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From UP RR facebook page... and the TO Forumup

The 'Spirit of the Union Pacific' was actually a B-17 bomber in WWII.

UP 9026 will be a commemorative unit for USAF's 70th anniversary. 

Celebrations are undergoing in SA starting this weekend. San Antonio makes sense because it's 
always been a key location for the USAF / USAAF. Multiple bases, no city has had more installations. 
For some years now, everybody joining USAF starts at San Antonio.

If painted as a diesel locomotive...this will really be neat.

Expected to be unveiled on Friday, October 20, 2017 in San Antonio, TX.

Walter

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Last edited by Walter Matuch
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Maybe the color choice in  camouflage is meant to represent a wide timespan of military service.  I could be wrong, have been before, will be again, but I don’t think the POW/MIA flag was around during WWII was it? It’s commonly associated with the Vietnam War.  I think maybe UP was trying to cast a wide historical net with their attempt to pay tribute to the service members.  

Ben 

NotInWI posted:

Maybe the color choice in  camouflage is meant to represent a wide timespan of military service.  

That's the pattern for the BDU uniforms, which existed from the 80s until the early 2000s (though the USMC stopped using them first in favor of their own pattern and every service followed suit later)

I could be wrong, have been before, will be again, but I don’t think the POW/MIA flag was around during WWII was it?

Nope, that wasn't a thing until the early 70s.

 I think maybe UP was trying to cast a wide historical net with their attempt to pay tribute to the service members.  

I agree fully.

Trainplace posted:

I would have preferred an olive drab us army air corps style, but to each his own. 

When I first heard of this design (from a friend at the USAF museum a while back), I'd thought it would be a heritage unit memorializing the actual B-17 that carried the UP name, as the plane was shot down early on (I think on it's 5th mission, but don't quot  me on that) with some of the crew killed and the remainder captured and thrown into Luft Stalags.

FYI, the plane was a B-17F-120-BO, tail #42-30826. It served with the 571st Squadron of the 390th Bomb Group (Heavy). It was built at Boeing in Seattle and the name was painted on the plane at Boeing Field. UP had trackage rights on the line past Boeing Field (as it does now), so UP trains surely rolled nearby as it was readied for war.

trainnut56 posted:

It seems that no matter what a company will try to do too pay respect to one thing or another there are always critics, it is to pay respect to our military.  If you don't like it at least respect the effort.  Cheers Jim

I agree...but you know that some people will complain about the hole in a donut.

I like it, and very much appreciate UP doing it.   (Appreciate them having a steam program, too)

Another thought .... UP instead doing an engine for each of the 5 services, and unveiling them at the same time. Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast Guard. Conjure up some unique paint schemes for each.

Still .... thanks UP.

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