Boaz and Irving (dare I say Mutt and Jeff?)

NW Mailing List nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Tue Aug 7 21:10:44 EDT 2007


Frank,

Thanks for the info. I'll have to dig out my copy of Mercedes. I know
where Taylor's Mountain is and always thought, when driving 460, that there
appeared to be a bit of a hump there.

Sam

----- Original Message -----
From: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
To: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
Sent: Tuesday, August 07, 2007 1:45 AM
Subject: Re: Boaz and Irving (dare I say Mutt and Jeff?)



> Jimmy: Thanks for the Railfan reference re Boaz.

>

> Sam: If you have access to Ed King's A--Mercedes of Steam, go to p. 147,

> which pictures Y6 2148, in reverse, pushing a WB mixed freight East of

> Montvale. I know the spot well: it is immediately off the western slope

> of Taylor's Mountain, a finger roughly perpendicular from the Blue Ridge

> chain, playing out at Irving. Westbound crews opting not to chance a

> stall on the way to Buford's Gap just East of Blue Ridge would pick up

> their pusher at Irving. There was a mild WB 0.6 grade, half-mile-plus

> climb from the Irving siding to the high point on the Taylor's Mountain

> stretch, followed by an approximately 1.5 mile, 0.5 grade downhill run

> which the head-end engine and pusher alike would exploit to the full

> preparatory to hitting the roughly six-mile climb, starting about a mile

> East of Montvale, to Buford's Gap. For both head- end engine and pusher

> to get full benefit of that downhill break, pushers had to connect at

> Irving. Precisely, I conclude, No. 2148's story in the photo.

>

> No. 2148 doubtless began working that day from Boaz; instead of returning

> light to Boaz following the Blue Ridge climb, as many (probably most) Boaz

> pushers did, No. 2148 continued all the way to Irving (some nine miles

> ahead) to await there the call for a WB shove. The Irving siding almost

> certainly saw far less traffic (no coal drags) than Boaz. But there it

> was for WB over-Blue Ridge calls as needed. I believe I have read an

> account of even celebrity A-1218 in her working days stalling out WB to

> Blue Ridge and needing help, having earlier passed up the prudent choice,

> given her tonnage that day, at Irving.

>

> I might add: When in the mid-'50s the N&W began aggregating EB

> 200-or-more coal consists at Montvale (from Y+A head-end, Y pusher

> 150-load (approximately) over-Blue Ridge runs, which picked up some 50

> fill loads from an earlier Montvale Turn), what lay straight ahead, with

> little head-start time? Taylor's Mountain! Not in the the same league

> with the 1.2 Blue Ridge grade EB, but mighty pushing and hauling all the

> same for the 2+1 team departing full stop from Montvale, to face little

> get-up-momentum time for Taylor's Mountain. Once over the western slope

> of Taylor's Mountain, pushers would disconnect and run the short distance

> to Irving. At the crossover, depending upon traffic needs, the pushers

> would hole up at the Irving siding or head WB light.

>

> For a piece on the Irving siding, see The Arrow, v.15, n.5.

>

> Frank Gibson

>

>

>

>

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