here's what she looked like fresh and clean
not too clean, nor fresh.
an assembly photo when they were installing the engine
Here is what it looks like now... and they are ready to get to work on a restoration. It's sister was restored by expert Doyle McKormack
and that proves it can be done, http://www.nkp190.com/ and Doyle is ready and willing to help out a lot... and the Association of Tourist Railroads and Railway Museums is on the case and the locomotive is at the Frisco Texas new Museum of the American Railroad just North of Dallas. They are building a new restoration facility and museum, and have some really cool trains
they have a Big Boy,
and 10 Pullman cars, Frisco 4-8-4 No. 4501, Pennsylvania Railroad GG1 No. 4903, Union Pacific Big Boy No. 4018, UP Centennial diesel No. 6913, and Santa Fe doodlebug No. M160.
http://www.museumoftheamericanrailroad.org/Visit/InformationandDirections.aspx
http://cs.trains.com/trn/b/staff/archive/2014/11/24/about-that-other-alco-pa-santa-fe-59l-in-texas.aspx
https://www.facebook.com/AlcoPARestoration
Jesse, I love this. God bless America. Thank you for posting this sir.
ReplyDeleteit is what I must do... I have no other path in life.
DeleteI learn, I post and share the cool stuff.
I'm very glad some people like you seem to enjoy what I do so much! It gives me hope that there is a chance I can get a job doing something like this someday.
Here's something interesting though, the stuff like this - charity cases in need of publicity and donations - get reposted on the sites that rip me off, like http://auto-blog.cba.pl/ . Though they didn't post this, they did post the kids cancer charity.
I saw your post regarding this and it is wrong, wrong , WRONG for blogs to steal your research and hard work, especially if they give no credit to you. Perhaps I'm naive in matters such as this, but you would think there would be some kind of code of ethics here that bloggers would honer. At least mention it was re-blogged from your site.
ReplyDelete