VGN RY Motor Car 109

VGN RY Motor Car 109
Sitting in front of replica 2/3 scale VGN motor car shed in 2009

Friday, July 1, 2011

Telling the history through details








In my research and meeting former VGN men I have learned a great deal about the everyday routine of he men who operated the railroad's motor cars. The motor car operator's, be they signalmen, T&T linemen, section men or trainmasters and roadmasters, all had to carry the following; the current company employee timetable, the current company rule book, the company safety book and an instruction book for motor car operation which originated with the ICC. One VGN man told me that the railroad didn't care how they were carried, just that they had to be on the car. He used a leather bag. Another VGN man told of seeing men use an extra lunch box. One man who carried his paperwork on a lunch box fabricated a rack in which to hold the lunch box. I do not know how the operator carried the Motor Car Line Up Form he received from the dispatcher so that he would know the location and probable times of trains in his work area. The railroad management gave the men freedom to make some alterations to the motor car as long as the car was still safe and effective. I have heard of one man who enclosed his open car in the winter months with canvas and had a small gas heater on board! Many had battery lights for night time running and to light a signal pole while they worked. A retired VGN signalman described how some men placed the battery running headlight and work light on top of the motor car. It was held in place on the aluminum top by a strong magnet underneath! Very clever guys!

And in my car, I have added a rack for the required paperwork to be kept in a lunch box and a hook for the required case holding a flag, fares and torpedoes. As described by a former Virginian man in Victoria, work tools are carried in a heavy wire milk crate placed on the left side at the front, including a two pound coffee can for small items. Hanging in the middle of the front is a portable phone pack, purchased by the railroad in 1948.

The brake rigging in the original black paint contrasts with the car's orange.

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