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I saw your beautiful work over on the MRH blogs...I posted a link on Dave Foxx's thread.
I met Jim Hobbs, who was the son of ET&WNC Master Mechanic Clarence Hobbs, when I was in college in Richmond, Virginia in the early 1990s. I couldn't believe my luck meeting him and how small a world it was! At that time, Jim Hobbs was a VP on the RF&P, and he told me that he had the original number plate from No. 11 after it was torched off the locomotive at its scrapping. I begged him for it numerous times. Coincidentally, I came across a picture taken at Tweetsie Railroad within the last ten years, where several people came together with the number plates for some of the ET locomotives. Mr. Hobbs was holding No. 11's plate in that picture.It's been twenty-five years since I was last at Tweetsie Railroad. If memory serves me correctly, No. 12 was wearing its original plate back then. I could be wrong. But, I believe it's since been removed for security reasons and replaced with a reproduction. I wonder if the reproduction includes the cracks suffered when No. 12 was involved in a collision. The railroad welded that original plate back together when the repairs were made to the ten-wheeler. I recall reading that the plate was in two and almost three pieces after the wreck.