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The Railwire is not your personal army.
... Being so late, my guess would be they were used to haul potatoes like the SLC cars... something that would require the insulation but not refrigeration (since icing facilities were mostly long gone by then)In fact this page has a very poor 1973 photo of one in Fullerton Ca with what looks like two SLC reefers bracketing it... http://www.trainweb.org/chris/barry.html ...
http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/showPicture.aspx?id=3277315
Not necessarily Ryan, up in Maine they would still be shipping because a lot of the harvested taters were stored in a lot of tater houses and shipped as needed.Jon
Funny you would mention Fullerton, and the year. I lived nearby at the time and they were still hand-icing reefers in '73.
As far as I know the last reefers were iced on the BN in 1974, but old ice-bunker reefers were used for potatoes for at least a few more years. Just like Maine, Washington potatoes were stored in climate-controlled sheds, and could be shipped year-round.
Today. most of the major processors have plants in the Columbia Basin, so fewer potatoes are moved by rail. It's only a few miles from the shed to the plant.