Ahnu

Trackside Around Louisville West 1947-1958 with Jack Fravert Morning Sun Books

Description: RailroadTreasures offers the following item: Trackside Around Louisville West 1947-1958 with Jack Fravert Morning Sun Books Trackside Around Louisville (West) 1947-1958 with Jack Fravert by Charles B Castner, John Campbell, Charles Buccola & Rick Tipton Morning Sun Books Hard Cover w/ dust jacket 128 pages Copyright 2006 CONTENTS Introduction 3 Louisville as Traffic Magnet 3 Trackside Photographer Jack Fraver 3 The Two Volumes of Trackside Around Louisville with Jack Fravert 3 The Baltimore & Ohio in Southern Indiana5 North Vernon Indiana, 1956 5 O&M Main 10 B&O Excursion to Mitchell Persimmon Festival Excursion 15 North Vernon, 1957 21 Railroads on the Indiana Bank of the Ohio River 22 The Hoosier Line (Morron) 22 The Panhandle's New Albany Branch (PRR) 26 B&O at Charlestown Indiana 26 B&O at New Albany 28 VI Tower (B&O, Monon, Southern, K&IT, PRR)28 Kentucky & Indiana Terminal - home of three roads 32 K&IT History 32 K&IT Switchers at Work 34 Monon at Youngtown 37 B&O at Youngtown 41 Trains at Central Station (IC, NYC, C&O, SR, B&O) 54 Central Station history 54 NYC, SR, and IC Passenger Trains at Central Station 55 The B&O at Central Station 58 C&O Passenger Service at Central and Union Stations 63 Southern Railway around Louisville 1947-1958 64 The Southern in Indiana and Illinois - St. Louis Division (the "Air Line") 64 The Southern in Kentucky - Louisville Division (the "LS")64 The Southern in Louisville 65 Southern Railway at Youngtown Yard 66 Southern Trains Passing Through Louisville 72 30th Street 74 Southern in New Albany and West to Huntingburg 81 Illinois Central, the last bastion of steam 84 Oak St Yard - 2-10-2s and 0-8-0s 86 Hodgenville Branch local 88 Viewing Oak Street Yard 95 Getting Out of Town - South from Oak St 102 On to Central City 106 Oak Street's Roundhouse 108 The Final Days of Steam in Louisville 115 Excursion Runs 117 Some Louisville Area Curiosities 118 The Corydon RR (LNA&C) 118 Ferdinand Railroad 124 Louisville Cement Company 126 A Few Interesting Cars 127 ABOUT THE BOOK In our first volume (East), we began a look at Louisville railroading, as seen through Jack's cameras. Concentrating on Jack's early color work, we moved roughly counterclockwise around the city, starting with hometown Louisville & Nashville at Union Station and South Louisville, then to L&N's East Louisville yard and out to the suburbs. Next we met Chesapeake & Ohio as it came in from Lexington on L&N trackage rights and terminated with New York Central at Preston Street. We saw the NYC get here by trackage rights on the Baltimore & Ohio. And finally we showed that although the Pennsylvania entered the city with its own bridge, yards, engine terminal, and industrial switching districts, it partnered with the L&N at Louisville Union Station for passenger trains. This second volume (West) continues our tour around Louisville-area railroads, featuring the four other Class 1 railroads that "had to come here" Three of them, Southern Railway, the Baltimore & Ohio, and the Monon, resolved some of the early tangle by joining forces, crossing the Ohio River at New Albany and entering northwestern Louisville on the Kentucky and Indiana Terminal Railroad. At the K&IT roundhouse, Jack caught the end of Southern's steam power on both freight and passenger service, photographed the transition era on the B&O, and recorded the beginning of Monon's diesels. He also caught K&IT's switcher fleets - both steam and diesel. The remaining Class 1, Illinois Central, came into Louisville from the southwest, coming from Memphis, Tennessee through Fulton and Paducah KY. As steam dies elsewhere, we'll follow Jack to the IC, the last of Louisville's railroads to fully dieselize. The IC operated big steam through most of the 1950's; in fact, with dieselization elsewhere on its lines, the IC brought bigger steam to its Kentucky Division in the last years before completing dieselization. Finally, we feature glimpses of several Southern Indiana short lines, for the odd and the ancient. The operations of these small roads brought Jack and other fans to trackside in the 1950s, before they too phased out steam. This time we start with Jack some miles north of Louisville, on the main line of the Baltimore & Ohio between Cincinnati and St. Louis... Louisville as Traffic Magnet In our first volume, Trackside Around Louisville (East) with Jack Fravert, 1948-1958, we described Louisville's growth from the late 1700's, first as a river port. Before the railroads came, the Ohio River and the Great Lakes were the most important transportation arteries in what was then called "the West". At Louisville, steamboat navigation was interrupted, with upstream (Pittsburgh) boats and downstream (St. Louis and New Orleans) boats landing goods to be portaged around the Falls of the Ohio. With the Ohio on its doorstep and tributary rivers nearby, Louisville was in the right place to be the principal wholesale and distribution point for parts of Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi. The dream of railroads in the Louisville area became reality in the late 1840s and early 1850s, when local interests started at least five pioneering railroads from the Ohio River here, radiating outward toward "inland" points. Eventually, these early routes were acquired by larger rail systems, but their origin around the Falls of the Ohio attests to the wealth and enterprise of the area's business community. Once these railroads started running "trains of cars" to distant cities, Louisville (and its Indiana neighbors, Jeffersonville, Clarksville, and New Albany) gained access to wider wholesale markets and became a major manufacturing center as well. Of course, Louisville was the home of the L&N Railroad, with its headquarters, main shops, and ultimately five main lines reaching out to the northeast, east, south, southeast, and west. But as the city grew, it was an important enough traffic source that it had to be tapped by every railroad system, near or far, that could get here. One measure of this was the 24 railroads (plus two never built) that had "Louisville" in their names. By 1900, Louisville had 8 trunk line railroads and two local terminal switching operations. Each of these railroads acquired terminals as it could, and in our first volume we pointed out that Louisville was "a city of tangled terminals," with railroads crossing each other, running on each others' rails, and sharing joint yards and stations. That pattern was still true in Jack Fravert's day, and we will examine more of that tangle in this volume, as our tour of Louisville railroads continues. Jack Fravert, Trackside Photographer Jack Fravert (John B. Fravert, 1926-1998) was well qualified to record the railroading scene around the Louisville area. He combined the enthusiasm of a railfan with the perfectionist bent of a photo professional. Growing up in a railroading family in Louisville Kentucky, Jack trained as a US Army Signal Corps photographer, and continued with the technical education necessary to sell photographic supplies and equipment for a leading Louisville wholesaler. The result was a large body of work using the best films and cameras available, taken with an understanding of the railroad activities captured, and often with the cooperation of the railroaders involved. In the postwar years, his color slide work was a variety of films in 2inch format, but around 1952 Jack switched to 35mm slides, predominantly Kodachrome. All pictures are of the actual item. There may be reflection from the lights in some photos. We try to take photos of any damage. If this is a railroad item, this material is obsolete and no longer in use by the railroad. Please email with questions. Publishers of Train Shed Cyclopedias and Stephans Railroad Directories. Large inventory of railroad books and magazines. Thank you for buying from us. Shipping charges US Shipments: Ebay will add $1.25 each additional items, there are a few exceptions. Ebay Global shipping charges are shown. These items are shipped to Kentucky and forwarded to you. Ebay collects the shipping and customs / import fees. Refunds may be issued if you add multiple items to your cart and pay with one payment. For direct postage rates to these countries, send me an email. Shipping varies by weight. Payment options Payment must be received within 7 days. Paypal is accepted. Terms and conditions All sales are final. Returns accepted if item is not as described. Contact us first. No warranty is stated or implied. Please e-mail us with any questions before bidding. Thanks for looking at our items.

Price: 55 USD

Location: Talbott, Tennessee

End Time: 2025-01-07T01:38:03.000Z

Shipping Cost: 9 USD

Product Images

Trackside Around Louisville West 1947-1958 with Jack Fravert Morning Sun BooksTrackside Around Louisville West 1947-1958 with Jack Fravert Morning Sun BooksTrackside Around Louisville West 1947-1958 with Jack Fravert Morning Sun BooksTrackside Around Louisville West 1947-1958 with Jack Fravert Morning Sun BooksTrackside Around Louisville West 1947-1958 with Jack Fravert Morning Sun Books

Item Specifics

Restocking Fee: No

Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 30 Days

Refund will be given as: Money back or replacement (buyer's choice)

Recommended

Trackside Around the Garden State 1950-1975 with Bob Goin and John Dziobko
Trackside Around the Garden State 1950-1975 with Bob Goin and John Dziobko

$55.00

View Details
Morning Sun Books Trackside Around New England 1967 2020 with Jeremy and Je 1748
Morning Sun Books Trackside Around New England 1967 2020 with Jeremy and Je 1748

$69.98

View Details
Trackside Around Louisville West 1947-1958 with Jack Fravert - Morning Sun
Trackside Around Louisville West 1947-1958 with Jack Fravert - Morning Sun

$49.99

View Details
Trackside Around West Virginia 1963-1968 with Bob Withers Hardcover
Trackside Around West Virginia 1963-1968 with Bob Withers Hardcover

$34.95

View Details
Trackside Around New York City 1953-1968 with Robert Malinoski
Trackside Around New York City 1953-1968 with Robert Malinoski

$39.99

View Details
Trackside around ONTARIO's COTTAGE COUNTRY -- (NEW BOOK)
Trackside around ONTARIO's COTTAGE COUNTRY -- (NEW BOOK)

$69.95

View Details
Trackside Railroad Train Book around ST. LOUIS 1952-1959 James Sandrin
Trackside Railroad Train Book around ST. LOUIS 1952-1959 James Sandrin

$39.99

View Details
TRACKSIDE AROUND THE BIG APPLE: 1964-1973 with Al Roberts - Hardcover - LIKE NEW
TRACKSIDE AROUND THE BIG APPLE: 1964-1973 with Al Roberts - Hardcover - LIKE NEW

$74.00

View Details
Trackside around GRANGER COUNTRY, 1952-1955: IA, IL, WI, KS, NE (BRAND NEW BOOK)
Trackside around GRANGER COUNTRY, 1952-1955: IA, IL, WI, KS, NE (BRAND NEW BOOK)

$69.95

View Details
Trackside Around New Jersey 1968-1983 with Robert Yanosey
Trackside Around New Jersey 1968-1983 with Robert Yanosey

$55.00

View Details