The shots of GN power were primarily on trains 97/88, pool power between Chicago and St. Paul. While GN power was occasionally leased, particularly during the Sugar Beet campaign on lines west, Chuck's photos are of the pool train. Missouri Pacific F-units were leased for a few months and saw service out of Lincoln. A shot in the first (Burlington Route Historical Society) SD Bulletin shows one of these in Lincoln.
Those were the GREAT days of RR'ing. as far as I'm concerned but the GN junk we were saddled with took some of the "joy" out of it. I can't recall the no. but one of those beasts, a GN F3A, nearly killed me on train 88 at Dugan X'ing. years ago. I witnessed, first hand and up close, a crankcase explosion that totally destroyed the prime mover and, very nearly, yours truly.
The GN power mentioned was always on #'s 97 and 88. This was the result of an agreement whereby Q E units would run through to Havre, MT. on #31 rather than change engines at St. Paul. In exchange, #88 would continue on to Clyde with GN power that would turn and become 97's power the next day, or as soon as Clyde Diesel shop could resuscitate them. This was the classic JUNK power of the decade !!! Few trips on either train were completed without at least one catastrophic engine failure and, usually, MORE than one. On one memorable trip Charlie Wright and Art Krahn were commin' over So. River St. on 88 when everything went ta ****. Seems the pilot of their lead unit fell off the engine and they, of course, ran over it. While runnin' over the pilot they fell off the tracks and nearly ended up in the river. Some readers may remember a massive derailment that resulted in freight cars hangin' off the bridge over River St. and cattle roamin' the streets on the south end of Aurora. The stock cars were supposed to be set out on the Sheep Yard lead but never quite made it. These exchange units remained on 88/97 'till the boys at Clyde got 'em runnin' again. When that happened they were replaced with a different bunch of units that were in the same shape as the previous set. I have had sets of these beasts on one of those two trains that had units that had blown up but were left in the consist for months. Rusty, oil covered walkways, piles of sand in the engine room and inspection covers everywhere. THESE were the GN engines we had to put up with in the 60's. I hope this helps explain the presence of GN units in the 60's Chuck.
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