׉?ׁB!בCט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://w0THuRjktdLEGGu6cNyN-p7LSq4k7ESUxxc8cqnLe74 O`׉	 7cassandra://ET1aKe0vOt4mML8m3C3s1k1jEjfZadgGXIVKHbMrIcQ͔`s׉	 7cassandra://dLyJpr8rUrSf35TM198rGWBFA1-xxKsCzS1SBT4Kbdc2` ׉	 7cassandra://bpksstJNoLT5ii32m6RRI9WG3i6w6pDzIGrNzOJhhPQ  ͠][Wf䰍W*ט   (u׈         ׈E[Wf䰍W*׉E׉	 7cassandra://dLyJpr8rUrSf35TM198rGWBFA1-xxKsCzS1SBT4Kbdc2` [Wf䰍W*[Wf䰍W*(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://7xPNC77wFFTLo3vKT7N9ZTQM5UarCEO88wDw6pjLly8 `׉	 7cassandra://xZYpLhhV72kpdiHx8tRhoAURvBu2YloRVC2b9yckG-s}@`s׉	 7cassandra://PM1QZtbfhj-dp2YdIDF7oOl7nJ1klmE1G26IuO2UFJw(` ׉	 7cassandra://EFzqheg3EOM_O191ME89TDyipwkjBzyriqzUQGwhG40 (͠][V:0䰍W)ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://P-o9MaPVH1m1drl3UIdDQy-7K6TTylSXijeBCkJWv7Y S`׉	 7cassandra://ZG5k62VW5hp_FYU1oH3E691Ch3nnXNh0Bx7THhuavBk͆`s׉	 7cassandra://QoMgJ3PRF8gRxRj6Ts2bFX1OY0I-P6WUg-N7EH-1v7o'3` ׉	 7cassandra://GH-Km48zKMjGBHxxZ3cjkdzZigCXxCROi0VsuRiO_nM 	͠][V:0䰍W)׉E}Feature Articles
3
Departments
2
6
Spanning The Gap
President’s Message
John Stocker
Lights, Camera….
Martin DenBleyker
10 Bel-Del News
12 Maywood Station Historical
Committee
Ed Kaminski
Hi all,
Well it’s 2015 and I’m sitting here writing this while it’s
snowing outside. As I sit here, my mind wanders off to a
warm summers day and the smell of coal smoke mixed with
steam, and the soft panting of 142 sitting on the main ready
to take the next train south. Hurry up summer!
We have some new and exciting things in the works that
will happen this year. That along with the “normal”
excursions we run, will make for a interesting year. Now is
the time to come out and help us get ready for the new
season.
2015 is when the film “Figs For Italo” is scheduled to
release and our 142 and coaches are the train in the movie.
Last year marked the first time we ran a Polar train on a
Friday. This was necessary because of demand for tickets. A
special thanks goes out to all who worked to make our Polar
and the whole year the success it was.
As always there are a ton 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 2015.
Working on the coaches
Getting the M1 ready for service.
Getting the 501 ready for service.
Brush cutting along the ROW.
Work in the Station Area.
Looking to extend our tracks further South.
Come on out to help make 2015 a great year for our
Society!
As always, my “door” is always open to you, our members.
President,
John Stocker
2
13
18
From The Current Time Table
Ralph Bonanno
Shop Talk
Martin Den Bleyker
Covers
Front: NYSW #142 at Bairds Farm during one of our Fall
Foliage trips, many years ago
Rear Top: NYSW 3010 on the SU-100 in Ridgefield
Park on 12-10-10
Photo: Ed Kaminski
Rear Bottom: The SU-99 in Rochelle Park at Saddle
River Road on 2-16-15.
Photo: Kevin Quinn
׉	 7cassandra://PM1QZtbfhj-dp2YdIDF7oOl7nJ1klmE1G26IuO2UFJw(` [V:/䰍W)׉E	Spanning The Gap
In
1870 the New Jersey Midland Railway was organized,
connecting with the Sussex Mine Railroad
and with various trade centers in Sussex and Warren
counties. The rail line gained access to the Hudson River,
and a year later was running from Weehawken NJ through
the Paulins Kill Valley to Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, by
way of the New Jersey side of the Water Gap. Soon it was
renamed the New York, Susquehanna & Western Railroad.
Unlike more powerful rail lines, which crossed the Delaware
downstream near Portland PA, the NYS&W crossed
the Delaware here, at LaBar Island just north of the Gap, on
a truss bridge built around 1882. In doing so, it offered small
communities along the New Jersey side of the river, such as
Columbia and Dunnfield, a chance to participate in the
growing tourist trade centered in the more-famous Pennsylvania
village of Delaware Water Gap. NYS&W "mixed"
trains carried both passengers and freight, and small flag
stops provided boat service to riverbank hotels. Some stations
were typical of period railroad architecture; others now
seem more like local sheds pressed into service for passengers.
3
The
NYS&W bridge to Pennsylvania may have had some
problems—trains crossing it were limited to 10 m.p.h. —
but it was on the job until 1940, when the financially
strapped railroad abandoned the bridge and discontinued
service to Stroudsburg. Soon after, the truss structure was
removed. The stone piers remain today as reminders of an
era of trade and tourism that has passed. Karamac Trail
bears the name of a river resort that was built here around
1880, and named Karamac in 1920. In the 1800’s there
were a string of small communities along the New Jersey
side of the Water Gap, served by the New York, Susquehanna
& Western line across New Jersey, which crossed
the
Delaware here beginning in 1881. Some villages,
like the slate "company town" of Browning, had sprung up
for industry. Other enterprises grew with the tourist trade
spreading from the town of Delaware Water Gap PA. Still
other place names had already come and gone. Fairview
House, a hotel built here in 1880, was in an area once
known as Brotzmanville. It overlooked the NYS&W rail
bridge, whose stone piers remain today.
Fairview House offered ferry service across the river from
Pennsylvania for guests arriving on rail lines that crossed
the Delaware further downstream. In 1920, under new
(Continued on page 4)
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owners, the facility was renamed Camp Karamac, and Fairview
House became Karamac Hotel. In 1924, the hotel
accommodated 100 visitors at $15.00 per week each, and a
round trip ticket from New York City on the NYS&W cost
$3.59. The rail line discontinued service to Pennsylvania in
1940, however, and today this one mile stretch of the
abandoned NYS&W rail bed forms Karamac Trail.
M
uch of this article came from member Harold Fredericks
. During our membership meeting in November,
Harold entertained us with his "Surprises of
a 1924 Vacation". When in your lifetime have you ever had a
chance to hear a centenarian tell about the NY Susquehanna
and Western Railroad in 1924? It was great! Harold Fredericks,
a NYSWTHS lifetime member turned 101 this summer.
In fact, during the show, which he recited from memory, he
hesitated for a minute and proclaimed,” I am sorry, I am not
as sharp as I was at 100!” Harold’s talk was about a young
man who went on a train trip from New York City to the
Karamac Inn by the Delaware Water Gap. Sadly the inn is
no more and the tracks are abandoned. But gladly the railroad
beds were turned into rail-trails used by hikers, bikers and
equestrians. Harold Fredericks was born on August 19th in
Oak Ridge, NJ. His father was the railroad station agent in
Oak Ridge and his mother was the postmistress. When he
turned 5, he walked ½ mile to his one room grammar school.
When he was older, he rode a bus for 10 miles each way to
attend Butler High School. After graduating from college in
1937, he pursued a career as an engineer for a conduit manufacturing
plant in Orangeburg, NY. Married in 1940, Harold
and his wife Alice raised and educated two children as well as
built their own house in Pearl River, NY. Having grown up in
Oak Ridge when his father was the station agent for the NY
Susquehanna & Western RR, Harold developed a love of railroads
and came to know their history well. The picture at the
right was taken during the meeting with Harold Seated in the
center.
Left to right, Gus Aversa, Harold Fredericks, Chris Cotty.
In the rear, Martin DenBleyker, Nick Zisa, Les Coleman and
Victor Zolinsky.
4
With the coming of the railroad to “The Gap” the tourism industry
flourished and some amazing resorts were built. Above is a post
card from the Kittatinny Hotel in Delaware Water Gap, Pa.
׉	 7cassandra://ugfzJfyHXcNme4FMhkCVU9VbiuYelA61lx9ypxN4jc8%` [V:/䰍W)׉E A train crosses the NYS&W truss bridge at
Karamac in 1931.
Howeys, a summer flag stop, in 1931
A “mixed” train crosses the ColumbiaDunnfield
Road in 1931.
The Karamac Hotel.
Dunnfield Station in 1910.
Camp Karamac in 1967.
5
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from within the other car across the actors playing the part
of the disenchanted customers of domestic swill, envious of
the party in the passing next car. When the director asked
what we call the M-1, we said it was a Budd Car. “Please,”
he asked, “could you call it anything else?”
One of two college level films was also done about
the same time. I’m afraid I have little
information
about either of them. This one, also done in Whippany and
using several of our people as extras, was a story suggested
by the Long Island Railroad massacre. This particular project
left M-1 in horrible shape. It took months to clean the
A
“Hollywood blood” out of the car and, in fact, we were still
finding some when the floor was torn up for rebuilding a
few years ago.
Newfoundland Station (owned at that time by
member Bill Jentz) became the backdrop for two films,
nd many times, we
provided
the
action. I was
originally going to mention our
latest entry into the media in Shop
Talk, but decided this topic was
starting to amass some serious
content; enough to cover it
separately. Over the years, our
Society has been part of numerous
film shoots for various levels of
entertainment, large and small.
While being one of the few
operators of live steam in this
country, steam has not always been
the background we provided. Still,
it seemed time to share our growing
list of screen credits.
One of the first projects
we were involved in was a Heineken
commercial. In Whippany,
the M-1 was dressed up as a
dining car that pulled up alongside the dining car of a passing
train. The fact it was self-propelled made the logistics easier.
In Becoming Santa ,the star Jack Sanderson contemplates his upcoming
day as Santa on our Polar Express train.
#142 seen in Bellows Falls Vermont during the filming of “Cider House Rules” starring Toby Maguire and Michael Caine.
6
׉	 7cassandra://_2dlzN9ff3PpaV1q_ggh4Rw2hjqTIeOennwx2CvZzbs'` [V:/䰍W)׉Estarting in 1996 with, I Love You, I
Love You Not, with Claire Danes
(Reflector Volume 6 Issue 3). Later, it
would become the focal point of the
independent movie The Station
Agent, starring David Dinklage in
2003. That movie was an off-beat
comedy filmed at many New Jersey
locations, including the PortlandDelaware
bridge near our current
steam operation, but the station was
the star location. It has since been
sold to someone not a member of our
Society. The current owners have a
website that notes it has also been
used in J. Crew advertising.
Maywood Station, after its
renovation, has been used for many
photo shoots, including ones by Vanity
Fair and for several weddings. It
is the subject of The Maywood Station
Story, narrated by Carl Quintanilla
and is the source of an HO scale model that appeared
in an episode of 30 Rock. It is also the focal point of an
Images of America series book.
After purchasing 142 from the Valley Railroad in
Star David Dinklage in the film “The Station Agent” filmed on location at the NYS&W
Newfoundland Station.
escape of a detective and a damsel-in-distress from a serial
killer. It used one of our crews to operate a Bel-Del train.
The second college level film briefly used our train
Connecticut, it appeared in the major motion picture Cider
House Rules with Tobey McGuire in 1999. Labeled
“Bangor and Aroostook” for the camera, it was the very
first scene in the film, shot in Vermont.
After moving to the Bel-Del and starting our regular
operation, another independent film was shot there. I
recall it being shot in either 2004 or 2005 but we were never
to hear from it again. If you look on the Independent
Movie Data Base (IMDB, found at imdb.com), it shows a
release of The Mercy Man in 2009. It’s as good a time to
mention that, according to a friend of mine in Los Angeles,
there are three times the films released in theaters there than
anywhere else in the country. It would explain both its absence
(here) and yet showing a release date. The scene shot
was about the convenient passing of a freight train for the
in Lehigh Junction for their work. Again, I have little information
on the details of this project and, again, we never
got to see the results.
Polar Express came out in 2004, our first year on
the Bel-Del. We were asked if we could provide 142 for
Tom Hanks to “arrive” in several major cities across the
country on a steam train to tout the film, but that would
have been a logistical nightmare and so never became a
serious inquest. Two years later, we became a licensee of
the name and it has become our most popular event, this
year selling out in just a few hours. Since then, in 2010,
Becoming Santa was filmed, listed as a comedy. The story
follows a man through Santa School, learning all the nuances
of the role. His first stop (about 20 minutes into the film)
was at our Polar Express ride, where we had him scheduled
on one of our four-trip evenings. If there was any doubt
The cast and crew of “Figs For Italo” including Society members John Stocker, Chris Cotty, Dylan Vieytes, Martin DenBleyker,
Nick Zisa, and Rich Butterworth. Not pictured here as they worked on another day of shooting, members Paul Weinberg, Don Young
and Myron Biggar.
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about the dedication of our volunteers, you need to hear his
comments after a night with us on that train.
Once again, we were approached for The Sorcerer’s
Apprentice (2010). It’s another project that went nowhere past
initial contact. They wanted a steam train for something in the
film to be shot in Hoboken. Price was no object to Disney.
Having seen the finished product, you would have no idea
where it would have fit in. It seems the original plot may have
had flashback scenes that were deleted from the final script.
After all, Nicholas Cage’s character was 1,000 years old.
While, granted, production plans change as a film progresses,
the finished film didn’t give any hint as to what they were
originally thinking.
Next up came Black Dog, Red Dog, another independent
film by James Franco, also starring Whoopie Goldberg
and Olivia Wilde. We didn’t get to meet any of them as
their filming was in another segment of what is an episodic
film and apparently was already completed by then. We did
get to hob-knob with Logan Marshall Greene and Chloë
Sevigny. Shot in 2012, the IMDB kept pushing the date back
having cited “in post-production” until about August, 2014.
Now marked “completed” as of this writing, it still has no
exact date for release. Again, several of our people were used
as extras. Our president, John Stocker played the conductor
and got a couple of lines.
Finally, the impetus for this article is to report on the
latest effort. Another independent company is shooting a dramatic
short, Figs For Italo. It’s a family story set in World
War II Italy. While the budget is low and thus prompts our
use as an Italian railway – bigger stretches have been done –
some shooting actually occurred in Italy. The two days of
shooting in and around Lehigh Junction were the final segments
to complete the filming after which it went to postproduction.
The producers want it ready for a film festival at
the end of the year. IMDB shows it as a 2015 film.
One last note: our Society president, John Stocker,
had now appeared in three of these films, each time playing a
conductor – type casting to be sure. Besides Black Dog, Red
Dog, where he actually has lines, you might also hear him in
Becoming Santa talking with other of our members in that
unscripted documentary. In this latest film, he just got to run
a lot as the scene involves an Allied bombing of the train.
Fortunately, that scene is easily embellished with modernday
special effects and we had no mess to clean up.
We are well of aware the reason why there are so
few people in this country running steam locomotives. They
are expensive to maintain and to run, they require specialized
talents to do either and they have special needs, like a pile of
coal to burn. We pride ourselves on the fact we continue to
carry that torch. While our engine is a 1930’s design and our
cars are from the 50’s and 60’s, which tends to limit us in
what we can reasonably give the appearance of, I expect there
will still be more opportunities in the future to strut our stuff
for the camera.
During filming of “The Mercy Man” Guenia Lemos rehearses
a stunt on the back of our caboose, under the watchful eye of
cinematographer Roy Kurtluyan
8
׉	 7cassandra://CSeRfhXtp35rHiar1jz5TOakCWmcd1qPtHQ3IIfmEf8*a` [V:/䰍W)׉EC“Figs for Italo” takes place in Nazi occupied Italy during the end of World War II. In the top picture the train was just stopped by Nazi
soldiers and the passengers were forced to evacuate.
In the bottom picture you can see how the interior of the train was decorated with authentic World War II Italian propaganda.
9
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+++
+++++++
It
+++
+++
+++
’s been a busy winter working on our
equipment. Each year we have to work
much of the winter just to get ready for
the coming season. The thousands of people we
carry each year, really put a toll on our historic
equipment. This year we are rebuilding the
interiors of two of our coaches. This entails
removing all the seats and seat frames, removing
the tile and fixing all rotten areas of the wooden
sub floor. Once the new flooring is installed, the
whole process is reversed! The Winery Train
car has been spruced up with carpeting, while the
530 has a new rubber floor which is specially
made for transit applications. Each year the
steam locomotive gets an extensive amount of
work performed on her by our shop crew. This
year we will be doing work on the boiler,
rebuilding the air compressor and reverser as
well as rewiring the electrical system.
Here are some pictures of the work.
Left to right, top to bottom:
1. Noah Conrad ripping the rotten floor up in the
530, preparing for a new floor. 2. The 531 after
being completely refurbished. This is the Wine
Train car and now is carpeted! 3. Keegan Forke
prepares the outside of the firebox. 4. CMO Gary
Matthews inspects the stay bolts INSIDE of the
boiler! 5. Steve James works on rewiring the cab
of #142. 6. the whole crew busy stripping the
floor in the 531.
7. Kurt Christenson preparing the exterior of the
firebox. 8. Keith Cadigan busy heat treating
pins. 9. Chad Hubler cleaning the scale off the
front end, inside the smoke box. 10. Don Young
and Don Gardner working of the water glass
valves. 11. the new rubber flooring in the 530.
12. Dylan Vieyles and Wayne Nilsen removing
paint from the Plymouth #18’s door. 12. CMO
Matthews takes ultrasonic thickness tests while
Mat Horning records the results (inside the
firebox).
׉	 7cassandra://LtmBuststZxrW2JECq_C4dsoxmiq_B6wf8I_aTGxcnk,Z` [V:/䰍W)׉E׉	 7cassandra://jRscFcBFhW_jOBk1QK-hzMj1Agr2w0pGWqntIBIpHpw,` [V:/䰍W)[V:/䰍W)(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://DwczRDEv2Yp53PsJUcE1ri9cWlNzkRTVTveP8MPA4g4 @`׉	 7cassandra://4tPW22EyBZ5mwvj5JGK3JnETQj3lWveiuqaKe9gB9ss͈`s׉	 7cassandra://dszqbLDU4D7zvHZXCWiYgUf7TP6bydV2risoGflkqS8)` ׉	 7cassandra://px2QuqJ5RhGRD3XC2zsnZgNPtrYH3mtLPxIWEOhNHSo ͠][V:2䰍W)ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://TfexiJX9sEuZHBwLgwe8WsxWoTBOwsoDkoP5SnJmulk N`׉	 7cassandra://44xe0q7Ut6kTc-1TXtpeHrhM-Cj2BV9RpJyU5MVGAAI͖`s׉	 7cassandra://PExaWulM7rsEJsafW7HRDQ7dJgcOXZ0OT5G1xfkbsjM,` ׉	 7cassandra://Y6vgbCWOfnFzS6k12ArteJWA_2Dv8Bw_cV9CL1DezLI +͠][V:2䰍W)׉E
MSHC Membership News
By Ed Kaminski
Santa Visited the
Maywood Station
Museum on Saturday,
December 13,
2014
Santa made a special
visit to the Maywood
Station Museum for the
13th Annual Santa at
Maywood Station event
on December 13, 2014.
A festive crowd of
young ones waited for
the jolly red elf’s arrival
and the opportunity to
visit with him. Santa
met with each good little
boy and girl and every
child received a bag of
treats courtesy of Myron Corporation; Operation Lifesaver; TD
Bank; Children Are Creative; Atlas Model Railroad Company;
the New York, Susquehanna & Western Railway; and the Maywood
Station Museum. Each child attending also was given a
free chance to win special raffle prizes including a BMW Junior
Bike Tricycle courtesy of Park Ave BMW, which was won
by Wes Crawford and an HO-Scale Train Set courtesy of Atlas
Model Railroad Co., which was won by Alexandria Vega.
The Maywood Station Museum thanks Tom Richards for his
“special” help and thanks to Bob and Donna Funk of Moon
Doggie Coffee Roasters & Café who provided refreshments
during the event. The MSHC once again look forward to hosting
next year’s Annual Santa at the Maywood Station Museum
event!
Doug Earls, Tim Moses and Tom Callan recently donated two
concrete railroad milepost markers to the collection and they
have been installed by members on the museum grounds……
John Brown vacationed in Providence Town, MA in September……The
Northeast Regional Scout Museum in Rochelle
Park, NJ held its grand opening on Sunday, October 2. MSHC
member Ed Quinn began work to build this museum in 1999
and serves as its Chairman….. Rob Pisani visited China on
business in early October…..Gus Aversa performed in the
Maywood and Music theatre group’s rendition of Spamalot at
Our Lady Queen of Peace Church in Maywood on November
15……Work on restoring the original NYS&W semaphore
pole has been suspended until the warmer weather next spring.
The pole and circuit box have been sanded, primed and received
a new coat of paint in advance of winter……The Maywood
Station Museum continues to be a popular location for
photo shoots this past fall with several being conducted
through permission granted by the museum…….Sales of the
H.O. scale model of Maywood Station Museum’s NYS&W S2
#206 continue to be brisk……The Maywood Station Museum
Annual Holiday Party was held at Gencarelli’s in Lyndhurst,
NJ on December 18…….The MSHC welcomes aboard
new members Bob and Donna Funk……
Santa made his annual visit to the Maywood Station Museum on
December 13, 2014. (All photos by Ed Kaminski)
12
Another wedding photo shoot was recently arranged at the Maywood
Station Museum on September 21, 2014. Sean and Leash
O’Connell strike a pose with their wedding party aboard Caboose
׉	 7cassandra://dszqbLDU4D7zvHZXCWiYgUf7TP6bydV2risoGflkqS8)` [V:/䰍W)׉EWestbound SU 99 at Maywood, NJ Sept 2014.
MARCH 2015
Ok kids, here we go again. Time for another update on the
goings on around the railroad. This time there is a plethora of
news to report on, current to when this was typed out. So sit
back, relax, while I attempt to disseminate the activities of
the past few months.
OPERATIONS
In the first area of news, there is plenty to report on. The
past several months have seen the NYS&W called up on
numerous times this summer to provide crews for CSX
detour trains. There were several reasons for the detours,
including track work on the increasingly busy River Line
south from Selkirk, NY, as well as track work on the
Selkirk-Buffalo Chicago main line. The track work was compounded
by the increasing amount of crude oil traffic to and
from Philadelphia via Selkirk and Buffalo to/from Chicago
on an already busy artery of traffic. So while I can’t recall
each and every detour, I will summarize by noting a few of
them.
Starting back in May, the first detours started to show
when CSX needed maintenance windows to place into
service new interlocking at Stony Point and Haverstraw NY
on the River Line. As in the past, CSX chose to reroute
intermodal trains Q156 and Q004, both eastbound stack trains
that terminate in South Kearny NJ. The twist this time was
that westbound trains also detoured via the NYS&W to
Binghamton-Syracuse-CSXT. These included empty ethanol
trains K635 on May 9 and K637 on May 12. In one instance,
20 freight that would have been on the SU 99 was added to
the empty ethanol train, and as this was traffic already
blocked to go to Syracuse to CSXT, it didn’t run on the
SU-99, thus killing two birds with one stone.
The SU-99’s still ran, as did the 100’s, although there
were instances of NJ-bound traffic added to the CSX detours
for movement to NJ, again, killing two birds with one stone,
continuing a practice that has long been established with the
detours. Two other detours ran in July, both on July 18,
when a Q004 and A Q156 followed each other east. As the
Q004 was over tonnage, the NJ destined freight was added to
the Q156, along with NYS&W power which would turn on
the following day’s SU-99. Overall, it has been a busy
summer for the railroad just for the detours alone. As CSX is
installing double track at the north end of the railroad, it
would be a safe bet that when the new track is ready to be
placed in service, along with the signals and interlockings
related to the track age, there will likely be
another round of detours at that point as well.
As for other news in the operations department,
Westbound SU 99 along Route 23 Oak Ridge, NJ
September 2014.
13
traffic is up overall, and it’s pretty plain to see to
even the casual observer that there is more and
more traffic. The WS-5, the job that handles the
work east of Little Ferry to North Bergen and
Jersey City has seen its traffic grow quite a bit
since this time last year. It is not unusual for the
crew to return to Little Ferry after a nights work
with 30, 40 and sometimes more cars. This is
NOT including the traffic that they interchange
with the NS at the extreme east end of the railroad
at the three track Marion yard, just east of
Resources. There have been times when the NS
has delivered over 50 cars in one drop at Marion,
and the NYS&W has returned the favor with
moderate to heavy interchange tonnage. As for the
trackage east of Little Ferry yard, there are several
customers, all requiring daily (and sometimes
more than that) service. The track age just south
of where Amtrak crosses over the railroad, just to
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ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://iM4sUa31yNNZoXhx-xeZOi43cTjlv9CJNWFBRtSgAf8 ``׉	 7cassandra://fACWYVr2eurZBzWTjTvH0FzNB8Um2P7i-uy_vAeU55o͋`s׉	 7cassandra://Mkb1AeN9608dhIay7Wmwc5cLjiPKQ1K0UtuTxUtCM-4'y` ׉	 7cassandra://npfu9kRhpKBMC_JOXhGxiY0ICsnXa7O2DFKc5NCopNg ͠][V:3䰍W)׉E[the east of the old Erie/NYS&W Susquehanna
Transfer is undergoing expansion as new tracks
are being installed within the confines of the yard
adjacent to Resources terminal. Most of this
traffic is auto racks, although there is a fairly busy
soybean transloading facility on the premises as
well. It’s not uncommon for the crew to make
overtime, and there is the work to support it. In
fact, on occasions, one of the daylight crews,
either the WS-1 or WS-2 will venture east of the
yard to North Bergen to handle some traffic
Along these lines, the railroad receives a good
amount of interchange traffic with CSX at North
Bergen, at CP-3, adjacent to the CSX yard which
parallels the NYSW at this location. The CSX
daylight crew, symbol Y120, will almost every
day, as part of their duties deliver cars to the
railroad at either CP-3 or CP-5 in Ridgefield Park,
NJ. They will also bring back any outbound
freight to North Bergen where it will eventually
be placed on trains to Selkirk for classification. In
addition, the afternoon CSX yard crew, symbol
Y220 will also deliver/pick up freight to the
NYS&W, and it’s not unusual for BOTH crews to be on the
NYSW property doing their respective interchange work. Add
to that the normal radio chatter of WS-3, WS-4, and WS-5 and
it becomes a challenge to hear your own crew on the radio.
And as always, the SU-100 and SU-99 trains are pretty
Westbound SU 99 under cloudy skies approaching Excelsior Mills Sept 14 2014
The WS-5 as noted earlier concentrates its work between
Ridgefield Park NJ and North Bergen/Jersey City at the
extreme east end of the railroad.
And at the start of the New Year, a slight realignment of
healthy in terms of tonnage on their runs, minus what traffic
gets handed off to CSX and NS in northern NJ. If that traffic
were to be added to the NYSW trains, the road trains would
most likely be a 5-day a week operation. That hasn’t happened,
nor is it expected to happen in the foreseeable future, but given
the current traffic levels, what DOES run via the SU 99/100 is
still a pretty healthy level of traffic overall.
And speaking of the road trains, they are running, as
always, on their standard schedule, with the 100 departing
Binghamton on Sun/Tues/Thurs evenings, and then returning
as the SU 99 the following afternoon/evening. The departure
from NJ as the 99 is dependent on when the crew is rested per
the Hours Of Service rules, but if all goes well, they generally
are on duty at 4 pm out of the hotel and usually westbound
shortly after arriving from the hotel and yard office.
Before the road crew shows up, however, one of the afternoon
yard crews (usually but not always the WS-3) will bring the
power from the service tracks to the train at the west end of the
MC tracks at Cross Street in Bogota NJ and drill out any
cripple cars that cannot travel on the train for some mechanical
reason, then assemble the entire train, do the pre departure
brake test, and hand off the train to the road crew who then
departs. Sometimes they are westbound by 430 pm, sometimes
not. It depends on the work involved in assembling the train.
As for the rest of the Southern Division, along with the
WS-3, there is the WS-4, WS-5, and WS-6 all on duty between
230 pm and 5 pm. The WS-3 is the afternoon intermodal crew,
meaning that they primarily work the CSX intermodal yard,
drilling cars as needed for the following morning’s outbound
Q003, or yarding the Thursday only Q002, among other duties.
The WS-4 assembles its train, and then heads west
(sometimes before, sometimes after the SU-99), and will work
at Passaic Jct, 4th Ave Paterson (Trash), Midland Park (Kuiken
Bros Lumber) before heading back to work Malt Products in
Hackensack.
14
crews took place. The WS-6, known as the “Sparta turn” was
abolished. In its place was a new job, named the SJ-1, based
out of Sparta Jct. This job works Monday to Friday, on duty at
4 pm, and has an engine assigned and based there at SJ. It’s
generally been the 3022, but occasionally one of the tunnel
motors has done time there as well as one of the leased CSX
and NS 4 axle geeps. The cars were dropped off and picked up
by the SU 100’s and 99’s, usually at the siding track just west
(by timetable, northeast geographically) of Sparta Jct. And as
of press time, there is plenty of work to keep them busy.
This brings up another item. As this goes to press in March
2015, there has been a modification to the SU 100/99 trains.
The schedule is still the same, with the 100’s running east from
Binghamton Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday and the 99’s running
west the following afternoon/evening, as noted above. With the
harsh winter in upstate NY taking its toll, it has affected traffic
on CSX as well as the NYS&W and other carriers in the
region, notably in the Buffalo-Syracuse-Albany corridor of
CSX. Usually, the SU 99 goes west with a block for
interchange to CSX at Syracuse. However, owing to mother
nature and congestion in general, some of you may have
noticed the SU 99 running west with less than 20 cars out of
Ridgefield Park, NJ. That’s because the CSX-Syracuse block is
not traveling on the 99’s. Instead, the freight has been picked
up by CSX, usually crew YY220 out of North Bergen, who
then take the freight to South Kearny yard for inspection and
addition to Selkirk bound trains. The last weekend of February
had 109 cars for CSX to pick up, and previous moves involved
97 cars and 67 cars respectively. The Y220 normally delivers
inbound freight as well as needed intermodal cars for the CSX
Little Ferry intermodal terminal, so it’s not a stretch for the
Y220 (of which I’m the regular engineer) to grab the cars and
run them to South Kearny. How long this modification to
freight traffic lasts is anyone’s guess, but will likely go on until
the weather and congestion issues in upstate NY ease up.
MOTIVE POWER UPDATE
This area has been pretty active the past several months. I’m
(Continued on page 15)
׉	 7cassandra://cV1HCleed0Yt-gRVKVoET6OlqETYL4XkRH03Ytdzn6E)p` [V:/䰍W)׉EoThen, in a move that surprised most, the
Westbound trash train detour Q710 departing Ridgefield Park, NJ August 2014
not sure where to begin, but here goes. This past summer
found several changes among the company’s motive power
roster. First off (and in no particular order of importance),
the railroad scrapped several locomotives. Among those
scrapped were the three GP20’s, acquired with the operations
of the TP&W several years back, and retained after
giving up that operation. GP20’s 2062, 2064, and 2066, all
of AT&SF lineage were scrapped in Binghamton in July by
a local contractor. The other sad news (for railfans at least)
was that F45 3636 was finally scrapped this summer in Utica
NY, along with ex-NS high hood SD40 3020, and GP40
3042, ex NS 1355. The 3636 had a long and illustrious
career on the NYS&W and was the last of its model in
regular service east of the Mississippi when a catastrophic
mechanical failure forced it into retirement where it was
cannibalized for parts over several years in Utica, NY. The
3020 was a high hood, ex- NS SD40 acquired with what
became the 3018 and 3022, both active on the roster as low
nose SD40’s as of press time.
SD70M’s became the next three units to leave
the roaster, but not by the scrapper’s torch. Rather,
the NS acquired all three units as part of
their ongoing program of picking up second hand
high HP road units for their own use. They became
NS 2779, 2780, and 2781 upon their return
to service. In early September they were handed
off to the NS and transported to Enola PA. Since
then, they were moved to Altoona PA and placed
in the Juniata locomotive shop for evaluation
and eventual rebuilding. The SD70s, purchased
in 1995, ran for several years on home rails before
being leased out on a long term arrangement
with the Indiana & Ohio Railroad who ran them
pretty much into the ground for several years.
They then returned home and sat unused (after a
few runs) until the NS decided to take them. It’s
been rumored that a deal was struck with the NS
in which they will install PTC and cab signals in
the SD60s in return for the acquisition of the
70’s. It makes the story interesting, if that’s the
case. And the NYS&W will need to equip their
road units with PTC and cab signals soon, as NJT/MetroNorth
plans on installing the technology on the Southern Tier
between Campbell hall NY and Port Jervis, NY (This was
discussed in greater detail in an earlier Reflector column).
As for the rest of the roster these days, the rumor mill was
in high gear again over the summer, as stories surface stating
the railroad was planning to reactivate SD45’s 3618 and 3634.
They sent two of the 4 SD40T-2 “tunnel motor” locomotives
out to be rebuilt with more Eco-friendly prime movers. As of
press time, there hasn’t been any more news on these items of
interest, but that certainly doesn’t mean it’s not going to or
cannot happen. In a related sidebar to the above, the railroad
leased three Progress Rail (PRLX) GP38-2’s to pick up the
slack while the T-2’s are getting worked on. The railroad finds
itself in a position of needing whatever power it can get it
hands on these days owing to the traffic upswing, and as it’s a
customer service based company, the better they can deliver
the goods to their customers, the better for all involved.
As for the rest of the roster, currently (at press time) the
following units are assigned to NJ: NS 5291, 5294; CSXT
2732, 2782, and NYSW 3016, and all are getting a
good workout these days. I’m missing info on
what’s assigned up on the Northern Division,
aside from long time Utica holddown 3040, so if
any info can be passed along for next time please
let me know.
As for the SD60’s, they are certainly earning
their keep on the road trains between SyracuseBinghamton-Ridgefield
park on the SU-100 and
99’s these days. And in a bow to new technology,
SD60 3810 is the first road unit to have cameras
installed. One is facing outward from the cab end,
and the other outward facing camera is on the
conductor’s side, rear end, above the number
board. It’s expected, like with the other railroads
that have installed cameras, these will greatly aid
in the investigations of grade crossing and trespasser
accidents. It’s expected the rest of the fleet
will eventually have this technology installed as
well.
Westbound SU 99 at Hawthorne, NJ April 2014 Photo Credit: Marc Hamon
15
(Continued on page 17)
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FINALLY
Well, for the first time in a few columns there are no
retirements to report on (though that may change next
year). In short, traffic is steady if not up, and the railroad is
humming right along and doing what it was established to
do: provide customer service the best it can and as safely
as possible. I realize this column has a bias to the Southern
Division, but I am always looking for Northern Division
news and info as well. If any readers can provide me
with such info, please do so. My email is:
blet601@gmail.com. Remember, this is YOUR NYSW
THS since it’s YOUR dues that allow us to publish this
magazine and the annual calendar. We are only as good as
the members who support us, so please get involved
and help keep this group to preserve and record the history
of the NYS&W, whose final chapter is far from being
written. Until next time…
Photos by Ralph Bonanno unless otherwise noted.
17
Photos page 16.
Top: Eastbound detour combo Q004/SU100 at Ridgefield Park
NJ July 2014 Photo Credit: Marc Hamon
Bottom: SU99 meets a southbound CSX train with CN power,
Ridgefield Park, NJ Jul 2014
Photos this page.
Top left: Westbound SU 99 led by SD45 3618 at Pompton
Lakes NJ July 2008
Top right: Westbound SU 99 along Route 23 approaching
Stockholm NJ June 2013
Bottom left:F45 3636 at Mayhill St, Saddle Brook, NJ March
2006
Bottom right:F45 3636 westbound at Rock Road, Hawthorne,
NJ June 2006
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n͠][V:4䰍W)ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://6T4rvFzu1buRsX1ruSYweyJlRtmrCqN9oD2G6DnYyRU \`׉	 7cassandra://eaP1pWHJZ_7NyxFEvXSL2Zn1e9rvdrEzBIayUxOW1mo͑`s׉	 7cassandra://9F3vS_bsu0yaxUmR6dBs_ahtSClJ6_NL_Ms1yodLuPs)` ׉	 7cassandra://NNAPQYG9jRTZYQoFs78YiANwlqHnRkjWFDhRJc8pOak tZ͠][V:4䰍W)נ[V:3䰍W) ̶9׉Hmailto:Mechanical@nyswths.orgGׁׁrנ[V:4䰍W) ̮9ׁHmailto:Mechanical@nyswths.orgׁׁЈ׉EJthree weeks late, we were already in gear for the 2014
season. While our 11th season started with the Easter Bunny,
it is May 1st we passed the ten year anniversary of the
Bel-Del operation. The one Saturday in between was our
annual rules class. As it turns out, the Easter Bunny was way
-laid on the last day by a brush fire along the tracks that
delayed the first train for hours and cancelled the second trip.
It was not one of our better days.
Ironically, we had just taken a radical step to keep
T
he last edition was a recollection of 25 years
of mechanical doings. This issue is back to
the usual business of more recent doings and
will cover all from where I left off in 2013 through 2014. After
retiring 142 for the winter came Polar Express, with its record
timing sellout of the previous August. Expecting a sellout
every trip was an issue going into the worst winter we can
remember in a long time. The cold started three weeks early,
which meant baby-sitting the diesels for a longer period. That
was further complicated by a new power station for keeping
them warm being operational some six weeks late. Then the
snow started and we were once again faced with a day that
many of our customers were unable or unwilling to come out.
For the second time, we ran an extra weekend for makeup
trains. The number of customers who missed didn’t add up to
quite the number the last time it happened and we went for an
entire weekend rather than two trips and opened it up to
additional sales. It went just shy of sold out again.
The winter also made it difficult to accomplish much,
at least of any outdoor activity. When it finally broke, about
the brush controlled along the way. The Society’s newest
acquisition is a brush cutting machine, which went to work
the week after the bunny retired to his hutch. Society
members have often formed brush parties to keep the rightof-way
clear on the whole railroad, not just the active part.
This action on the out-of-service portion is important as the
day a track gang starts to work on rehabilitation of the track,
they don’t have to begin with several days of brush cutting.
This saves on the cost and increases the productivity of the
track gang. The brush cutter is also a potential source of
income working for other railroads when not in use on our
own. While this column sees about a two-month lag time
from writing to mailing, photos tend to be more up-to-date
and a photo of the new machine appeared in the last issue.
Plymouth #18 was further reconditioned during the
winter. The transmission had some issues, electrical wiring
improved, new windows are in, the paint job is pretty much
complete and it will be lettered “MW 18” to reflect its status
as a piece of maintenance equipment. It will soon be able to
make maintenance moves that are particularly important in
the out-of-service track. Similarly, the member-owned GE
45 tonner nears completion. It has been numbered 146 and
has a new herald on the cab showing “DRR” over a Pennsylvania
keystone. This engine was never railroad-owned
having come from the power plant in Holland, NJ.
Another anniversary in May was for 142, when it
became 25 years old and officially an antique. When it got its
annual inspection pressure test, it showed no leaking
The railroads new locomotive #1567 which we use for The Polar Express and The Easter Bunny Train. Photo Rick Glosser
18
׉	 7cassandra://aguFUkmnWab--rkX4DV68TgdvfPC-N7hIP_fOAXfuu0+` [V:/䰍W)׉Estaybolts. That would be the first time in years we had none.
Annual testing and reassembly became almost routine for once
only to find, on the last day of the season, the engine crew
came in the shop in the morning and found a leaking staybolt
in the firebox, knocking it out of commission from its last
scheduled appearance of 2014.
Even before the Easter trips, car #500, the gift shop,
was sent out to Topton, PA to get body work and a new coat
of paint. The Society board voted to paint the cars in Stevens
(Institute of Technology, Hoboken) Red with black ends and
silver roof. This is consistent with the 1942 paint scheme for
NYS&W coaches. While the new color stands out sharply
against the other cars, that edge should fade as the other cars
start to match. We will send them out as funds and down-time
permit. If you would like to speed up the process, click the
“DONATE” button on our web site. Here too, a photo of #500
appeared in the last issue, before the lettering was applied.
It should be noted the other class of coach we have,
the gallery bi-levels, will step back an additional two years to
the 1940 paint scheme. The Stevens Red will be applied to the
lower section up to the height of the LIRR cars and will have a
gray band for the upper windows, matching the power car that
runs with them. Since the “Squeak” never had bi-levels, this is
a bit of a stretch applying the 1940 scheme to them, but it is
expected to make the train as a whole quite impressive when
all the cars are painted and together. The 33 has to have the
red touched up though to match the new look. As the test
subject for this program, its color isn’t quite the same right
now. Once all ten cars are done, it should not only match, but
also hold down maintenance issues for some years to come.
And then, six months later and the seasons reversed,
the winter may have still been affecting us. Thomas the Tank
Engine visited in July as usual although, on its sixth visit, it
was one weekend later. We always seemed to pick the two
hottest weekends of summer and the thought was to skip at
least one of them, as well as avoid July 4th
also sold out in hours. In order to accommodate everyone, we
started a new boarding procedure where everyone had an
assigned entry point, marked by a letter. The thirty trains were
packed with nearly 3,000 more people than we would ordinarily
carry and, aside from running a bit late the first Saturday
(which always seems to be the case), the trips ran without a
hitch. We took the rainy Saturday over the snow, so no makeup
trains this time. The only snow was leftover on the ground
the first weekend from an early cold snap and mild December
weather took over. In fact, it rained several times until the last
week of January when the snow and cold then stated in
earnest.
Meantime, the railroad’s latest acquisition was an
SW-1500 switcher that had worked for NS in Altoona the
as it was on a
Friday. Well, something was missing this time – ninety degree
weather. Summer, 2014 turned out to be cooler than usual,
perhaps set up by the harsh winter, and the only 90+ degree
day was on a Tuesday this July and not again until the very
end of August and early September. The first Sunday was
incredibly muggy but the thermometer stopped rising at 88.
The Easton fireworks that night started a bit early and were
rushed, for good reason. A severe thunderstorm wrapped up
that weekend just as I got home after the fireworks. My count,
taken from the Conductors’ reports, was 18,656 fares in those
six days, 14,921 on Thomas and the rest on our “regular” train.
Using two bi-level cars, 142 hauled 878 people to the mine on
its best day.
Dinosaur Train followed in August. Considered by
many of our customers to be our best event, it none-the-less
had a disappointing turnout and will not be a return event.
Three of the four days, the weather was great. Only the second
Saturday did we have to contend with rain much of the day.
Finally, two years ago we installed conduit between
the ticket office and station building with an access point in
between only to have someone mistake the tubes as recycling
ports. While one pipe easily blew its contents back out to run
power, we finally had the time and ambition recently to clear
out the second pipe in order to install communication lines
between the buildings. The permanent PA system, internet, an
intercom and possibly a phone are planned.
Coming full circle back to Polar 2014; we thought
selling out in a month was quick. This time, we sold out in
four hours. Despite overselling the trains, we were still disappointing
many customers who were shut out and, for the first
time, we added a Friday pair of trips to the schedule, which
19
45 tonner belonging to member Don Chaudruc at Baer Yard.
previous 20 years. It received a fresh paint job and was
shipped to us for Polar. It is now the assigned locomotive for
the Bel-Del and the Geep left shortly after Christmas. At the
north end of the train with an also freshly painted caboose
right behind, it made for an impressive entrance into the
station. We found out the hard way it drops its water in cold
weather rather quickly (to protect it from freezing) and it had
to be shuttled between the power station at Kent and the train
at the yard daily. The cold weather baby-sitting was none-theless
easier. As you can see, into our second quarter-century,
we’re not standing still. Like always, I invite you to come out
and pitch in, even for a day. Every little bit adds up.
Personally, during the winter we all could have done without, I
found a project I could do in the comfort of my warm home,
converting the LIRR car marker lights to LEDs, which makes
them bright enough for legal requirements and more
dependable. The light bulbs easily burnt out, but not before
melting some of the red lenses. When we finally make
Riegelsville, it will facilitate the runaround to just flip the
switch for taillights, but they already came in handy when we
did not use a caboose on the trains in 2014. See? Every little
bit helps. Contact Mechanical@nyswths.org for information
on how to help keep us moving forward.
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