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At any given moment Hagerstown could have any of five railroads represented. By 1974, the WM alone provided three of the color schemes (stately black speedlettering, red white and black "circus", and of course, Chessie the Knife. On top of that, Reading Company SD's Geeps and Centuries were regulars on trains to and from the east, Norfolk and Western came in from the south and west, and the B&O Weverton Branch terminated just east of the WM roundhouse. Just north of town, and actively interchanging with the N&W was the Penn Central.
More likely I'll get my hands on a couple of the Atlas SD-35's that were done in the blue and call it a day.
How long will it be before they show us how to add DCC to a tree?
I was in Tommy Gilbert's about a month ago and he has some WM heavyweight and lightweight cars in stock. Bought one of the lightweights. Good looking car but doesn't match up window wise with the ex C&O car the WM had and it now as the B&O museum.Bob
Yeah. WM Heavy Weight Passenger cars had the windows evenly spaced down the length of the car. Most models follow the PRR/Pullman version with groups of two windows with wider mulls between them.The ex-C&O car at the museum was purchased by the WM around 1970 and painted red/white/black (pretty handsome!) but it was never used in revenue passenger service, which ended with the last mixed train to Durbin in 1958. It was included in many excursion consists, but was primarily used as an office car for inspection trips.Lee