Steam Trains
Showing 41–44 of 44 results
The Search for Steam
The Search for Steam is a mammoth parade of smoky action that will delight any railfan. Some of the greatest rail photographers such as C.E. Prusia, Charles Kerrigan, Richard Wallin, Russ Porter, Richard Kindig, Robert J. Foster and Donald Sims combine to make this huge 360-page hardbound book a masterpiece of steam!
From freight and passenger action to rail facilities, this large picture book has it all! Lines include Southern Pacific, Union Pacific, New York Central, Baltimore & Ohio, Great Northern, Wabash, Milwaukee Road, Illinois Central, Pennsylvania, Soo, Santa Fe, Rock Island and many others. Some diesel and electric photos are also featured. A handy index of railroads is included.
Tracking Down Steam: A Personal Journey Through the Final Days of Steam
This book is a compilation of the author's personal experiences in the sixties and features hundreds of previously unpublished colour and black & white photos of BR steam locos. Peter Nicholson sought out BR locos wherever they could be seen starting from the usual spotters' locations on station platforms, progressing to engine shed visits and railway workshops, then on railtours and haunts away from the national networks such as the Isle of Wight and looking for former main line locos after disposal by BR in museums, on the first preserved lines, in industrial service, and awaiting their fate in scrapyards. The quest culminated in the last days of scheduled BR steam in August 1968. All photos, black & white and colour, were taken in the period up to the final day 11 August 1968. In the author's case though, that last day was not on the lineside of the Settle & Carlisle with everyone else for the final special (a week after the end of regular scheduled steam services), but in the less-publicised private yard of Corals coal merchants, Southampton Docks, where an old London & South Western Railway dock tank was still at work! The subject is strictly main line steam locos - those owned or formerly owned by British Railways or its constituent companies, the Big Four (GWR, SR, LMS and LNER) and their predecessors. Surprisingly, perhaps, no other book has looked at BR steam locos in their differing environments as this would do.
West Virginia’s Last Logging Railroad: Meadow River Lumber Company
Complete history of West Virginia's largest logging railroad which was also its last, operating 1912-1972. It operated Shay, Heisler, and Climax geared steam locomotives and in the last 15 years also had diesels. The book covers the locomotives in detail, the cars and the operations as well as background on the company and its owners, the Raine family. Photos show all aspects of the operation and the people involved. Meadow River was at one time the largest producer of hardwood lumber in the world. Some of its equipment has survived to operate on tourist lines.