׉?ׁB!בCט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://srUw0gstPcQ6Z8_v_D_vNvdjFHTpfAPXHgC4PDJuXmI w`׉	 7cassandra://ahKa_1zPm-tBdkhkWAfR764caKnqHujIsZmVaaUXWewq`s׉	 7cassandra://46s1dWVW8aBh2-UGJBgyOpAcKCmxpMExkwD58h4JLD4,` ׉	 7cassandra://fLxyQsKvcYPbgD31COCQ4W0wzXtLOjfGtVcOv9NjymE  ͠][Wd䰍W*ט   (u׈         ׈E[Wd䰍W*׉E׉	 7cassandra://46s1dWVW8aBh2-UGJBgyOpAcKCmxpMExkwD58h4JLD4,` [Wd䰍W*[Wd䰍W*(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://MHMRR6su58ceHX5-piD6yBSyZq4z3iRb7NlBdJUKn9Y `׉	 7cassandra://PLyCmn8fkSxgwuuILIcaWU27vOXm6m4vhxvhsAQg2BM|`s׉	 7cassandra://2WBvm4LIu_BuXOUBCdHITru_r0y53e--tOn-fBE9vrk'` ׉	 7cassandra://1U6tVR5yuM_EHyML2P2gmgmfUPNK1Ye_gNPvprsYVi8 (͠][V9䰍W)ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://y2cgcfveT2x5GMZQ5KScS1ZcyGS4s-ID9XobepXIHF0 `׉	 7cassandra://XeRuRkaeXWwrhwn0g4dgyrqh0l1B4RaoJMkbAKBPAPs̀`s׉	 7cassandra://e6XSbuCJ_48qsmDcxUJHhm3HHtiHVmwQsRvcxMfSlpo'` ׉	 7cassandra://O2nBh1LoselgeKB7F4zswEAvBJR4reY3m5ODQev4Nes @4͠][V9䰍W)׉EgFeature Articles
3
Departments
2
8
10
Hi All,
It’s hard to believe we are celebrating our 25th year. Who
could have thought that small band of dedicated Volunteers
who came together a quarter century ago with a desire to
“play with real Trains” would grow into the Great Society
we have now.
From those humble beginnings we have gone from a one car
operation to the collection of equipment we now have. From
running one car Santa Trains to the Polar Express trains we
now run that sell out in less than two days and require two
Santa’s to run. To having Thomas the Tank Engine and
now the Dinosaur Trains. And we are always looking to
expand!
We have been in Films and are known all around the
Railroad community. Not bad for that small group.
Along the way we have made a great number of friends and
sadly lost too many of our friends who will not be forgotten.
As always there are tons of things to do and so little time to
do them. Your help will make it happen. Come out and give
an hour or a day, it all helps.
Upcoming work in 2014.
Getting the M1 ready for service.
Getting the 501 ready for service.
Brush cutting along the right of way.
Work in the Station Area
Let’s continue to work together and make 2014 a Great
Year for our Society!
As always, my “door” is always open to you, our members.
Here’s to another 25 YEARS!
President
John Stocker
The Polar Express at night.
2
Happenings At The Station
Harold Fredericks
President’s Message
John Stocker
Bel-Del News
Harold Fredericks– Honored
Rich Onorevole
13 Maywood Station Historical
Committee
Ed Kaminski
14
18
From The Current Time Table
Ralph Bonanno
Shop Talk
Martin Den Bleyker
Covers
Front: NYSW 3810 on the SU-99 in Bagota NJ on 3-813.
Photo:
Ed Kaminski
Rear Top: NYSW #3810 on the SU-99 at Butler NJ on
4-16-14.
Photo: Kevin Quinn
Rear Bottom: The NYSW 3014 at Maywood NJ on
2-05-14.
Photo: Ed Kaminski
׉	 7cassandra://2WBvm4LIu_BuXOUBCdHITru_r0y53e--tOn-fBE9vrk'` [V9䰍W)i׉ETh
e station and freight house at Oak Ridge served
the New Jersey Midland and New York
Susquehanna and Western railroads for ninety
years. In the 920’s and 30’s it was a gathering place where
people came to talk and to get information from the
telegraph. Passengers came and went on the train. The mail
train brought letters and packages. Express shipments went
in and out. Boxes and barrels moved n and out of the freight
house. Coal trains, milk trains and ice trains passed by
daily. While most days were routine there were some
unusual happenings.
The Trapper
A well-known brakeman lived on a dead end road near the
station. He was an ardent hunter, fisherman and trapper. He
was often at the station telling fantastic stories about his exploits.
He tended a trap along the right-of-way of the railroad.
The man would jump off the front of a moving train,
bag a muskrat, skunk or a mink and then jump on the caboose
with his catch. Now if you asked the brakeman if this
was a true he would assure you that it was. Anyway these
exaggerated stories prompted some lively conversation.
The Bitter Blacksmith
One Sunday morning, in the early life of the railroad, an
eastbound coal train stopped just below the station. There
was trouble with the engine. A vital part needed welding, a
simple job for a blacksmith. The local smithy was not cooperative.
He refused to weld the part “because it was the Sabbath”.
His language, however, indicated that there were
other reasons. Some years before some of the man’s prime
farm property had been appropriated by the Midland. His
compensation was unsatisfactory and the blacksmith remem3
bered.
Perhaps, the Susquehanna had an impossible job of
making everybody a friend of the railroad.
The Lost Mail Bag
One hot summer afternoon the railroad mail clerk opened both
doors of the mail car. When he arrived at the Oak Ridge he
found that a bag of first class mail had fallen out. He was
much disturbed as losing U.S. mail was a serious matter. My
father sent my brother and me to find the bag. It laid somewhere
between Stockholm and Oak Ridge. We drove to the
midpoint at the Oak Ridge reservoir. My brother went west
and I went east, looking on both sides of track. Two minutes
out I spied the bag on the side of a small cinder fill. It was too
late to reach my brother, a fast walker. I sat on a bank bag in
hand while he went to Stockholm and back. The next day the
grateful mail clerk gave us each a dollar which on the days of
the depression was very adequate and welcome reward.
The Stubborn Elephant
Alfred Ringling, one of the brothers of the famed Ringling
circus, came to Oak Ridge in 1913. He called a section of the
Longwood Valley, “the most beautiful place on earth”. Here
he built a three story fieldstone mansion overlooking a lake
and farmer’s fields. Alfred envisioned and assembled a small
trunk circus that would go from town to town in northern New
Jersey. Animals were brought up on the railroad and marched
three miles to the Ringling barns. Alfred’s only son, Richard,
was named to managed the circus. Richard was a privileged
young man who often came to the station in his Stutz bearcat
sports car. The circus was not a success. The trucks were too
often bogged down on the mud of the 1918 dirt roads. Ani(Continued
on page 4)
׉	 7cassandra://e6XSbuCJ_48qsmDcxUJHhm3HHtiHVmwQsRvcxMfSlpo'` [V9䰍W)j[V9䰍W)i(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://2l6JzA5U5j1DswY1Z1H3wG__9M44o0Dwl8OENYl4A3g r`׉	 7cassandra://x_HUYzGw2mcjS8Jt6kl53BsCra6ICmEMxcltTwqYSI0̈́`s׉	 7cassandra://mS7Q7_G9DoZnQ5_xGm4Gg7NhGTOtCv-gb89jhM-iHps%` ׉	 7cassandra://VciVpB84QHCCDhGN89bSFlcqdeIjRFZxSFFMMNGz-6k Z4͠][V9䰍W)ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://Wk1vl1iGLS8Lw9d9JDgSjUuj2CeLck0IZAr5uEmLmP0 8`׉	 7cassandra://ql3pvVszv1iKoOBHreeOPO82OQI_BHkyxIzQuWO_gLYr`s׉	 7cassandra://sZYU_Rn5EoAMUNNrLmPqxlonOFvqXRcC8CbbOIuFiJY#D` ׉	 7cassandra://WDjj9CCTtw_VjtEDt1haa-THJQ5QmlI4qB9_P-Y8V3I h$͠][V9䰍W)׉EThe young man, in this 1946 picture, is not waiting for a train.
He just stopped to see what was happening at the station.
(Authors collection)
mals, circus wagons and cages were shipped back on the railroad.
One cow elephant was reluctant to leave. She left the
march and was found drinking at Wallace’s pond. When she
reached the station she refused to enter the box car. There
was no way to get the big girl to go in under her own power.
Six men and a boy hauled her in with the mechanical advantage
of a block and tackle. The car door was secured just
as the way freight blew for the road crossing.
Section Hand’s Freight
A motor car with four section hands stopped at the station to
inquire if the track was clear for them to proceed to Newfoundland.
They were particularly cautious because they had
just had a frightening experience. At Stockholm they were
told that the way freight was at Newfoundland and would
soon be heading west. The foreman realized that the train as
usual would be unloading freight at Oak Ridge and he could
meet the train there. Unusually, this day there was no business.
The way freight passed by the station without stopping.
The track workers saw its plume of smoke rising above a narrow
rock cut a mile before the planned meet. The scramble to
leave the rails before entering the cut left the men and motor
car in great disarray among the trackside weeds. The locomotive
puffed merrily by with its half dozen cars and caboose.
Experience Counts
In the very early Susquehanna diesel days an Alco.S2. going
in the coal yard siding, dropped two wheels off the track. The
train crew was prepared with re-rails, spike and a spike hammer
but had little experience spiking the re-rails to the ties.
One by one the trainmen tried to hit the spike head with the
pointed spike hammer. A seventy year old retired sectionhand
stood by watching the bungling with disgust. He finally
grabbed the hammer and drove the spikes home with the
standard four meaningful strokes. With an easy tug on the
throttle the wheels were lifted up on the rail.
The Speedy Milk Trains
To see the milk trains at the end of a day was like having dessert
after a good meal. There were two of them, each with
three engines and two dozen cars. The trains raced through
Oak Ridge twenty minutes apart. Kids and grownups were
warned not to stand in front of the station when the milk train
4
The arrival of a train was always an exciting time. The Hanford
Branch mail and passenger train stopped at Oak Ridge
minutes before eleven o’clock in the summer of 1939. This
date engine No. 972 hauled the combination mail baggage
car and coach.
passes. The speed of the cars drew objects into their wheels.
My brother lost his new express wagon this way. The three H
-4 consolidations passed with a swish, swish sound as the
engineers adjusted their throttles for a gentle braking action
on the down grade. The little 50 inch drivers and the rapid
motion of the rods added to the appearance of speed. A veteran
engineer told me that he had piloted a milk train for 11
years with the same engine, camelback Consolidation No.121.
The Susquehanna served the rich dairy farm country of Sussex
and Warren counties, comparatively close to the market.
The short haul was an invitation for trucks to compete. Inevitably
the two milk trains and the ice train were combined. In
the 1930’s, the three trains became one plodding freight,
switching here and there as it went. The speedy milk trains
were gone forever.
Travel to the Farmers Picnic
In the early 1900’s the big event of the summer was the
farmers’ picnic at Lake Grinell. The picnic took place in an
oak grove along the tracks of the Susquehanna and the L. &
H. R. making connections at Sparta Junction. Many farm
boys took their girlfriends to this popular outing.
Les, a young fellow from Oak Ridge, took a girl from
Milton. They arrived at the station with a fully loaded picnic
basket and boarded the picnic special. They made the connection
at Sparta Junction and spent a pleasant day at the picnic
grove.
The returning special train arrived at the station on time but
Les and his friend were not among the passengers. Had they
missed the train? There was concern how they would get
home. Soon a work train arrived delivering the two special
passengers to Oak Ridge. Les had to explain what happened.
At Sparta Junction the two boarded the waiting train. Les
chose the last seat on the last car. With all of the attention on
each other they paid no attention to what was happening. The
train pulled out leaving them stranded on an unattached car.
They started walking. It was three miles to Sparta Station. It
was the good fortune for the pair that the company engineers
and surveyors had been working that day up along the Delaware
River and were returning with an engine and a coach.
The crew saw the plight of the travelers, broke the rules and
invited them aboard. At Oak Ridge a horse and wagon was
waiting to take them home, the end of a near perfect day.
׉	 7cassandra://mS7Q7_G9DoZnQ5_xGm4Gg7NhGTOtCv-gb89jhM-iHps%` [V9䰍W)k׉E
track were laid down and picked up
as the machine chugged to the dam
site a mile away.
After two years work the shovel was
to be moved back on the railroad. It
was stored along the road between
our home and the tracks. Hyman –
Goodman found no use for the
machine so it just stood there
marring the landscape. Kids
climbed over it and got dirty. My
mother hated the thing. Over the
years my father made many attempts
to get rid of the monster. Finally in
1930, he was told that the shovel
was his to do what he pleased with
it. He sold it to the scarp dealer for
twenty-five dollars. This was a
week’s wages at that time but little
compensation for the nuisance it had
been for nearly a dozen years.
Fire in the Chimney
There was a lot happening at the station in the 1890’s when summer boarders arrived to go
back to the city. Jefferson Township Historical Society
The Ugly Steam Shovel
The Oak Ridge reservoir dam was built in 1900. It was
greatly enlarged in 1917 by the contracting firm, Hyman –
Goodman of Jersey. A huge steam shovel, originally used to
build the Panama Canal, was brought upon the Susquehanna
to move a necessary massive amount of soil. It was the
heaviest shipment ever to be assigned to the Oak Ridge
station. The shovel had eight wheels to move on the standard
gauge track. A shelter covered the boiler, the engine,
and the operator. There was a system of sheaves and cables
and a four foot bucket on the long hinged boom. Sections of
After 1927, the Susquehanna
supplied soft coal for heating station
building. It burned with intense
heat, a sulfur smell and left a
combustible residue on the chimney.
A passerby noticed flames coming
from the station chimney and
notified the agent. The ever present fire ladder came into
rapid use but the water barrel had been neglected. Available
hands brought pails of water from nearby neighbors. It was
poured on the charred roofing while the fire was allowed to
burn out. The building was saved to serve the railroad thirty
more years. The combined station and freight house
buildings were moved one hundred feet to the fuel
company’s property in 1962 and are still used as a warehouse
for the company’s business.
Alfred Ringling’s manor house being completed in 1918.
The building contained 28 rooms, 8 baths, elaborate wood
carvings, Tiffany stained glass, a $75,000 organ and fire5
A
glimpse of the postal clerk at Oak Ridge in 1915. He sorted
the mail while traveling, delivering mail from town to
town. The engine is No. 24 hauling the “Sussex mail”.
(Authors collection)
׉	 7cassandra://sZYU_Rn5EoAMUNNrLmPqxlonOFvqXRcC8CbbOIuFiJY#D` [V9䰍W)l[V9䰍W)k(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://comgTvql6jPqJ_o7i-dzOz1idD4ZJUQXX4wpEbS5GmQ `׉	 7cassandra://ML69N5Qwb_BGn_ZJeHekTo9R-g8udwk_ha8xbY1Kdl8{`s׉	 7cassandra://ErHlTfGe-iRDn1GFB1zQGAHMnjMAvW8Pyin2zFIRSvQ(` ׉	 7cassandra://nkYDJ5JMA64iLQgBf59lgd0t1hk5MCrS5VYVg0aew_4 G͠][V9䰍W)ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://Zka9p7B4w07e5SFwcmsbAO9Cq4VoVfwD9HTJm-NYOhA 0`׉	 7cassandra://rh2JHxrX_KX9wtf_B5R8Fl7qhjPn-ZUE9nsOnZZ0QR8t``s׉	 7cassandra://wtY_4loIbOu9-zN02pmQNwkJ9qeYlYrjrU_BY2ChuwU)` ׉	 7cassandra://bcY1GJQ8Vqpjbq1qWW7QwDaUmzXQfWFGWS3HI4kxsYM 	]͠][V9䰍W)נ[V9䰍W) cI9׉H Qhttp://www.northjersey.com/obituaries/local-obituaries/bruce-van-wyk-67-1.752044#Gׁׁr׉E	Bruce Van Wyk
this seems to be a trait of railroaders in general, Bruce was
quite adept at entertaining us. Many a Saturday night we
would sit around the restaurant table and swap stories into
the wee hours of the night. We always laughed and had a
great time.
I remember many years ago when we had the Newfoundland
engine house and we had to swap out an engine in
the M1. It had snowed and the roads were quite bad.
Bruce and I somehow made it to the shop and swapped
out the engine. All these years later I still remember how
excited I was to work along side of him.
It was always an educational process working with Bruce.
You might learn anything from the top ( classified) speed
of an aircraft carrier to the metallurgical makeup of a
bearing, but it was always interesting to say the least.
One thing I admired most about Bruce was that he never
gave up on something he believed in.
The society and his friends all benefited from his determined
and forthright nature.
Perhaps this is one reason why Bruce’s death is so hard to
fathom, it seemed he would be around forever, way to
tough and stubborn and determined to let any illness get
the better of him.
Alas our friend has left us and I know one thing for sure,
the great railroad in heaven will be in perfect working
condition by the time I get there, Bruce will see to that!
L
ong time New York Susquehanna & Western Technical
& Historical Society member Bruce Van Wyk passed
away on March 6th.
Before retiring, Bruce worked as the maintenance engineer for
Fratelli Beretta USA, Inc. in South Hackensack and was formerly
the mechanic and lead foreman on the Morristown and Erie
Railroad. Bruce also was a Navy veteran who served the country
during the Vietnam War aboard the USS Enterprise.To say that
Bruce was important to the society is a great understatement.
Bruce was our Chief Mechanical Officer ( CMO) and for his
exceptional service was awarded life time membership in the
society. Bruce helped the society obtain a reputation for doing
things others couldn't even imagine. He was a superb mechanic
best known for being the leading force behind the restoration of
our New York Susquehanna & Western RDC M-1.
Much more than a mechanic, Bruce was a friend and a mentor to
many of us. One of Bruce’s other talents was story telling, while
During one of our Saturday night dinners Rich Onorevole presented
Bruce with a Christmas present of a pine cone! This was
a long running gag with Bruce.
6
Bruce at work on the Morristown & Erie Railroad.
Photo: William Kunath
׉	 7cassandra://ErHlTfGe-iRDn1GFB1zQGAHMnjMAvW8Pyin2zFIRSvQ(` [V9䰍W)m׉ExMany years ago we posed for this picture while running Santa trips in Ledgewood with the M-1.
Bruce in his element working on a 610 block in our Newfoundland shop
Above left: Bruce never shied away from a big job. Here we took the trucks out from under the M-1 for an overhaul.
Above right: As always “holding court” telling stories. This was during a picnic in Whippany.
׉	 7cassandra://wtY_4loIbOu9-zN02pmQNwkJ9qeYlYrjrU_BY2ChuwU)` [V9䰍W)n[V9䰍W)m(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://5vgKA91XcBZdBGgwhouOejyrQ42-KNLeqjT0k4ye91E p`׉	 7cassandra://IwgIBpNHy-BnfrxqxpT0rSzAMKU3Xf5LQhqEsnQCDXQ͋p`s׉	 7cassandra://UFJyPaKDuOaitwiHB7FxW67FLXWb2v3FRF4XtBMqC7w-` ׉	 7cassandra://0xO4siG1nHguejKyfjV7gKry-Tvltr8SHfwM-6lZUag ͠][V9䰍W)ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://32TiS2UxjYU64BiYtWxrQv5cHp5MnFDDxK7lIHucQWQ `׉	 7cassandra://3Mc2SJ7vZnii3ria6-j6hRKZ2AT2UkzTGMa1iUY196cu`s׉	 7cassandra://k6cZNlpCIu1HknF_VWaAkWEpIohdYV_qGqcNwf1HJvA(` ׉	 7cassandra://g9X6ONUgZoxHZqKJau1rpeKq4m4MigJvokDIMi3Wsy4  ͠][V9䰍W)׉EAs always things have been quite busy.
After The Polar Express, train operations
took some time off, and maintenance work
picked up! While the steam crew has been
eagerly working on #142 in anticipation of
springtime and the coming of “steam” the
rest of us have been busy working on the
coaches. Car 530 had the tiles coming up off
the floor and many of the seats were loose as
well.
We lag bolted all the seats in place and
re-glued down all of the tiles. One of the
biggest projects was the repainting of the Gift
Shop. All of the contents of the shop has to
be removed and it was shipped off to Topton
PA to be painted. It made its debut on The
Easter Bunny Train Ride. The color is much
brighter than we are used to but it represents
the historical NYS&W red which just
happens to also be the red of Stevens Institute
of Technology.
Above: The Polar Express had some beautiful snowy nights this year. Just enough to make it beautiful, but not dangerous.
Top Left: Dylan Vieyles working of #142 valve lubricating lines. Top right: Devin Stasak working with Don Young to
reassemble the cab appliances on #142.
Bottom left: Our gift shop makes its first appearance in Susquehanna red during The Easter Bunny Train Ride.
8
׉	 7cassandra://UFJyPaKDuOaitwiHB7FxW67FLXWb2v3FRF4XtBMqC7w-` [V9䰍W)o׉EYLong time member Kevin Griggs ( KB) was awarded life
time membership by the Society. Here Gary Shea presents
him with a plaque in commemoration of his service to the
Society. Kevin is our senior trainmen and is best known
for his ability to pack a train.
Kevin has retired to Connecticut to be close to his
family and is missed on the Bel-Del
9
׉	 7cassandra://k6cZNlpCIu1HknF_VWaAkWEpIohdYV_qGqcNwf1HJvA(` [V9䰍W)p[V9䰍W)o(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://AFUOHbhUB-_y13NTs0ZHcvxnS-d93IxzY8r3x_HciP4 `׉	 7cassandra://Ku-kNAE_opxXDTvNr_s-5z5_LFyEbEKDSEaYq16LWQE͐`s׉	 7cassandra://hVVOKtsKDauWI051FJAXVEFjHDRI8l6A2olXZl24hwE.` ׉	 7cassandra://cK-N_dXcXHNvG2lsfHKxNlpnJZQMAcileBI_taUzhz0 ͠][V9䰍W)ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://_XIbrBjPNvqN-0ujgOTXKWbFnmPu_7YAkdEJ9D30hv8 `׉	 7cassandra://DuUNUVgBadAe7nnnl7-T6s6CE9MPGRIvJt-NQSCK8Uw͚`s׉	 7cassandra://1pyTxTlnXzbTpkAOqbRDd883mt5w7pY9jkz4UChx9HE2` ׉	 7cassandra://b7y8yVnkXyVps3HiH3hbkez29emrhqWrdzL3cNcB-ps ͠][V9䰍W)׉EHarold Fredericks
100 years Old!
By Rich Onorevole
On December 12th, 2013 the Paulinskill Valley Trail
Committee celebrated Harold Fredericks 100th birthday at
their annual dinner at the Lafayette House in Lafayette
Township. Present were members of Harold's family and the
event was co-hosted by Bob Nicholson Sr and Bob
Nicholson III.
Harold is, at 100 years old, just as a remarkable person that
he was when he graduated college in 1934. He can still
relate the memories that he experienced while growing up
and living along the Susquehanna Railroad. His father, Harry
Fredericks was the station agent at the Oak Ridge station
for forty years. he also was the local postmaster for 33 years.
In those days, a group of "locals" (who would be called
"railfans" today), would congregate daily to greet the
6:30PM mail train. The stories that evolved here did much
to shape Harold's admiration of the NYS&W. His Father
also operated a small coal yard along the tracks at Oak
Ridge, which also added to his experiences. He also has
authored the widely heralded book "The Wilkes-Barre and
Eastern Railroad" which many consider to be the definitive
work on this railroad.
Harold's talk on December 12th, was that of a summer-land
vacation of a young man who traveled by train to the
Karamac Inn by the Delaware Water Gap. Sadly, the Inn is
long gone, and the tracks long abandoned. But the memories
are alive through people like Harold, who also provided
much input to new endeavors such as the hiking trails such
as the Paulinskill valley Trail that now exist in the area.
Harold showed that he can still relate the hundreds of
stories based on his experiences of growing up along the
Susquehanna. And he can still present a captivating slide
show with many of the excellent images that he recorded
during his lifetime.
A humble individual, he graciously has assisted many
historical groups by sharing his knowledge and materials.
Time may have slowed him a bit, but he still has a twinkle in
his eye when a subject that interests him arises....which is
quite often. He is a treasure that many of us have had the
privilege to share, and God has blessed us with having him
for a century of memories!
׉	 7cassandra://hVVOKtsKDauWI051FJAXVEFjHDRI8l6A2olXZl24hwE.` [V9䰍W)q׉ET
wenty five years! It seems like only yesterday when
we started out on this adventure. We have been
many places and done so many interesting things. It
is inconceivable to imagine that things could have worked
out any better! Things were not always easy, in fact, our
success has come out of adversity! Every time a roadblock
was put in our way, we worked around it only to come out
better than ever before. Our specialty has always been
historic restoration of railroad equipment funded by
operating trips for the general public. Our equipment roster
has blossomed from our humble beginnings with the
NYSW RDC M-1, to a whole fleet of equipment including
our very own steam locomotive NYSW #142. We have
operated trips near and far. Hawthorne, Maywood, Rutherford,
Whippany, Ledgewood, Butler, Rockaway,
Newfoundland, Dover, Westfield, Dunellen, Binghamton,
Syracuse, Lincoln Park, Ridgewood, Morristown,
Hackensack and Phillipsburg all have hosted our
excursions. We hold some of the most coveted licenses in
the tourist railroad industry, such as, A Day Out With
Thomas, The Polar Express and Dinosaur Train. Over
100,000 people visited our Delaware River Railroad
Excursions in 2013. None of this happened by accident, we
have an extremely competent group of volunteers that have
dedicated their free time to ensure the success of the
organization. Over the years, we have become a tight knit
“family” existing for much more than simply the trains.
The true secret to our success is in the caring and
compassion we share for each other and our shared
enthusiasm for our hobby. We have shared births,
weddings, graduations and sadly, deaths, always coming
together for the betterment of all. On these pages you will
see some pictures of various trips we have operated and
places we have been. I could fill books with all the
photographs. Not much has changed other than some gray
hair here and there. Our goals are still he same and our
“family” is strong as ever.
I thank each and one of you for all that we have.
Chris Cotty
VP & General Manager
׉	 7cassandra://1pyTxTlnXzbTpkAOqbRDd883mt5w7pY9jkz4UChx9HE2` [V9䰍W)r[V9䰍W)q(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://2DPRjH1rn6bpQxB1LDrZgh3_RORxw4NWpqn3jHvBxvo !`׉	 7cassandra://G1vGQzItHaRUfxHLwzhN8rYsDiX-AW9b5u3khkkAjoY͓`s׉	 7cassandra://FB3NucVybx0txVJVCKUFecK9VuBqUZgpbcTkP_sRwEs)` ׉	 7cassandra://bKQG9jf-DNBY3W3Vvz6L8UmqrBGHgUWazRb3iUKnntY s͠][V9䰍W)ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://7NJc9gF0BLZABQNx36PQWNVD0jEyyTKDO8YXvORDg8U `׉	 7cassandra://kr7NJKEoeL5jjYhnOaJfaN3oU_uPDMQR6-Dyzi6gLl8͗`s׉	 7cassandra://nD4jZ_rvi56VslislySV3kAIs6_7XborxpWFTr4qM_M+` ׉	 7cassandra://NJTnNC3y6h9C0y54_jUQ4ljR-Fi2Oy9iWJ3oYDZBxmE ֤͠][V9䰍W)נ[V9䰍W) s̻9ׁHhttp://www.maywoodstation.comׁׁЈנ[V9䰍W) ̻9ׁHhttp://www.maywoodstation.comׁׁЈ׉EwMSHC 2013 Year in Review
Year 2013 concluded another busy year for the Maywood Station
Museum. Aside from the usual mix of preservation and
maintenance items we attend to as well as a new restoration
By Ed Kaminski
H
.O Scale
Model of
Maywood
Station Museum’s Historic
Locomotive to be
Released this Spring!
A finely-detailed, operating,
H.O. Scale limited-run
model of the
actual National Register
Listed, 1942-built, New
York, Susquehanna &
Western Alco S-2 Locomotive
#206 that is
cosmetically
restored
and located at the
Maywood Station Museum
will be produced by
the Atlas Model Railroad
Company this Spring. The model is available EXCLUSIVELY
through the Maywood Station Museum while supplies
last and all proceeds will benefit the museum.
The Maywood Station Museum is accepting orders and the
model will be available in Item # MSHC-01 (Analog/Decoder
Ready) for $125.00 each (MSRP $149.95) and Item# MSHC02
(Decoder Equipped with Sound) for $220.00 each (MSRP
$259.95). To place an order for a model(s), please send an email
to info@maywoodstation.com with the quantity you wish
to order and specify either Item# MSHC- 01 or Item# MSHC02
including your name, address and telephone number.
For more information, please visit the Maywood Station Museum
website at www.maywoodstation.com or the Maywood
Station Museum Facebook page. All proceeds go to further
preservation and maintenance of the historic Maywood Station
Museum.
project, membership had a very challenging schedule of museum
open house events including our third year hosting a series
of free concerts at the station.
In 2013 we held a new event The Easter Bunny at the Maywood
Station Museum on March 30. The event was very successful
and with approximately 300 visitors. Many parents
commented that they enjoyed the event and we look forward to
making this an annual event in the museum schedule. We also
held three free concerts on the station grounds – two on
Wednesday evening open houses in June and August and one
during Annual Railroad Day at Maywood Station on October
6. The weather was great for all three free concerts and attendance
was good. The concerts were known as the The Maywood
Station Museum Backyard Summer Concert Series and
were once again sponsored by Park Avenue Acura. The concerts
featured performances by local bands and performers,
which included Dave Murphy & the Bull Brothers; Anker and
David Jacobsen. On October 6, the museum hosted Annual
Railroad Day at Maywood Station Museum. The event went
on exceptionally well and it was estimated that approximately
400 people visited the station that day. The Annual Santa at
Maywood Station Museum event on December 14 drew a
record-high of 542 visitors marking our largest Santa event
ever.
Public attendance figures to the museum’s 2013 schedule of
two open houses on Wednesday evenings and four Sunday
afternoons between May and November plus the Annual Santa
at Maywood Station Museum event on Saturday, December
14 came in slightly above 2012. The museum had the good
fortune of enjoying favorable weather conditions at each open
house/event. Additionally, the November 10 regular open
house had an unusually high amount of visitors.
For the year 2013, the Maywood Station Museum schedule of
six open houses and the Annual Santa at Maywood Station
Museum event drew 2419 visitors, up from the year 2012
total of 2387. This signified a 1.01% increase. Prior year totals
are 2577 in year 2011; 2351 in year 2011; 2289 in year 2009;
1982 in year 2008, 2142 in year 2007, 1967 in year 2006; and
1621 in year 2005, the first year of museum operations. The
museum also saw a 3.2% increase in revenue from open houses
as compared to year 2012. The books, Maywood - The Borough,
The Railroad, and The Station and The New York,
Susquehanna & Western Railroad in New Jersey and sales
from Museum Store items including The Maywood Station
Story DVD; holiday ornaments; calendars; T-shirts and hats;
Reflector magazines; and Maywood Station models; as well as
general donations and commercial photos helped contribute to
the bottom line. Online sales through the Maywood Station
Museum website’s Museum Store posted an increase of 82%
over 2012 led by strong book and calendar sales.
The 2013 Maywood Station Museum Holiday Ornament,
which was released on October 6 at the Annual Railroad Day
at the Maywood Station Museum event officially sold-out
on December 14 for the second year in a row at the Annual
Santa at Maywood Station Museum event. The annual ornament
continues to be a strong year-end fundraiser for the
museum.
Year 2013 also brought several new additions and donations to
the museum including many new photographs to the collection.
(Continued
on page 14)
13
׉	 7cassandra://FB3NucVybx0txVJVCKUFecK9VuBqUZgpbcTkP_sRwEs)` [V9䰍W)s׉EAside from the upcoming Museum Open Houses and events
schedule for 2014, membership will be working on several
maintenance and preservation items as well as commencing
on a large, new, restoration project of an original New York,
Susquehanna & Western Railroad semaphore signal. The
semaphore pole and base was moved to the station in the
summer of 2013. The goal is to restore the semaphore to
operating condition sometime in 2014.
If you haven’t visited our museum in the past, we invite you
to come to an open house or event in 2014 and experience
our museum for the first time. If you’ve visited in the past,
make plans to visit us again and see our new displays,
exhibits and events.
- Ed Kaminski
Available Now!! - Maywood & NYS&W in
New Jersey Books!
The Maywood Station Museum Store now has available two
books written by historian, author and Maywood Station
Historical Committee President, Edward S. Kaminski and
published by Arcadia Publishing Company. Maywood - The
Borough, The Railroad, and The Station traces
Maywood's history from a farming community through its
population and industrial growth brought on in part by the
coming of the New Jersey Midland Railway in 1872.
Separate chapters include The Borough of Maywood; The
New York, Susquehanna & Western Railroad in Maywood;
and Maywood Station including its role in the development
of Maywood and its recent restoration and museum. New
York, Susquehanna & Western Railroad in New Jersey,
traces the history of the railroad from the late 19th century
through the 20th century and covers the complete route of
all its mainline track and branches in New Jersey. Each
128-page book contains over 200 quality images with
detailed captions and are available for $22.00 each at
Maywood Station on Museum Open House dates or by mail
order through our website at www.maywoodstation.com.
All proceeds will go toward further preservation and
maintenance of the historic Maywood Station Museum.
Society Train Show at Mother Seton High School in Clark, NJ
on Sunday, March 2. MSHC Members Rob Pisani, Kevin
Quinn, David Percival, Wendy Cummings, Tim Moses and
Vince Molodowec were on hand representing the Maywood
Station Museum at the table…….Pat Reynolds and his wife
Barbara vacationed in Utah during mid-March. Pat also ran in
a marathon while he was there…..Original MSHC member
Doug Earls has taken a new job in Texas and has relocated
there……The Easter Bunny visits the Maywood Station Museum
on Saturday, April 12 from 10am to Noon. This event was
very well received last year and we look forward to hosting
this year’s event once again.
Maywood Station Museum Store
The Maywood Station Museum has available numerous merchandise
items in the Museum Store on Open House dates or
they can be ordered online on our website at
www.maywoodstation.com. These items include the awardwinning
DVD documentary The Maywood Station Story;
Maywood – The Borough, The Railroad, and The Station and
New York, Susquehanna & Western Railroad in New Jersey
books; Atlas Model Railroad Company HO and N-scale
models of the actual Maywood Station™; Maywood Station
Museum Holiday Ornaments and Pens; Maywood Station
Museum T-shirts, Polo Shirts, Windshirts and Caps; NYS&W
Railway Caps; NYS&W Railway Miniature Clocks; NYS&W
Railway Calendars; NYS&W Railway Lithographs and Postcards;
NYS&WT&HS Calendars; Engineer Hats; Children's
Train Whistles; Children's Pull Toy Trains; and Atlas Model
Railroad Company Train Sets. All proceeds help support the
preservation and maintenance of the historic Maywood Station
Museum
MSHC Membership News
Ed Kaminski’s photo of an NYS&W train blasting through
a snow bank at the Maywood Avenue grade crossing in
fron to the Maywood Station Museum appeared in the Jan.
5 Sunday edition of The Record Newspaper……A Red
Carpet reception was held on Feb. 8 for Kevin Quinn to
commemorate his appearance on the Extreme Collectors
television show……Keith Smollin married his fiancé
Bonnie on March 15 in Scranton, PA. Congrats to both!
…….Work will start again once the weather warms in the
spring where it was left off in the fall on the restoration of
the semaphore pole……The Maywood Station Museum
once again hosted a sales and information table at the annual
Jersey Central Chapter National Railway Historical
14
׉	 7cassandra://nD4jZ_rvi56VslislySV3kAIs6_7XborxpWFTr4qM_M+` [V9䰍W)t[V9䰍W)s(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://nO_5eX4JDM_0_A2kiGGIR0nc3toWFk20091oO2ApH0k e`׉	 7cassandra://AcnAo-FBW6NxaWaqiLRRt7CTeT0UmtHUv4rEciDowys͕%`s׉	 7cassandra://zQTYSLv9un7sufX3Fp4nMffAc_ZWaVhK4hUSi1sat7U(` ׉	 7cassandra://WUB-gtzBHtv-dVkCNhbXD-x72DR2xRcjUvxwTAeq6Ngͻ(͠][V9䰍W)ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://1sLznxrcZqRbmB406iHwkOLki32HibXq7TTwEmn1ykA `׉	 7cassandra://rOT8ErZnQ7oumFKkuhzB49FKnX4qg248pzCAxdws4pǵ`s׉	 7cassandra://XUZFqHHzUjDobl1F0hfoyjLqc2yJTIFToYyihZbCxQw%` ׉	 7cassandra://GfsmV-s9J9ZU-TQFezyI7gedNHr2zvr9yIiG8Q1HF7Q ͠][V9䰍W)נ[V9䰍W) ̈9ׁHmailto:blet601@gmail.comׁׁЈ׉Egoes as far west as Midland Park NJ on occasion, also is a good
money maker for the railroad with the customers they serve. As
for the remaining crews, the WS-1 and WS-2 remain focused
on the CSX Intermodal yard, and the WS-3 being the afternoon
assignment that assembles the SU-99 prior to its departure,
then drills cars in the intermodal yard with a couple of non
intermodal customers they usually serve. But in any case, while
there hasn’t been any major news, the railroad has quietly and
smoothly continued to serve its many customers safely and
without incidents.
As for other items in this department, the railroad has comMARCH
2014
Ok folks, its been a while, but here we go again with
another look at the recent activities of our favorite railroad. I
must confess that this time the column will likely be smaller
owing in part to a general lack of news, but as the saying
goes, the one constant in railroading is change, there is still
some news here and there to report on. So here we go….
OPERATIONS
Operations over the past several months have been somewhat
uneventful, but if nothing else they’ve been steady. Car
loadings are either growing or holding their own, and the
revenue side of things looks good. There have been several
capital improvement projects both completed and ongoing,
with some additional projects planned for the future. Unlike
the last column which had a significant amount of northern
division news, this time the bulk (such that it is) of news is
from the southern Division.
The past several months have marked a winter that was
actually a REAL winter in the northeast, both in terms of
snowfall and temperatures, and this resulted in the railroad
running several plow extras, and in once instance running
three separate plows on the same day: one on the northern
division, one on the Southern Tier and one on the southern
division. But I’ll get back to this in a bit.
Traffic has seen an overall increase on the southern division.
As an example, the railroad has the WS-5 crew, on duty
(as of press time) at 6 pm, which works east of Little Ferry to
North Bergen and Jersey City to the Marion interchange with
NS. This assignment has seen a steady increase in traffic and
it is now normal to come back to the yard with 30 + cars on a
regular basis, and the crew run out of time before completing
their work. The result has been having a second crew finish
up any leftover work the following day, thus supplementing
the WS-5. The WS-6, the Sparta Turn has also seen traffic
increase, with Sparta Jct seeing a crew there nightly and most
times for several hours. A lot of times the cars for Sparta will
be dropped by the SU-100 or even the 99 since the road
trains
have more
available
horsepower.
The other job that has seen an increase of activity is the
WS-4, the “PC Job” as the bulk of its work is centered
around Passaic Jct yard in Saddle Brook NJ. This job, which
14
pleted several capital improvement projects recently. Most notably
was the installation of ties, ballast, and re-decking of a
few bridges on the Southern Division between Butler (MP 38)
and Sparta (MP 64). This was completed in part with funding
of s state DOT grant, which I mentioned in a previous column.
As part of this grant, several grade crossing improvement projects
were undertaken, most notably the Mt Vernon St crossing
in Ridgefield Park NJ. This crossing sees a significant amount
of heavy truck traffic and because of that, was in major need of
repair. The work involved the installation of new rail, ties and
ballast, along with a new concrete crossing. This took several
days to complete, but when completed, was a much welcomed
improvement for all involved. CSX, which parallels the
NYS&W here, is planning for an upgrade/replacement of its
crossing at Mt Vernon St later this year and as of press time,
ballast has been dumped trackside, along with ties and crossing
timbers. No timetable has been set for installation as of now
(late March).
Next, we have the winter that wouldn’t quit…… This past winter
was one that a lot of people would like to forget. As of late
March when I type this, we are into Spring by a few days, but
you would never know it owing to the continued bouts of cold
snaps with temps hovering around or struggling to get above
freezing when we should be around the 50 degree mark here in
northeastern NJ. That said, this winter did have the bonus of a
lot of snow and thus increasing photographic opportunities for
several people, myself included. The peak seemed to be here in
NJ when on Valentine’s Day, Feb 14, the railroad operated
THREE separate snow plow extra trains. One ran on the Northern
Division, which normally sees several of these movements
each winter, owing to the lake effect snows up in that
region. A second ran over parts of the CNYK, the Southern
Tier Line east of Binghamton towards Port Jervis NY, though
the plow extra didn’t go that far. The third train ran over the
Southern Division from Ridgefield Park NJ to Warwick NY
and return, which I happened to catch and will thus report on as
follows.
It was no secret the railroad planned a plow run for Friday,
February 14, and as such several people in addition to myself
gathered at Ridgefield park to await the departure of the train.
The plow, # 91, had been moved to the service track in anticipation
of an impending storm that did indeed drop a significant
snowfall (on top of several inches already on the ground). The
weather was sunny and bitterly cold, but that didn’t dampen
spirits. Hope for a yellow jacket on the train were dashed when
the NS 5294, a GP38-2 was used instead. It was shortly after 9
am when the 91, pushed by the 5294(facing east) began its trek
westward. While the morning sunlight proved a bit tricky,
several people were out for the chase and the sun and clouds
did their dance for a good portion of the afternoon. A light
delay owing to a vehicle stuck on the tracks just west of Butler
slowing things down minimally, but the run went without
incident otherwise. It should be noted however, for those of us
׉	 7cassandra://zQTYSLv9un7sufX3Fp4nMffAc_ZWaVhK4hUSi1sat7U(` [V9䰍W)u׉E.Snow plow extra on the Ramapo River Bridge, Oakland, NJ Feb 14, 2014 Ralph Bonnano
in our warm vehicles chasing the train, there was NO heat in
the cab of the snow plow, making a long day seem longer for
the crew and track dept. personnel no doubt. But the weather
cooperated (even if the sun in the sky seemed to be there just
for decoration), and the plow train was a nice diversion in a
pretty cold and long winter season. Kudos to the crew of Jason
Emery and Todd Hryn (who endured the lack of heat in the
plow’s cab) along with the track dept. employees.
MOTIVE POWER UPDATE
Things have been kind of quiet in this area this time
around. One item of interest was that in late March, it was announced
that the threeGP20’s (#s 2062, 2064, 2066), long in
the4 dead line in Binghamton NY, have been sold for scrap to a
local dealer, Ben Weitzman and Sons. The fluids were drained,
the the scrapping was expected to take place in the Liberty
Street yard in Binghamton, NY. This leaves the three SD70Ms
and 2 SD45’s on the deadline, with their fates unknown at the
present time.
As for the rest of the roster, the SD60’s have been performing
their duties largely without incident, as have the tunnel motors
and SD40-s. The 3022 returned to Jersey for a bit in late
March, as the 3014 and 3016, which had been mainstays on the
Southern Division, were sent north for inspections and some
mechanical work. The lone GP40, 3040 continues to soldier on
in Utica, with other power being rotated between Syracuse,
Cortland and Binghamton. The NJ based locals are being handled
by CSXT 2732, NS 5294, and NS 5291. The only time
these have left the property has been to go to their respective
owners for their periodic inspections and any mechanical repairs
that might be needed. But aside from that, its pretty much
all quiet on the power front these days.
15
RETIREMENT, NYS&W STYLE, PART DEAUX
And lastly, in what seems to be a regular feature, I would
like to note the retirement of a long time NYS&W locomotive
engineer and good friend, Mark “Sparky” Wilber, last October.
Mark, having reach the combination of 30 years of service and
60 years of age, decided it was time to “pull the pin” after a
lengthy career. It should be noted that before his time on the
NY&W, he also worked on companion Delaware Otsego Corp
railroad Fonda, Johnstown and Gloverville, an operation which
has long since passed from the scene and has been abandoned.
Mark was working the BH-1 job out of Binghamton
NY when his retirement came, and you can bet he doesn’t miss
the alarm clock going off or having to answer the phone anymore.
I’ve had the privilege of knowing Mark several years,
and I’m glad to call him a friend and fellow professional. He
was always gracious and hospitable to me when I ever was in
the area, and a great guy to talk with (and share the occasional
spaghetti dinner with in Bogota NJ when he made it to Jersey
on a few occasions). I don’t know of anyone who didn’t like
him, and I can only wish him many happy days in his retirement,
and thank him for his years of service and friendship.
Enjoy your rest, Sparky, you’ve earned it !!
Finally, as I noted, this column is a little smaller this time for
several reasons, but nevertheless its here again. With the coming
spring, there should hopefully be more news, and a trip to
the Northern Division for me is in order to renew friendships
first and foremost, and then as well to scope things out in the
news department. But keep in mind, I cant do it alone; your
contributions are always welcome, for its YOUR Reflector,
YOUR T&HS, and YOUR dues that help us to keep going and
publishing. Please email me at blet601@gmail.com with any
pertinent clippings or news items and they will most likely be
used the following Reflector. I cant do it alone; your help is
needed and always welcome. Until next time…….
׉	 7cassandra://XUZFqHHzUjDobl1F0hfoyjLqc2yJTIFToYyihZbCxQw%` [V9䰍W)v[V9䰍W)u(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://rn3K1Qi2lDYs7gc6J9HJ5H82gY9n4V-E2Hyy0stPE30 p5`׉	 7cassandra://_QIN07DlBTlluUytU1rzqd-6NMr6mgbVCmsJctAB88Iz$`s׉	 7cassandra://BOwMtj88zGazMFe2TrJZwSRXgsN-YBsnC2yVkg7y5o8)<` ׉	 7cassandra://xcwLA8v7Oq5-DeHAaxLfllbVeVpm0p5SVQuElQzXLNA <͠][V9䰍W)ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://We2pI1Lm0WpkmQrfsazERQBjVhr-Lf2qZiXI0G4XvI0 Ծ`׉	 7cassandra://B8xZBoq49YWl7y9wJ_7Pmby3mdVDi7__DkRUHXKsLD87`s׉	 7cassandra://fACuHcqmTzwPk0SrTStKtfoduh33XEFJvnmGkrgHBYo&` ׉	 7cassandra://0nIVX_JlYryHHK_AdYx-R0BMZsa1jlzh5lSA-yX4MwA }D͠][V9䰍W)׉E Top: SU-99 power on the rear of its train as the WS-3 crew drills out cripple cars. Ridgefield Park, NJ 2/28/14
Bottom: WS-2 with the 3014 passes eastbound as the SU-99, waits to depart Bogota NJ 2/5/14
׉	 7cassandra://BOwMtj88zGazMFe2TrJZwSRXgsN-YBsnC2yVkg7y5o8)<` [V9䰍W)w׉E Top: Westbound SU 99 at Edison Road, Oakland NJ Feb 3, 2014.
Bottom: WS-X plow extra westbound at Goffle Road crossing, Midland Park NJ 2/14/14
׉	 7cassandra://fACuHcqmTzwPk0SrTStKtfoduh33XEFJvnmGkrgHBYo&` [V9䰍W)x[V9䰍W)w(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://2U8XxnUaLuPt_7wZbhjG9BxfN4gyo4TSQIi5vtBwVMg {`׉	 7cassandra://6o2oywwAR2pbOsLiEftdQXdNnUYvjlHeApHov2aBTcw͚`s׉	 7cassandra://Ie4Eq39nwnG6gFWYD9bcUBwmPlXuuhr0OGnDYsSdC7g,'` ׉	 7cassandra://0N0bo8JBv4bibsIIZ_80wtwc787x1DDItEjsah0Ycx4 $͠][V9䰍W)ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://_iPMfFMl-LVcQD8wnKUCDX_sjEymbeq9lk0JWLWmbaQ `׉	 7cassandra://N9VEV180FdxIXRyLTP9sTP13iTxowiQ3rct0lsYLTZ0w`s׉	 7cassandra://P-y8b7QKjwdlyLMWDO-vbRrXRtQZPA9JdIc_XNLWDnI&W` ׉	 7cassandra://wCKKtGcCzfemNoWap9qiZ2lnRKhMZIOTUpNT9YWrgpk s͠][V9䰍W)נ[V9䰍W) BF̲9׉Hmailto:Mechanical@nyswths.orgGׁׁrנ[V9䰍W) =H̮9ׁHmailto:Mechanical@nyswths.orgׁׁЈ׉Ewise, to try it. We then took on the task of running trips ourselves
to raise money for the RDC. Once it was ready, we
ran trips on several rare mileage lines with the Budd. We
used the RDC in Morristown, Chester, Dover, Scranton and
Syracuse as well as on the NYS&W. It would appear in a
Heineken TV commercial and a low budget film patterned
after the Long Island massacre. When we realized a one car
train limited our resources, we obtained the M-2 and M-4 but
lost our shop in Newfoundland to work on them. For a time,
we had a replacement shop in Butler, but those Budds never
got into it.
Soon after, the Susquehanna Railway entered the
SILVER EDITION
When I think about it, it’s been an amazing journey.
November 2013 marked this Society’s 25th anniversary. May
2014 marks the tenth anniversary of the Delaware River Railroad
Excursions. I joined the Society about a half year after its
inception so I’ve been there pretty much all the way and it’s
staggering the steps we took. When you watch the movie, The
Station Agent, it opens with a scene of railfans sitting around a
projector watching pictures of trains. It
is a familiar scene. It is where we started.
We had four meetings a year, but
would later make it bi-monthly. We’ve
held those meetings in five different
venues, the current one being Maywood
library where the meetings continue.
As one of our objectives was
to support the formation of a badly
needed transportation museum in New
Jersey, in 1989, we were assigned the
M-1, an original Susquehanna Budd
RDC and thus was born our Mechanical
Department. It was quickly given an
exterior paint job, which consisted of
removing any paint on the car and placing
a maroon letterboard stripe with
silver SUSQUEHANNA upon it. It was
then displayed in the Hoboken Train
Festival and that’s when and where I
joined the Society.
It wasn’t until the following
year we had a place to do further work,
the former Morris County Central enginehouse
in Newfoundland. Newfoundland
station was the central site of
The Station Agent and one other film
used the locale during the period it was
owned by one of our members. It would
not be our last involvement in films.
We went to work on the RDC in July of
1990 and in September, 1992 we rolled
it out for its shakedown run. It returned
to Hoboken for the Rail Festival, which
was then in the autumn, and those who
remembered it from its 1989 appearance
were stunned at its “new” look.
Our Operating Department
tourist market in New Jersey when they acquired Mikado
142 from the Valley Railroad. In the process, it would be
used in the film Cider House Rules. We naturally took to
assisting the railway in running their program. Eventually we
were leasing the engine and coaches to run trips on New Jersey
Transit Boonton and Raritan Valley lines.
Then came the day we could no longer run on the
Susquehanna. Rather than be depressed about it, we looked
for a new home to run 142 permanently. This was not an
easy task. As it turned out, the still unfounded museum was
to be placed in Phillipsburg. With no progress being made,
the town asked the Black River Railroad, owners of the Belvidere
& Delaware Railway, if they could start an operation
there. They intended to run a Brill motorcar. That is when we
asked the Black River where we could
run and next you know, we started
running there May 1st, 2004.
We had bought the engine from
Steam locomotive #142 poses with Tobey Maguire
on the cover of “The Cider House Rules”. Our
locomotive was in several scenes in the movie
as well.
started with our staffing of the New Jersey Transit Ski Trains in
1990. It was an unsuccessful attempt to demonstrate rail service
to the Vernon ski area. They picked a poor year, weather18
the
railway but we also needed cars. It
was not the first piece of rolling stock
we obtained. During the work on M-1
we got the Plymouth 18 ton engine to
make shop moves. We would add
another engine to our roster when we
put S-2, 206 on display at Maywood
Station. We leased cars from the
NYS&W and the Adirondack Railroad
but we needed our own equipment.
When an opportunity came up to acquire
ten Budd SPVs, we took them.
Moving them turned out to be a logistical
nightmare and in the end they
were scrapped. We purchased 5
World’s Fair series Long Island cars
from Cape Cod. But before we could
do much with them, we then got an
opportunity to purchase 9 bi-level gallery
cars from Chicago Metra. We
sold two and swapped four for the
NYS&W Long Island coaches. Four
of the newer L.I. cars eventually
would be scrapped as well. The Long
Island had a habit of pouring tons of
salt on the stairwells in winter, which
left them in rough shape. We also acquired
a baggage car for head end
power for the bi-levels.
When we started on the Bel-Del, it
was with 3-1/2 miles of track running
hourly on weekends while the Brill ran
Thursdays and Fridays in summer for
two years. During that time, we supplied
a crew for a freight train used in another film, The Mercy
Man. It was an independent film that was apparently released
in 2009, but probably only in the Los Angeles area.
׉	 7cassandra://Ie4Eq39nwnG6gFWYD9bcUBwmPlXuuhr0OGnDYsSdC7g,'` [V9䰍W)y׉E	We gained a bit more mileage each
even year since, now up to 7-1/2
miles, but the plan was always to
reach Riegelsville, 1.2 mile yet to go.
But as we gained mileage, we also
got more inventive. With the 2005
release of The Polar Express, our
Christmas trains made a rather radical
change starting in 2006 when we
were licensed by Warner Brothers to
run trains themed to the movie. In
2013, we put tickets on sale August
1st and sold out 28 trips August 2nd.
In 2010, another movie, Becoming
Santa, was partially filmed on the
Polar Express. In 2011, a James
Franco film, Black Dog, Red Dog
was filmed on the railroad with many
of our members as extras. We are
still waiting for release of that film.
We now also have Thomas the Tank
Engine and the Dinosaur Train
themes while our traditional Easter
trips and pumpkin trains in October
continue to thrive. All told, we now
attract over 150,000 riders a year
making us the biggest tourist
attraction in Warren County. Sorry
Hot Dog Johnny’s.
Now remember, I cover
Mechanical and Operational departments
in this column. I haven’t
touched upon 25 years of the Reflector,
our calendar, Maywood Station
and more of the diversity of our Society.
Yes, we’ve come a long way. It
has come to the point that nothing
seems out of reach and I won’t make
limits when I speculate on what the
next 25 years hold. It’s done with the
dedication of our members and the
desire to be more than just another
railfan group. And it’s just plain fun!
My inbox is always open. Email
Mechanical@nyswths.org for instructions
on how to help us write the history
of the next quarter century.
Right two photos:
Over the winter work was done on
the LIRR passenger cars. Many of
the seats were loose and had to be
re-bolted to the floor. Almost every
seat and most of the tiles had to be
removed and re-attached. Many of
the seats were re-upholstered as
well. As our cars age, they need
more work. Its easy and fun work
that anyone can do, regardless of
their mechanical skills. We are
looking to put together a permanent
“car shop” of members who want to
work on the equipment. Come give
a hand!
19
Our newest addition! This is a mulching brush cutter with a reach of 31 feet from center of
track. We will now be able to assure our train and our passengers are not damaged by tree
branches!
׉	 7cassandra://P-y8b7QKjwdlyLMWDO-vbRrXRtQZPA9JdIc_XNLWDnI&W` [V9䰍W)z[V9䰍W)y(בCט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://FgJ0C6drU8ldS709rak-k4_jh7ad-9TV64LwgpWegdg `׉	 7cassandra://sITvPVMRfNjGj2SkmaCSOqUjYcUl9DQzzKnKFdZO2wY͕#`s׉	 7cassandra://3J4zXlM8_CZqvzlXzBoo2TfvspcNoSeXoSF1kBFhmx80C` ׉	 7cassandra://rvJ9lDfAdh61vrwCXP0zgfCBQMOYLw2w6aKxDSAbQA0 ] ͠][Wd䰍W*׈E[Wd䰍W*׉E׉	 7cassandra://3J4zXlM8_CZqvzlXzBoo2TfvspcNoSeXoSF1kBFhmx80C` [Wd䰍W*[Wd䰍W*(,Reflector 15 4[V9w{aE