NKP S-1 718 and S-2 741 were both overhauled and stored at Conneaut - and eventually scrapped.
According to Joe Karal, the Conneaut boilermaker who later did work on GTW 2-8-2 4070, one or more of the RDG 2100's, Daylight 4449 and NKP 765, the Conneaut Shop was closed in May 1958. After being notified during his shift that they were done with steam - and them, most of the shop employees could care less about giving the company anything else. Joe said that he didn't know anything else so he went back to work, driving staybolts for the rest of his shift.
He was a priceless resource for locomotive restorations and had an equal number of priceless stories about the bar fights between different nationalities - a very big issue in Conneaut which also had lots of lakeboat types and shop pranks. There were bars that catered to Fins, Poles, Germans (the machinists), on and on.
At least once the piping gang got in a hurry and plumbed up a steamer BEFORE the cab gang had reinstalled the cab. As this was piecework (a flat sum for the crew that installed the cab) they "were going to show the so-and-so's who did the piping". They had the overhead crane set the cab in place - kinda - and then had the crane operator use a set of driving wheels to mash the cab down over the piping. Undoubtedly some punches were thrown along with a lot of cursing, also. The piping gang didn't do that again.
Even as an old man, he could beat anyone at arm wrestling. However, he didn't want to drive to Fort Wayne from Conneaut - over 200 miles. So member Bob McCown would drive from Cleveland to Conneaut, pick up Joe and haul him to Fort Wayne for a few days work. Then Bob would drive Joe home to Conneaut and then double back to Cleveland. This happened dozens of times during 1977 to 1979. Joe's favorite saying after a days work was "Well, we didn't get much done today but we'll give it hell tomorrow". Priceless memories...........