Hey BA-by! It's SWSAT Time!!!
Hope all of my fellow "switcher geeks" had a great and glorious Thanksgiving Day with the one(s) you love.
As many of you know, I am/will be loosely modeling a Kansas City urban industrial area based in the "early 1960s". (In "Weinie Scale".) I want to represent all of the Class 1 railroads during that era. (On the belt trackage of KC, through almost any given area, essentially all of the KC lines would be seen in the form of "transfer" trains/etc.) This little desire means I need to represent 13 railroads. (In addition to "my" railroad, the Kansas City & Gulf.)
Now, I don't want to just "wing it" and run paint schemes of a prototype that aren't appropriate for the early 1960s. I'm not quite wired that way. So, this desire will (has) resulted in some basic "research" into the lines that operated in KC. (I have already done so with some of the lines.) Much of what I have learned has been fascinating and is part of the fun of model railroading for me.
For example, I really was surprised to learn that there were a TON of lines that originally received their switch engines in basic black. The brighter colors/schemes on the switchers of the early 1960s on many lines were typically applied AFTER delivery. FAR more that I would have thought.
(As a side note: As you learned in my SWSAT post last week, a notable aberration to the "basic black" delivery scheme was my own beloved Frisco: They went the opposite direction! The Frisco went from a colorful "first" switcher scheme to basic black! The Frisco was unique in many ways... that was one of them!)
ANYWAY (my lands I'm long winded)...
One of the iconic (to me) schemes of the KC lines was "The Q" (CB&Q). Imagine my surprise to find that the very familiar (to me) gray and black "Slogan" scheme was NOT their ORIGINAL scheme. Nope, it was an all black scheme.
Along that train of thought (oooh, I'm so PUNY!), I offer the following pictorial "Builders Photo" evidence of the Q's "original" switcher paint scheme:
Gotta' admit, even their basic black was a cool scheme!
Now, according to my research thus far, of the 13 lines in KC, the following KC lines originally received switchers in basic black:
CB&Q
Union Pacific
Rock Island
Missouri Pacific
Wabash
Santa Fe
Kansas City Terminal
Kansas City Southern
Thus far, my research has not yet reached the following KC lines:
Gulf Mobile & Ohio
Missouri-Kansas-Texas
Chicago Great Western
Milwaukee Road
Like I said: I was highly surprised to unearth this fact in my research. Now, the fun thing about it is that I now have an opportunity to incorporate my findings into the evolutionary process of my own Kansas City & Gulf line. I think it will be a lot of fun to have KC&G switch engine examples still puttering about on the layout that reflect the original black scheme (and variations of same) in addition to the later applied Gulf Coast Blue and Mountain Mist Gray scheme(s). I like variety in paint schemes... sort of like was found on the old Rock Island.
There you have it! That's it for my SWSAT post. Ain't you SMARTER? See? SEE? I told you before: Ain't I AMAZING???
EDIT: Decided to add the remaining pics of the above subject. Don't know why I didn't originally. What a maroon.