Quick Facts
Name | Diesel Switcher |
---|---|
Manufacture Date | 1942 |
Railroad Of Record | Pere Marquette Railway, Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad (C&O), Chessie System, CSX |
Manufacturer | General Motors, Electro-Motive Division |
Description
General Motors, a company typically known for its automobiles, is also a big name in locomotive manufacturing. They began mass-producing diesel switchers in 1935. Switchers are designed for traversing rail yards, industrial parks, and other short distances. Often, they are used to assemble and disassemble trains. These lightweight locomotives offer crews better visibility, reversibility, and maneuverability compared to heavier engines designed for long hauls.
In 1925, CNJ No. 1000 – another locomotive in the B&O Railroad Museum collection – became the world’s first commercially available diesel electric switcher. Seeking a diesel locomotive of its own, the Pere Marquette Railway purchased its first “Phase I” model SW1 switcher in 1939. Pleased by the performance of the reversable engine, Pere Marquette added a more advanced “Phase II” model – this No. 11 – to its fleet in 1942.
The Pere Marquette Railway was formed in 1900, when three small railroad companies merged into one. Though the Detroit-based railroad was initially intended to service the Michigan timber trade, it later expanded into Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, New York, and Ontario. Amidst a financial crisis in the 1920s, the company experienced multiple changes in ownership. Pere Marquette was sold to the Chesapeake and Ohio (C&O) Railway in 1929, and it was fully merged with the company in 1947.
Another major merger would occur in 1973 when the C&O, B&O, and Western Maryland Railway were all combined to form the Chessie System. Just a few years later, in 1982, the Seaboard Railroad merged with Chessie to form CSX Transportation – with the “C” representing Chessie and the “S” representing Seaboard. Today, CSX is the second largest railroad in the country.
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Did You Know?
Andrew Jackson, in 1833, rode on the B&O Railroad, becoming the first US president to ride a train.