As of 2017, nearly all the Baldwin diesel locomotives produced between the early 1930's and 1956 have been scrapped. Of the few that remain intact, all but an extremely small handful are either found in museums or on display somewhere. And, of the tiny number of operable Baldwins left, even fewer are still used to generate actual revenue for an operating railroad. Because of my interest in these relics, I have visited several museums and/or display locations across the country to see, and possibly even touch them.
(Sorry, I hope the touching part doesn't sound weird - honestly having a chance to grip a handrail or run my hand along the sill for a moment helps cement in my mind that such fascinating objects actually exist and are not just a mental fabrication.)
The only two times I have seen Baldwins working for real was during a road trip to Arizona in 1990 and several times while driving past the Geneva Steel plant in Orem UT between 1988 and 1993. The one problem with the Geneva versions I saw in action is that they all had been re-engined with EMD diesels, so although their appearances did not differ much from their former all-Baldwin selves, they did not sound like a "real" Baldwin.
But over on the east coast, a small contract switching railroad has been serving several industrial parks for the last 15 or 20 years with a growing fleet of cast-off Baldwin products. I only knew about this because of articles in print and online (plus a lot of YouTube videos) showing actual Baldwins earning their own keep instead of relying on donations to shuffle around a museum. I looked up Pureland, New Jersey on Google Maps - that's the name of the industrial park where this SMS Rail Lines (www.smsrail.com) has its office and shops - and found it conveniently located just across the Delaware River from the Philadelphia airport.
And, incidentally, it's also right across the river from Eddystone, the land of those Baldwins' birth.
It took some time, but I finally saved up enough frequent flyer miles to obtain a standby ticket from Pasco, WA (my nearest airport) to Philadelphia with one stop on the way there and two stops on the way home. I also found a relatively inexpensive rental car deal and relied on AirBnB.com to help me find a cheap place to lay my head for a couple nights.
I made some unusual travel plans to ensure I would have the maximum amount of time "on the ground" in PA/NJ and still minimize my paid vacation time away from work. So I hopped on a flight on a Wednesday after work and arrived in Philadelphia right about midnight Eastern time. Getting into my rental car, I drove immediately to SEPTA's Eddystone commuter station, which also lies along Amtrak's famed high-speed Northeast Corridor. I figured a relatively well-lit public space would be a safe spot to take a nap and make up for missed sleep. I was partly right: it was safe enough, but my naps kept getting interrupted by Amtrak and SEPTA trains zipping past. Darn!
When the sun came up a few hours later, I started looking around a little. The first freight train I spotted was this one (below), running on an ex-Pennsylvania Railroad secondary line along the waterfront. I don't know for sure where it came from or where it went, but the spot where I photographed it may well have been right inside Baldwin's massive manufacturing complex when it still stood.
About 9 am, I headed across the Delaware and quickly found my way to the Pureland Industrial Park. Hearing the sound of a locomotive horn, I turned down one of the side streets expecting to see a real live Baldwin diesel hard at work. Not so fast! It was a middle-aged General Electric B23-7, still painted in it's former Santa Fe paint. This caused me some concern. Had I come all this way only to get "skunked" in my quest to experience working Baldwins?
The same road I turned onto was also the right one to access the SMS office, but I drove around the industrial park a little to get familiar with the area beforehand. I could see into the shop area from an access road slightly west of there, and could see several Baldwin locomotives parked there. Finally, I approached the office. I had sent an e-mail to the general manager several weeks prior, and he had welcomed me to drop in during my time in the area, so I went in the front door and asked for him.
Without going into much detail, Brian, the GM gave me a tour of the shop area, where two Baldwin diesels were undergoing work while the boiler, firebox and running gear of a steam locomotive sat in another corner and a nearly-complete project to restore a Reading RR caboose resided on the other side. Out on the apron of the three-track shop sat nearly a dozen Baldwin diesels in various stages of repair. Brian walked me around to each one and gave me a rundown on their current status. Several are operable, others need minor work to get to that point, and others are long-term projects.
Since the crew out working in the industrial park was using the bigger GE unit for the day, Brian did not expect I would see much Baldwin action that day. But, he did fire one up (A former Pennsylvania RR DS-4-4-1000 number 9069, restored by SMS to its as-delivered scheme and number) and let me ride along while he moved it over to the adjacent track. Not long after that, as I was examining more Baldwins, one of the crew came over and told me they needed to reposition a few cars spotted on one of the side tracks to make room for a HazMat training course they would be hosting the next day. If I wanted to ride along while they did that, I was welcome. So I got about another hour of cab time in the 9069 which was fantastic.
Earlier, I had signed a liability release form, so I was allowed to roam around and take a few more photos of the units out on the apron and the equipment in the shop. Brian had suggested that, since the HazMat program might put a crimp on any trains operating at Pureland the next day, that I should head up to their Morrisville operation on Friday morning. He would let the crew know to look for me and maybe give me another chance to ride along.
This left me time in the day to investigate other rail ops in the area. While there were probably dozens of places I could have gone, I knew from a series of YouTube videos that Norfolk Southern's ex-Reading line between Reading (where else?) and Harrisburg, PA is a relatively busy mainline. Plus, there's a town on that line named Richland. Since I currently live in Richland, WA, this other Richland seemed a natural target. The map app on my phone showed Richland was only 60 miles away, so off I went.
But holy cow, that's the most time I think I ever spent driving 60 miles. Between slow traffic on the spider's web of freeways west of Philadelphia, plus even slower traffic on the side roads (most of which appear to be colonial-era cow trails), it was nearly 3 hours before I got there. When I finally arrived in Richland, it looked about like what I'd expected from the videos. I set up my tripod, ready to shoot video action just like the guy on YouTube, but the absence of trains after nearly an hour's wait gave me concern.
About this time, two young men approached me and asked if I was railfanning. No one who isn't already a railfan uses that term (the uninitiated usually use the shudder-inducing term "rail buff" - no thanks, I prefer to keep my clothes on while railfanning), so I figured these guys were worth hanging out with. We chatted for almost an hour. They were brothers and mentioned living a few miles outside town on a farm, but now working in town at an auto repair shop. I wondered if maybe they were Mennonite, based a little on their speech and dress; I was too far north for them to be Amish, and I'm not sure even the most worldly Amish carry a Canon DSLR under the front seat of their car.
An eastbound garbage train passed us while we spoke. I shot a video, but I was using my manual-focus 50mm lens (for better low-light performance, I think) but must have bumped it out of focus, so the video wasn't worth much when viewed later. After that, DeVon (the younger and more talkative of the two) and Curtis took off. I was watching the shadows getting longer and bemoaning the loss of the otherwise fantastic early-autumn light, when finally I heard a horn off to the east. The oncoming train turned out to be a local, like the one featured in an issue of Trains a few years ago, with a standard cab "geep" on each end. This (cropped) photo shows how close I came to not getting a decent shot at all because of the long shadows:
Once I had committed this train's passage to my SD card, I headed back toward Philadelphia for check-in at the AirBnB I had arranged in the suburb of Rutledge. On my way, I also caught a glance of two East Penn Ry locomotives tied down at Reinholds, which is another railroad I'm familiar with from YouTube. The light was really low by now, so the shots I took with my f1.8 lens wide open still aren't very sharp. After meeting my host in Rutledge (nice lady - if you ever need a place to stay in the Philadelphia area, let me know and I can connect you with her), I went to sleep for a few hours.
Up the next morning before first light, I headed back down to the Eddystone SEPTA stop. One observation I'd made there the day before was two high-speed Amtrak trains, one in each direction, passing that stop pretty close to 6:20 am. Since the NE Corridor is known for its (relatively) on-time performance, I figured being there a little after six would set me up to see them pass again. Sure enough, the two trains appeared within minutes of each other.
Exactly where he said it would be . . . |
Rolling slowly toward the CSAO yard, we stopped again to retrieve an empty bulkhead flatcar from a steel service center. The crew let me off here so I could shoot more photos of their locomotive at work. After climbing back on the diesel, the crew left the two empty cars on a siding, from which a CSAO train would retrieve them later. We continued up to the yard, but held short of another track. Very soon, a local CSAO train with one NS "geep" on each end passed on the track ahead of us. My hosts explained it was heading off to work an industrial site where US Steel's Fairless Works once stood.
Pulling an empty bulkhead out of the steel yard |
Passing the SMS "yard office", a former PRR caboose spotted on a spur, we pushed the lumber loads back to the distribution center. I hoped to hop off and shoot another photo or two of a green Baldwin switcher handling a train of finished lumber, but conductor Dan finished his job too quickly and soon we were back at the office, where they would now tie up for the day. Dismounting the venerable Baldwin, I thanked the crew again and headed out.
I had a few other things I wanted to see while in that area, mostly Revolutionary War sites and the campus of Princeton University. I also checked out the two-mile NJ Transit branch from Princeton to Princeton Jct., and in about 10 minutes at the junction, I also bagged a couple NJT and Amtrak trains rolling through at high speed.
Heading back south to Philadelphia, I walked around Independence Hall (but would like to have declared my independence from the parking ticket I got while there!), drove past the new LDS temple, and then up the Schuylkill River (because I missed the turn to see Philly's famous 30th St. Station). I ended the sunlit part of the day in a suburb called Manayunk, and walked a rail-trail where the PRR once crossed the river on a cool concrete bridge.
After another night at my AirBnB, I got up early to cram in a few more rail photos before I had to catch my flight home later that morning. Being a Saturday, I held little hope that SMS would be running at all across the river in Pureland, but I drove over there anyway. I was right about no SMS trains running, but I took another walk around the perimeter of their facility to snap a few photos of locomotives from their sunnier sides.
Then, as I headed back to the bridge with only a little time left before I had to check in my rental car, I took one more look down the CSAO branch through Bridgeport, NJ, I caught a glimpse of some movement. Sure enough, there was a CSAO freight heading south toward the Pureland interchange track. Even better, to get from Bridgeport to Pureland, the train had to wait for a small pivoting drawbridge to align with their tracks. I watched this operation, and then photographed as the train, led by two SD40-2s, one each from CSAO owners Norfolk Southern and CSX, rolled slowly across Raccoon Creek and through the marshlands. With that event capping a very exciting trip, I got on my plane and headed home.
Here's a sampling of more Baldwin diesels on the property at SMS:
SMS 300 is also a former Navy unit, built in late 1952. It is a supercharged, 1200 hp S-12 model, as are the majority of SMS' Baldwins. |
This S-12 worked a long time in the iron fields of Northern Minnesota, but was originally built as Great Northern Ry. number 27 in early 1953. |
SMS 308, also an S-12, was built in late 1953 for the Michigan Limestone Co. and served as their number 116. |
Looks like an awesome trip! Your advance preparation paid off!
ReplyDelete