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Chuck Zeiler's Collection
 
4/29/2025
 
 
 
 
 
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CSS&SB Baldwin-Westinghouse 900
Title:  CSS&SB Baldwin-Westinghouse 900
Description:  CSS&SB Baldwin-Westinghouse Class E 900 at Michigan City, Indiana on February 16, 1964, Kodachrome by Chuck Zeiler. Number 900 was built by Baldwin-Westinghouse in 1929 for the Illinois Central as number 10000 as a result of the City of Chicago's smoke abatement ordinance in the downtown area (requiring the IC to electrify its suburban service by 1927) and was acquired by the South Shore in 1941 when the IC dieselized its Congress and 31st Street Yards in Chicago. The construction of the four IC Class E's (Class E is a Westinghouse designation) followed the South Shore's intiial order for four Class E's (road #'s 1001-1004) in 1926, specifically designed by Westinghouse to meet the South Shore's specifications. During 1927 the South Shore followed up on it's initial order with an order for two more Class E's in 1927 (#'s 1007-1008), and again during 1928 for two more (#'s 1009-1010). Baldwin designed an outside equalized truck for the South Shore orders, but for the IC order, it used its traditional steam locomotive tender truck design. The following is from Joseph Strapac's book, "Interurban Electric Locomotives": One of the reasons that there was a Baldwin-Westinghouse at all was because Baldwin was so successful as an integrated manufacturer. Baldwin had sufficient capacity in its tender shop in downtown Phildelphia that it could easily underbid any proposed assembly by Westinghouse's own forces out in East Pittsburgh. Baldwin built the structure of each locomotive riveting together and empty box with trucks and couplers (and at least rudimentary train air brakes) based on the familiar technology of locomotive tenders. The frame itself was assembled from standard steel shapes, with heavy Baldwin castings at each end to tie everything together. Even the trucks themselves were adapted from tender trucks used beneath thousands of Baldwin-built steam locomotive tenders. Windows and a host of other appurtenances would be installed, then the locomotive-to-be would be shunted out to the interchange track. It would be handed off to a line-haul railroad and waybilled (as if it were a freight car) across Pennsylvania to the East Pittsburgh Works of Westinghouse. Westinghouse installed and tested electrical gear at East Pittsburgh. The locomotives would be finish-painted (they left Baldwin in primer), tested and otherwise prepared for delivery. A short stretch of adjustable-voltage overhead behind the Works allowed road testing (and publicity photographs) when the locomotive was complete. This track was historically "pantograph country", so locomotives destined for customers who used only trolley poles or third rail were often pictured at this site fitted with pantographs - which would be removed prior to shipment.
Photo Date:  2/16/1964  Upload Date: 10/16/2010 12:52:21 PM
Location:  Michigan City, IN
Author:  Chuck Zeiler
Categories:  Roster
Locomotives:  CSS 900(Steeple Cab)
Views:  1544   Comments: 0
CSS&SB 902
Title:  CSS&SB 902
Description:  CSS&SB Baldwin-Westinghouse Class E 902 at Michigan City, Indiana on October 23, 1965, Kodachrome by Chuck Zeiler. Number 902 was built in September 1929 (c/n 61048) as Illinois Central 10002. In 1941 the South Shore obtained the four Class E's built for the IC (#'s 10000-10003), renumbering them 900-903. One of the results was that every B-W Class E ever built was on the South Shore's roster. They were designed for a top speed of 45 mph and weighed over 90 tons. Baldwin constructed the carbodies in their tender shops in Philadelphia, using standard tender structural components, shipped the empty shells on modified tender trucks to Pittsburgh where Westinghouse installed the electrical systems, tested, then sold them to customers, the IC in this case. Baldwin was merely a contract supplier.
Photo Date:  10/23/1965  Upload Date: 2/2/2016 2:01:39 PM
Location:  Michigan City, IN
Author:  Chuck Zeiler
Categories:  Roster
Locomotives:  CSS 902(Steeple Cab)
Views:  579   Comments: 0
CSS&SB 903
Title:  CSS&SB 903
Description:  CSS&SB Baldwin Westinghouse 903 parked at Michigan City, Indiana on February 16, 1964, Kodachrome by Chuck Zeiler. Number 903 was built in September 1929 (c/n 61047) cataloged as a Class E. The body was built by Baldwin in their tender shops and then shipped to Westinghouse for installation of the electrical apparatus. It was delivered to the Illinois Central in January 1930, numbered IC 10001, and used in the Congress Street and 31st Street yards. This was one of four such locomotives (IC 10000-10003) designed to comply with Chicago's smoke abatement laws. The IC changed to diesel locomotives in 1940, and the electric locomotives were sold to a dealer in Hammond, Indiana, who sold all four to the South Shore for $30,000.00 each. The South Shore had previously acquired their own Class E locomotives from the same builder(s) and with the acquisition of the IC's locomotives became the sole owner of all the Class E's ever built.
Photo Date:  2/16/1964  Upload Date: 6/15/2015 2:37:52 PM
Location:  Michigan City, IN
Author:  Chuck Zeiler
Categories:  Roster
Locomotives:  CSS 903(Steeple Cab)
Views:  495   Comments: 0
CSS&SB GE 1013
Title:  CSS&SB GE 1013
Description:  CSS&SB GE 1013 at Michigan City, Indiana on October 23, 1965, Kodachrome by Chuck Zeiler. Previous orders for South Shore freight locomotives had been placed with Baldwin, with electrical gear supplied by Westinghouse (road #'s 1001-1010). By 1929, GE took note of this sudden spike in the competitor's business and entered the bidding on the next batch when the South Shore asked for proposals. Whether any profit was earned is a good question, but nonetheless General Electric was awarded the contract for CSS&SB #'s 1011-1013, and they were erected and equipped by GE at Erie, Pennsylvania. As delivered, these locomotives also had a trolley pole (the reason for the offset pantograph) and third rail collection devices, and were designed to operate on South Shore's 1500 VDC or Samuel Insull's other two Chicago railroads (CNS&M and CA&E) 600 VDC, although there is no evidence that these locomotives ever left CSS&SB rails. Lookalikes (GE engineers drew up their own blueprints, the GE's had four front windows instead of Baldwin's three) for the Baldwin-Westinghouse Class E motors, #'s 1011-1013 were set up to run in multiple with them as well. They were shipped by GE between December 1929 and November 1930, all were retired in January 1967 and scrapped by Precision Engineering.
Photo Date:  10/23/1965  Upload Date: 10/17/2010 11:40:59 AM
Location:  Michigan City, IN
Author:  Chuck Zeiler
Categories:  Roster
Locomotives:  CSS 1013(Steeple Cab) CSS 1012(Steeple Cab)
Views:  2949   Comments: 0
CA&E Class B 3003
Title:  CA&E Class B 3003
Description:  Chicago Aurora & Elgin Railroad Class B 3003 at the Milwaukee Road interchange near Elgin, Illinois, date and photographer unknown, scanned from a 2¾X4½ print, Chuck Zeiler collection. Number 3003 was built by Baldwin-Westinghouse for stock (c/n 57070), completed September 21, 1923. It was purchased by the CA&E (as #3001, delivered as #3003) in 1926 and was rated at 400 horsepower with four 562D5 Westinghouse traction motors. The undulating profile and light construction of the CA&E right of way stressed the frame and the truss rods were added after delivery. It was scrapped in August 1963. Number 3004 is also pictured. It was also built for stock, completed April 8, 1924 (c/n 57717), ordered May 10, 1926 by the CA&E as #3002 but delivered as #3004, also scrapped in August 1963. The following is excerpted from the book, Interurban Electric Locomotives From Baldwin-Westinghouse, by Joseph A. Strapac.

In order to sell to customers whose requirements (and electrical and track structure capacity) would not support a Class D, Baldwin-Westinghouse downwardly engineered this design in order to replace the Class A in its catalog. The better built steam road subsidiaries and those lines that delivered considerable tonnage per train could order larger Class D motors (and even operate them in multiple), while B-W could offer a smaller unit to potential customers with less demanding requirements. The Class B locomotives were better suited than the D's for use on lightly built interurban lines, due to their reduced weight and power draw.

One of the reasons there was a Baldwin-Westinghouse at all was because Baldwin Locomotive Works was so successful as an integrated manufacturer. Baldwin had sufficient capacity in its tender shop in downtown Philadelphia that it could easily underbid any proposed assembly by Westinghouse's own forces out in East Pittsburgh. Baldwin built the structure of each locomotive, riveting together an empty box with trucks and couplers (and at least rudimentary train air brakes), based on the familiar technology of locomotive tenders. The frame itself was assembled from standard steel shapes, with heavy Baldwin castings at each end to tie everything together. Even the trucks themselves were adapted from tender trucks used beneath thousands of Baldwin-built steam locomotive tenders. Windows and a host of additional appurtenances would be installed, then the locomotive-to-be would be shunted out to the interchange track. It would be handed off to a line-haul railroad and waybilled (as if it were a freight car) across Pennsylvania to the East Pittsburgh Works of Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing. Westinghouse installed and tested electrical gear at East Pittsburgh. The locomotive would be finish painted, tested and otherwise prepared for delivery. A short stretch of adjustable-voltage overhead behind the Works allowed road testing (and publicity photographs) when the locomotive was complete. The track was historically 'pantograph country' so locomotives destined for customers who used only trolley poles or third rail were often pictured at this site fitted with pantographs, which would be removed prior to shipment. In the early years the consortium delivered interurban freight locomotives to specific order, rather than producing them on speculation for stock. However, Westinghouse occasionally ordered freight locomotives from Baldwin for stock, or in anticipation of orders not yet in hand. This practice tied up capital, but as the market for new locomotives dwindled (and credit grew tighter) during the late 1920's, Westinghouse decided to keep at least one or two new locomotives (with generic equipment) on the back lot in East Pittsburgh.

This appears to be a location to change over from 3rd rail to trolley wire.

Photo Date:  12/31/1950  Upload Date: 9/10/2011 1:46:19 PM
Location:  Elgin, IL
Author:  Chuck Zeiler
Categories:  Roster
Locomotives:  CAE 3003(Steeple Cab) CAE 3004(Steeple Cab)
Views:  2154   Comments: 0


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