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I know there is another thread on this subject here, but I thought you might like to see the official Norfolk Southern press release about these units.

 


 

TO:   ALL NORFOLK SOUTHERN EMPLOYEES

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

March 1, 2012

 

NORFOLK, VA. – Norfolk Southern is honoring its predecessor railroads during 2012, its 30th anniversary year, by painting 18 new locomotives in commemorative schemes that reflect the heritage of those predecessors.

 

Since the 1820s, hundreds of railroad companies were built, merged, reorganized, and consolidated into what eventually became Norfolk Southern, itself created from the consolidation of Southern Railway and Norfolk and Western Railway in 1982. In 1999, Norfolk Southern expanded the scope of its heritage with its acquisition of a portion of Conrail. The heritage locomotives will represent most of the railroads that played significant roles in Norfolk Southern’s history. The first units will be delivered in March, and all units are expected to be riding the rails by June 1, Norfolk Southern’s 30th

anniversary date.

 

“The heritage locomotives reflect the pride we take in our long and colorful history,” said Norfolk Southern CEO Wick Moorman. “As they travel through our system, these state-of-the-art units in vintage livery will serve as reminders to our customers, employees, and communities that the modern rail network that keeps America competitive today and into the future has deep roots in the nation’s past.”

 

Each paint scheme will be modified to fit contemporary locomotives while staying as true as possible to the original designs. Norfolk Southern employees in Altoona, Pa., and Chattanooga, Tenn., will paint GE ES44AC locomotives, while the EMD SD70ACe units will be painted at Progress Rail Services’ facility in Muncie, Ind. The heritage locomotives will be used to haul freight across Norfolk Southern’s 20,000-mile, 22-state network.

 

The predecessor companies to be represented are listed below. In parentheses are the respective roads each became part of (NW=Norfolk & Western, SR=Southern, CR=Conrail) and the make of locomotives to be painted. Images of the color schemes are available on Norfolk Southern’s web site.

 

  • Central of Georgia Railway (SR, GE) was formed in 1833 to connect Macon, Ga., with Savannah, completing a rail link between Chattanoogaand the port. It was famed for two passenger trains named after prize-winning race horses, the Nancy Hanks and the Man O’ War.
  • Central Railroad of New Jersey (CR, EMD) was the first American railroad to have its employees wear uniforms, and in 1892 one of its locomotives set a world speed record of 105 mph.
  • Conrail (GE) was created by the U.S. government in 1976 from the bankrupt Penn Central, Lehigh & Hudson River, Erie Lackawanna, Central Railroad of New Jersey, Lehigh Valley, Reading and Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines, becoming the largest railroad at the time, with 34,000 route miles.
  • Delaware, Lackawanna and Western (CR, EMD) was created in 1849 to connect the rich anthracite coalfields of the Lackawanna Valley of Pennsylvania to northern New Jersey. A hurricane in 1955 knocked the railroad out of operation for a month, with the resulting financial difficulties forcing it to merge with the Erie Railroad in 1960 to form the Erie Lackawanna Railroad.
  • Erie Railroad (CR, EMD) was key to economic development along the Southern Tier, which includes Binghamton and Elmira, N.Y. In 1851, Secretary of State Daniel Webster was strapped to a rocking chair on an open flatcar, wrapped in a blanket and clutching a bottle of rum, so he could ride the just-completed railroad.
  • Illinois Terminal Railroad (NW, EMD) began life as the Illinois Traction System in 1896 as an interurban electric railroad in central and southern Illinois. Hit by the Great Depression, it was reorganized as the Illinois Terminal in 1937 and attempted to survive as a passenger railroad until relinquishing that business in 1956,when it was acquired by a consortium of railroads. It was operated as a freight railroad until acquired by NW in 1982.
  • Interstate Railroad (SR, GE) was incorporated in 1896 to serve southwestern Virginia coalfields. Despite its name, it operated entirely within Virginia. It was acquired by Southern in 1961.
  • Lehigh Valley Railroad (CR, GE) was built to haul coal, replacing water transport down the Lehigh River, and was also known as the Route of the Black Diamond.
  • New York Central Railroad (CR, EMD) was organized from 10 roads paralleling the Erie Canal between Albany and Buffalo, N.Y., and became known as the “Water Level Route.” Today, the former NYC line between Cleveland and Chicago is the busiest on the NS system, with more than 100 freight trains daily.
  • New York, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad (NW, GE) was commonly referred to as the Nickel Plate Road, a moniker it acquired when the Norwalk (Ohio) Chronicle referred to it in 1881 as “the great New York and St. Louis double track, nickel plated railroad,” supposedly indicative of its solid financial backing.
  • Norfolk Southern Railway (SR, EMD) (not to be confused with today’s Norfolk Southern) was a line serving southeast Virginia and northeast North Carolina, chartered in 1883 and acquired by Southern Railway in 1974.
  • Norfolk & Western Railway (GE) originated as City Point Railroad, a 9-mile road between Petersburg and City Point, Va., in 1836. Following numerous mergers and acquisitions, it became the Norfolk & Western in 1881.
  • Pennsylvania Railroad (CR, GE), incorporated in 1846, billed itself as the “Standard Railroad of the World” and was for many years the largest American railroad by tonnage and revenues. PRR opened the Horseshoe Curve railroad engineering marvel; carried President Lincoln to his inauguration; implemented the “line and staff” organizational structure used by business today; built Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan; and electrified the route between New York and Washington, among its many  achievements.
  • Reading Company (CR, EMD) was one of the first railroads built in America, and built its fortune hauling coal. It featured the first iron railroad bridge in America.
  • Savannah & Atlanta Railway (SR, EMD), began life as the Brinson Railway in 1906, slowly expanding from Savannah toward the Northwest. It was consolidated with other small railroads to become the Savannah & Atlanta in 1917.  Central of Georgia bought the S&A in 1951.
  • Southern Railway (GE) originated as the South Carolina Canal and Rail Road Company in 1827. It put into service the nation’s first regularly scheduled steam passenger service on Christmas Day, 1830, with the locomotive “The Best Friend of Charleston.” The Southern was incorporated in 1894 from the reorganization and consolidation of numerous predecessors and absorbed another 68 railroad companies over the next six years.
  • Virginian Railway (NW, EMD) was the only railroad created through the capital and credit of one man, oil magnate Henry Huttleston Rogers. After building a short line, the Deepwater Railway, to haul coal out of West Virginia and then being blocked by the bigger railroads, he created another railroad, the Tidewater Railway, to reach Norfolk, Va., then combined the two into the Virginian in 1907. It was acquired by N&W in 1959.
  • Wabash Railroad (NW, EMD) was formed in 1877 and served the mid-central U.S. It was acquired by the Pennsylvania Railroad in 1927 and leased to Norfolk & Western in 1960. In 1991, N&W, by then part of Norfolk Southern, purchased the Wabash outright. Made famous by the 1904 song “Wabash Cannonball,” there was in fact no such train by that name until 1949.

 

Norfolk Southern Corporation is one of the nation’s premier transportation companies. Its Norfolk Southern Railway subsidiary operates approximately 20,000 route miles in 22 states and the District of Columbia, serves every major container port in the eastern United States, and provides efficient connections to other rail carriers. Norfolk Southern operates the most extensive intermodal network in the East and is a major transporter of coal and industrial products.

 


Last edited by Rich Melvin
Original Post

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That is great. The modern railroad scene is too boring to me. I was glad to see UP take care of the west with their heritage units and now NS will have the northeast and the south covered. All we need next is for BNSF to release a group of heritage units and there will be heritage units for everyone to see. 

Originally Posted by Walter Matuch:

How can one contact Andy Fletcher, the artist whose name is copyrighted on the NS Heritage locomotive drawings?

 

Does anyone know who he is?

 

Thanks.

 

Walter M. Matuch

 

Well, I hope Andy contacts our own Frank Swathford. Frank can help him out a whole lot.

The PRR version is very nice in maroon, however I hope to see it in Brunswick green please. or both, not being greedy I hope. John

Last edited by John Pignatelli JR.
Originally Posted by John Pignatelli JR.:
Originally Posted by techie:

Oh, well. No Erie Lackawanna. Looks like I'll just take family pix this suimmer.

Buy the Erie and the Lackawanna and run them together, post merger paint schemes  looking for the new paint job schemes.

My post was about my desire to photograph an Erie Lackawanna unit. since there won't be one, my camera will stay home. As for buying two of the models, I'm sure that they will sell for well over $600 each. There's no way I can afford to buy one of those let alone two. Doing that requires an economy.

Originally Posted by falconservice:

"As for buying two of the models, I'm sure that they will sell for well over $600 each."

 

You are forgetting about the MTH RailKing line and the Williams by Bachmann line. They will most likely have diesels in the NS schemes at under $250 each.

 

Andrew


I'd try the MTH engines if they're scale and if I can find one with blown electronics I can "TMCC"

Go to youtube and check out his video. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMkgOR6OTn0
He hand draws them using a straight edge and drafting template.  He currently is a museum staff member at TVRM.  He is a prolific artist.
 
Greg Elems
 
 
Originally Posted by VidKidz:

I like how Swafford posts all of these really slick CGI mockups on the forum, yet Norfolk Southern's official release has what look like photocopied outline sketches with artwork done in crayons.  

 

Originally Posted by Greg Elems:
Go to youtube and check out his video. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMkgOR6OTn0
He hand draws them using a straight edge and drafting template.  He currently is a museum staff member at TVRM.  He is a prolific artist.
 
Greg Elems
 
 
Originally Posted by VidKidz:

I like how Swafford posts all of these really slick CGI mockups on the forum, yet Norfolk Southern's official release has what look like photocopied outline sketches with artwork done in crayons.  

 

Prolific artist or not, they still look like photo copied outlines with crayon fill.  Sorry.  Swafford's renderings look 100% IMO.

I think this is a wonderful thing. I saw 5 Jersey Central Geeps crossing over Rt. 54 in Hammonton, N.J. just before Christmas. They were original paint. Don't know who owned them or where they were headed.What I don't understand is how NS can re-paint any loco to other road monikers. Are they paying royalties? NO I'M NOT KIDDING! Some years back a man in upstate New York owned the rights to the NYC name.  Can't attest to the other names  148th

Originally Posted by VidKidz:

Prolific artist or not, they still look like photo copied outlines with crayon fill.  Sorry.  Swafford's renderings look 100% IMO.

C'mon, VidKidz, lighten up. You are comparing apples to oranges. Andy's illustrations are HAND-DRAWN. Swaffords were done on a computer. It is two completely different worlds, with different skill sets and different results. Appreciate each for what they are.

Good Day Gentlemen,

 

I just so happen to create these paint schemes last year. Thinking of the 611, I created these color schemes. How does it look?

 

Today I would like to present the 21st Century Norfolk and Western GE ES44AC and EMD SD70ACe.  

 

Regards,

Swafford

 

          Drawings by Michael Eby          Painted by Frank Swafford

 

N&W ES44AC V3

N&W SD70ACe V1

Attachments

Images (2)
  • N&W ES44AC V3
  • N&W SD70ACe V1
Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:
Originally Posted by BnO_Hendo:

Call me a grouch, but I'd rather see a press release that said, "NS to resume defunct Steam Excursion specials".

They have already done that!

 

It's called the 21st Century Steam Program and was started over a year ago.

Rich,  great news.  Where can we find out more (like a projected schedule for beginning actual operation)?  Many thanks .

 

          paul m.

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