railroad.wikisort.org - TrainSouthern Railway "Maud" 1509 is the oldest surviving steam locomotive of the Southern Railway. The engine was built by Baldwin in December 1879 for the Atlanta and Charlotte Air Line Railway, originally numbered 27 and named Talullah. The railroad was later absorbed by the Richmond and Danville Railroad which itself became the Southern Railway, and thus, Talullah ultimately became Southern #1509.
Southern Railway 1509, Maud |
---|
Type and origin |
---|
Power type | Steam |
---|
Builder | Baldwin Locomotive Works |
---|
Serial number | 4909 |
---|
Build date | 1879 |
---|
|
Specifications |
---|
Configuration:
| |
---|
• Whyte | 0-4-4T Forney locomotive |
---|
• UIC | B2′ t |
---|
Gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) |
---|
Driver dia. | 48 in (1.219 m) |
---|
Loco weight | 111,000 lb (50 tonnes) |
---|
Boiler pressure | 135 lbf/in2 (0.93 MPa) |
---|
Cylinders | Two, outside |
---|
Cylinder size | 16 in × 24 in (406 mm × 610 mm) |
---|
|
Performance figures |
---|
Tractive effort | 14,688 lbf (65.34 kN) |
---|
|
Career |
---|
Operators | Atlanta and Charlotte Air Line Railway, Richmond and Danville Railroad, Southern Railway |
---|
Class | A |
---|
Numbers | 27 (A&CAL), 1509 (SOU) |
---|
Official name | Talullah (original), Maud (1925) |
---|
Nicknames | Whiskers |
---|
Locale | United States, South |
---|
Retired | 1949 |
---|
Current owner | Southeastern Railway Museum, Duluth, Georgia |
---|
Disposition | In storage, awaiting restoration |
---|
|
Very little is known about the engine's history prior to the 1903 renumbering and company records from that time are largely either missing, incomplete, and/or contain conflicting data. The 1509 was likely used for passenger service, particularly with suburban or commuter runs, and when renumbered, it received the A class designation, being a switcher engine used in yard service.
Southern rebuilt the engine in 1903, and from then until retirement, it served as a switcher for the railway's Pegram Shops in Atlanta. There, it was given the name, Maud by the shop employees. Maud was retired June 29, 1950, and moved to Inman, Georgia, where it was to be scrapped. However, the shop's workers had favored Maud, and wrote to then Southern Railway president E. E. Norris requesting the engine be preserved. Norris obliged, and Maud was placed on display outside of the shops until 1960. That year, the engine was donated to the Atlanta chapter of the National Railway Historical Society, who had placed it in their Southeastern Railway Museum in Duluth, Georgia.
Current status
As of November 2020, Southern Railway 1509 is stored, disassembled outside the Southeastern Railway Museum's shops, where it is awaiting restoration.
References
- The "Hot Box" as edited by George Weber, April 1961 & May 1990[full citation needed]
- Atlanta History. Atlanta Historical Society. Winter 1994. [full citation needed]
- Prince, Richard E. (1970). Southern Railway System Steam Locomotives and Boats.[page needed]
- Wiley, Autrey; Wallace, Conley (1983). Southern Railway Handbook.[page needed]
External links
Steam Locomotives of the Southern Railway |
---|
Passenger Locomotives |
- B (4-4-0)
- C (4-4-2)
- F (4-6-0)
- P (4-6-2)
- Ps-4 (4-6-2)
- Ts (4-8-2)
| |
---|
Freight and Switching Locomotives |
- A (various)
- D (2-6-0)
- E (4-6-0)
- G, H, I, J (2-8-0)
- K (2-8-0),
- Ls (2-8-8-2)
- Ms (2-8-2)
- Ms-2 (2-8-2 Tractor)
- Ss (2-10-2)
|
---|
Survivors |
- 107 (G)
- 154 (G)
- 385 (H-4)
- 401 (H-4)
- 542 (J)
- 630 (Ks-1)
- 722 (Ks-1)
- 1401 (Ps-4)
- 1509 (A)
- 1643 (A-7)
- 4501 (Ms)
|
---|
Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии