chicago Great Western (CGW), the Minneapolis and St. Louis (M&StL), and the Rock Island (RI).[21] With C&NW trackage rights, the locomotive travelled on the Milwaukee Road to Winona, Minnesota and the Burlington Northern (BN) to Superior, Wisconsin.[21]

In 1985, following a twelve-year hiatus, the Circus World Museum (CWM) of Baraboo, Wisconsin, hosted the annual circus parade in Milwaukee, and arrangements were made for No. 1385 to power the CWM's "Great Circus Train" on the C&NW main line on July 10.[18][23][24] For 1986, the C&NW created a full slate of trains for No. 1385 to pull, including a series of fundraising trips for the MCRM.[22] That same year, an insurance crisis broke out within the railroad industry, causing premium prices to go up, and most of C&NW's slated 1986 trips were cancelled.[22] No. 1385 only operated three trains that year; a C&NW employee open house in May, that year's Great Circus Train on July 8, and the Pufferbilly Days special in September.[22][25]

On July 7, 1987, No. 1385 was tasked to lead that year's Great Circus Train, but as it began to depart Baraboo, the R-1 suffered a superheater failure and sputtered.[19][26] While the train continued to Janesville behind an EMD SD60, No. 1385 was quickly towed back to the MCRM to undergo emergency repairs by museum workforces.[19][26] The discovered cause of the failure was a nipple bolt breaching open, resulting in one superheater unit bending out of shape.[27] The removal, repairs, and re-installation of the superheater took twelve hours for twenty members and all the museum volunteers to complete, and the progress was monitored and televised by a Milwaukee television station crew.[27][28] At midnight, No. 1385 was towed to Janesville to catch up with the CWM train, and despite the train having a slight delay in departing Janesville, it arrived in Milwaukee on schedule.[27][28]

After the event, the CWM train returned to Baraboo behind diesel locomotives, while No. 1385 ran to Chicago for display at Madison Street Station for the sesquicentennial of the city.[20] While the MCRM continued to keep No. 1385 in working order, the insurance crisis caused the C&NW to undergo dramatic changes, with routes continuing to be abandoned and sold off, divisions being consolidated, and workforces being cut.[22] The C&NW's management also changed after 1986; Wolfe died of cancer, Zito retired from the railroad, Burger left for Central Vermont (CV), and Ed Burkhardt left to create Wisconsin Central (WC).[14][22] New management of the railroad had no interest in running steam, with President Robert Schmiege feeling the use of No. 1385 reinforced the image of trains being low-tech antiques.[20] All motivation for C&NW to run a steam program was lost.[22]

Final years of 20th-century operations

With No. 1385 without a host, but still FRA-certified for mainline service, the MCRM looked toward running the R-1 on other railroads while helping communities that still wanted to sponsor steam trips.[22] In November 1987, No. 1385 pulled excursions on the Wisconsin and Calumet (WICT) between Brodhead and Monroe, Wisconsin, and the trips were to help benefit the Broadhead depot museum.[22] During its tenure on WICT, No. 1385 assisted an EMD GP7 in pulling a grain train.[22] After returning to North Freedom, the R-1 underwent some major boiler repairs, with a new smokebox being fabricated.[8] No. 1385 subsequently returned to WICT to pull yearly fall excursions on the railroad's main line in 1988, 1989, and 1990.[22] Throughout 1991, the locomotive remained in North Freedom to receive additional boiler repairs; scale was cleaned out, and old boiler tubes were replaced.[22]

No. 1385's driving wheels undergoing repairs at the Strasburg Rail Road on July 18, 2014

In the summer of 1992, the MCRM operated No. 1385 on the WC and the Wisconsin and Southern (WSOR), with Ed Burkhardt allowing it to operate on the former.[21][22] On the WSOR, No. 1385 pulled freight trains between Horicon and Oshkosh, and on the WC, it pulled public excursions between Wausau and Merrill.[22] During its tenure on WC, No. 1385 climbed a 1%-plus grade of the railroad's Byron Hill.[22] During the Fourth of July weekend, the locomotive pulled excursions on the WSOR's Granville-Horicon route.[22] After having carried over 8,600 passengers on the WSOR and WC, No. 1385 returned to North Freedom on July 6, with an ALCO C415 locomotive in tow for donation to the MCRM.[22]

In July 1993, during that year's National Railway Historical Society (NRHS) Convention, No. 1385 was scheduled to pull a "Mid-Continent 400" excursion to LaSalle Street Station in Chicago, where passengers were to be transferred from a Metra train to the excursion for a ride on the WSOR.[29][30] That year's Great Flood clobbered the MCRM, as their interchange with the C&NW at North Freedom was washed out.[31] As a result, convention officials cancelled the Mid-Continent 400 trip, and No. 1385 was used to move ballast cars.[30][31]

In the summer of 1994, No. 1385's driving wheels were removed to undergo repairs.[32][33][34] No. 1385 returned to service again on October 2, and that same day, it was repainted as Delaware, Lackawanna and Western (DLW) No. 1053 to be filmed for a movie, in favor of Steamtown National Historic Site of Scranton, Pennsylvania.[6][35] In the spring of 1995, the Chicago and North Western Historical Society (C&NWHS) hosted their annual meet at the MCRM, with No. 1385 performing some photo runbys for the meet.[36] On June 30, 1998, No. 1385 was removed from service to undergo firebox repairs.[1][11]

21st-century renovation

On May 18, 2000, No. 1385 became listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[1] Without an operable steam locomotive, yearly visitor attendance at the MCRM plummeted, so museum officials planned to return steam operations to lure visitors back.[11][37] They initially estimated that repairs on No. 1385 would cost $125,000 to complete, but a closer inspection revealed that the locomotive would require a full-blown $750,000 rebuild to operate again, and it was discovered that the condition of No. 1385's boiler reached the point of no return.[11][37][38] The project was subsequently stalled by varying challenges, including a lack of funding, the Great Recession, and a 2008 flood that damaged the museum's property, and the R-1 was stored on a side line, for the time being.[11][37][39]

In 2011, Wag-Aero co-founders Dick and Bobbie Wagner arranged for the Wagner Foundation to donate a $250,000 matching grant to the MCRM, and they made a solemn promise to help further fund No. 1385's rebuild.[11][38][40] It was re-estimated that the project would cost $2 million to complete, making it the most expensive restoration project in MCRM's history.[11][37][41] The museum contracted SPEC Machine to help restore the No. 1385, and after the locomotive was disassembled, the frame and running gear were shipped to SPEC's machine shop in rural Middleton, Wisconsin.[11][39][41] Afterward, the frame of the front pilot truck was replaced, and the driving wheels were sent to the Strasburg Rail Road's restoration shop in Pennsylvania to be repaired before returning to Middleton.[39][41]

Progress on the project required some tools to be custom-made, and a number of old photos, books, encyclopedias, and blueprints were used as references.[41][42] No. 1385's wooden cab was sent to Fond du Lac, where it served as a model for a replacement to be built.[39] A new welded boiler for the R-1 was initially planned to be constructed by Hamon Deltak of Plymouth, Minnesota, but in 2016, construction on the boiler began by Continental Fabricators in St. Louis.[41][43][lower-alpha 5] In 2017, the frame and running gear were removed from SPEC's machine shop, lifted via crane, and rolled into a larger adjacent building, which was built specifically to house No. 1385 for the remainder of its rebuild.[40][43]

In September 2019, the new boiler was moved to Middleton, lifted via crane, and fitted onto the frame.[43] Following the lock-downs during the COVID-19 pandemic, restoration work on the locomotive continued at a slower pace, but SPEC's owner, Steve Roudebush, set the project as a high priority.[11][38]

See also

Notes

  1. The idea of a steam program started during a pitch meeting in Chicago, when Burger noticed a photograph of railroaders posing in front of C&NW 4-6-2 locomotive No. 1544, and he asked Zito about it. Zito replied it was a graduation shot of his father's engineer training class.[14][20]
  2. Zito explained he thought a C&NW 4-8-4 was moved to Mexico and was possibly still there.[20]
  3. The name Prosperity Special was a nod to the 1922 delivery train of the same name, where twenty Baldwin 2-10-2's were delivered to the Southern Pacific Railroad en masse.[20]
  4. During the operation, state officials who were opposed to C&NW's line-abandonment program were invited to ride inside the business cars.[20]
  5. In addition to No. 1385, Continental Fabricators helped construct boilers for a number of other steam locomotives, including Pennsylvania Railroad 5550.[44]

References

  1. Gruber, John (March 1999). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form – Steam Locomotive #1385". National Park Service. Archived from the original on March 21, 2023. Retrieved March 21, 2023.
  2. Jorg (1995), pp. 65–67
  3. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  4. Glischinski (1993), p. 45
  5. Follmar & Jorgensen (1995), p. 45
  6. Pictorial (1995), p. 69
  7. Follmar & Jorgensen (1995), p. 57
  8. Pictorial (1995), p. 79
  9. Pictorial (1995), p. 72
  10. Pictorial (1995), p. 73
  11. Adams, Barry (2021-11-15). "Finish in sight for complete restoration of 1385 locomotive for Mid-Continent Railway Museum". ktvz. Retrieved 2023-03-23.
  12. Pictorial (1995), p. 74
  13. Cash, Matt (26 May 2022). "Throwback Thursday: Mid-Continent Railway Museum opened in Hillsboro 60 years ago". WKOW. Retrieved 2023-03-18.
  14. Glischinski (1993), p. 47
  15. Pictorial (1995), p. 75
  16. Pictorial (1995), p. 76
  17. Berger, Terry; Reid, Robert (1985). Great American Scenic Railroads. Dutton Paperback. ISBN 0-525-48174-5.
  18. Nelson (2013), p. 117
  19. Swanson (1987), p. 18
  20. "Fall 2021". Trains. Retrieved 2023-03-18.
  21. Glischinski (1993), p. 49
  22. Glischinski (1993), p. 51
  23. Zeirke, Jim (July 2000). "The Great Circus Train". Trains. Kalmbach Publishing. p. 43.
  24. Nelson (2013), p. 114
  25. Nelson (2013), p. 119
  26. Nelson (2013), p. 121
  27. Swanson (1987), p. 19
  28. Nelson (2013), p. 123
  29. McGonigal (1993), p. 29
  30. McGonigal (1993), p. 31
  31. "The little guys get clobbered, too". Trains. October 1993. p. 21. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
  32. "New Wheels for 1385". North Western Lines. Fall 1994. p. 23.
  33. Follmar & Jorgensen (1995), p. 56
  34. Follmar & Jorgensen (1995), p. 62
  35. Solomon (2009)
  36. "1995 Annual Meet". North Western Lines. Fall 1995. pp. 17–18.
  37. Adams, Barry (2011-08-23). "On Wisconsin: With help, old steam engine could be put back in service". Wisconsin State Journal. Retrieved 2023-03-23.
  38. "Two North Western R-1s are better than one - Classic Trains Magazine - Railroad History, Vintage Train Videos, Steam Locomotives, Forums". 2022-10-25. Archived from the original on 2022-10-25. Retrieved 2023-05-10.
  39. Adams, Barry (2015-02-15). "On Wisconsin: Making progress on the 1385". Wisconsin State Journal. Retrieved 2023-03-23.
  40. Adams, Barry (2017-12-25). "Roll, lift and turn: Historic locomotive takes another step in 5-year restoration". Wisconsin State Journal. Retrieved 2023-03-23.
  41. "Rebuild of 1907 steam locomotive chugging along". Racine Journal Times. 2016-02-21. Retrieved 2023-03-23.
  42. Lindblad, Peter (2018-01-03). "In Springfield, 110-year-old locomotive finds new life". Waunakee Tribune. Retrieved 2023-03-28.
  43. Adams, Barry (2019-09-27). "A major step for the Mid-Continent Railway Museum's 1385 steam locomotive". Wisconsin State Journal. Retrieved 2023-03-23.
  44. "Pennsy T1 comes to life in a St. Louis shop | Trains Magazine". Trains. 3 April 2018. Retrieved 2023-03-22.

Bibliography

  • Jorg, Ray (Winter 1995). "C&NW R-1 Disposition List". North Western Lines. pp. 64–67.
  • Follmar, Joseph; Jorgensen, Raymond (Winter 1995). "Locomotives That Changed the C&NW: The Class R-1 Ten-Wheelers". North Western Lines. pp. 45–63.
  • Glischinski, Steve (December 1993). "The life and times of a Ten-Wheeler". Trains. Kalmbach Media. pp. 45–51. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
  • "1385: A Pictorial". North Western Lines. Winter 1995. pp. 69–79.
  • Nelson, Bruce (2013). America's Greatest Circus Train (1st ed.). Heimburger House Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-911581-64-5.
  • Swanson, Paul (October 1987). "Heroics at North Freedom". Trains. Kalmbach Media. pp. 18–19. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
  • McGonigal, Robert (November 1993). "A tasty mix in the railroad capital". Trains. Kalmbach Media. pp. 29–31. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
  • Solomon, Brian (2009). Classic Locomotives: Steam and Diesel Power in 700 Photographs. Voyageur Press. ISBN 978-0-7603-4528-3.
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