A
History of Cincinnati & Lake Erie 640
By Frank Hicks
Foreword
The true
interurban era – the period during which almost the entirety of the Midwest was
traversed by an interconnected network of electric railways – lasted some four
decades starting at the beginning of the 20th century. During that
period hundreds of cars carried millions of people over thousands of miles of
track each year, connecting towns small and large with frequent, clean, speedy,
and safe transportation. People rode in big wooden combines built by Niles,
steel heavyweights built by Jewett, lightweight coaches built by Kuhlman or
deluxe cars built by St. Louis. They took the interurbans everywhere.
But it
wasn’t just people riding under the wires. At first the carriage of freight was
incidental to the electric railways, an afterthought. But after the Great War,
as more and more people bought Model Ts and fewer and fewer rode the rails, the
transport of freight took on a new urgency for the interurbans. Within just a
few short years the industry was hanging by a thread – and more often than not,
that thread was a profitable freight business. Interurbans were able to provide
personalized, even door-to-door service that steam railroads could not, and
they did it despite being unable to interchange freight cars or even to run
long freight trains during the day. Among large interurban systems, those that
were the most successful at carrying freight – the Indiana Railroad, the
Pacific Electric, the Illinois Terminal – invariably lasted the longest. And in
Ohio, the birthplace of the interurban, the interurban system that lasted the
longest was the Cincinnati & Lake Erie.
Title Photo: C&LE 640 looks sharp with a fresh coat of paint at Moraine Shops, nerve center of the railroad, on June 9, 1936. GWN photo from the Krambles-Peterson Archive.
Acknowledgements
Thanks are due to Randy Hicks and Richard Schauer for assisting with writing and proofreading this article. Art Peterson's help with providing photos was invaluable, as was that of Richard Schauer, who scanned into the computer the museum's file of documentation on car 640. Bill Wulfert also provided photos for the article.
Freight Under Wires
Interurban
lines weren’t designed to carry freight. With only a handful of exceptions,
interurban railways – most of them built between 1900 and 1910 – were designed
cheaply and with a specific size and type of car in mind. The standard
Midwestern interurban passenger car of that era was between 50 and 62 feet
long, about 8 to 9 feet wide, and was designed to ride over streetcar tracks
with curves as tight as 35 foot radius. This was not only a relic of interurban
cars’ origins as long-haul streetcars but, in most Midwestern cities, a requirement
stemming from the routing of the rails down the center of the street through
the towns along the way. Furthermore, to reduce construction costs, electric
railways often followed the rolling landscape rather than spending money on
expensive cuts and fills. After all, a lone interurban car had little trouble
climbing a 3-4% grade.
But as
interurban passenger traffic fell during the 1920s, the interurban lines turned
to freight – long the source of most income for the steam railroads – to make
up the gap in revenue. It was not an easy proposition. First, due to tight
curves and narrow loading gauges, interchange of steam railroad freight cars
was limited except for short stretches of track. This meant that the
interurbans had to use freight cars specially designed for electric railway
service. Second, train lengths were often severely limited, often not only by
steep grades but by municipal restrictions placed on how many cars could be
hauled down Main Street. Lima, Ohio, for instance, passed an ordinance in 1907
restricting train lengths to two cars during daylight hours. The result was
that a standard three-man crew might be able to transport two or three carloads
of freight on an interurban rather than dozens of carloads on a steam railroad.
Emblematic of Ohio Electric's freight power was motor 701, rebuilt from an 1897 passenger car in the company shops in 1909. It is shown at the NCR lumber yard in Dayton during the 1910s. Krambles-Peterson Archive.
But the
interurban lines adapted nonetheless. Many used electric locomotives for
hauling freight cars. General Electric and Baldwin-Westinghouse both offered
steeplecab locomotives built to standardized designs, but more common were homebuilt,
makeshift locomotives fashioned in interurban company shops. These often
consisted of a flatcar, fitted with electric car trucks and motors, topped off
with a small cab in the middle and known appropriately as a “cab-on-flat.”
Other interurbans built their own steeplecabs out of wood or steel, typically
using off-the-shelf motors and control equipment or components salvaged from
retired passenger cars.
But just
as common were freight motors (or box motors). These were motorized boxcars
that could haul a couple of freight cars but could also carry a car’s worth of
LCL (less-than-car-load) freight in their interior. LCL freight comprised the
vast majority of freight carried by most interurbans, and freight motors
allowed the function of the locomotive to be combined with an ability to haul
freight on board. Many – in fact, most – interurban freight motors were
constructed in the company shops or rebuilt from disused passenger cars.
Several interurban lines ordered freight motors new, but even on lines that did,
the purpose-built freight motors tended to be outnumbered by homebuilt
examples.
Lake Shore Electric 42, rebuilt from a 1906 Niles interurban coach, was typical of many interurban lines' homebuilt or home-modified freight motors. It is shown at the Detroit terminal of the Eastern Michigan in the company of C&LE 646 in about 1931. RAP photo from the Krambles-Peterson Archive.
And there
were the freight trailers. Many were rebuilt from steam railroad freight cars
or constructed in the company shops, but during the 1920s, a large number were purpose-built
by car builders. Late in the decade the Central Electric Railway Association
(CERA) developed a set of standard designs for interurban box trailers and over
100 cars were built to this general outline during the next few years. Along
with flat cars, gondolas, and even piggyback flats – all designed or modified
for tight curves and clearances – these interurban freight cars made possible
the expanding freight business that was, increasingly, keeping the interurban
industry just barely afloat.
A Lake Shore Electric cab-on-flat locomotive is coupled to a standard interurban box trailer and a flatcar. The boxcar is 801; identical car 810 is at IRM and has been completely restored. Charley Sheets photo, Illinois Railway Museum Collection.
The types
of freight being carried varied considerably from line to line. Even interurban
lines without much dedicated freight infrastructure often carried newspapers,
express packages, or milk on the front platform; many interurban lines had more
combines than coaches on their rosters, the baggage compartment the better to
carry a small amount of LCL freight and packages on each trip. As freight
became more of a focus during the 1920s interurban lines built or expanded
freight houses in large cities where companies could drop off small amounts of
freight for transportation on the railway. The freight house would load
packages into a freight motor or trailer spotted at the building, and freight
could be picked up or dropped off at smaller stations as the train proceeded
down the railway as well.
There was
also carload freight, though without the ability to interchange cars with steam
railroads, this was by necessity limited. But larger industries along the
interurban might ship freight or commodities by the carload, even if it might
have to be trans-loaded where the wires ended. And shipment of bulk commodities
such as gravel or coal, while not common, was also occasionally done. A few
interurban lines experimented during the 1920s and 1930s with newer forms of
what would eventually be called intermodal freight transport. The Lake Shore
Electric and North Shore Line ran trailer-on-flat-car (piggyback flat) freight
service while the Milwaukee Electric and Cincinnati & Lake Erie
experimented with carrying shipping containers. But on the whole these
innovations, too far ahead of their time and too limited in scope, were
unsuccessful. The bread and butter of interurban freight was always express and
LCL cargo transportation.
From Erie to the Ohio
by Interurban
Ohio was
home to some of the most storied interurban lines in the country. Its fertile
farmland, dotted with small cities that were regional centers of commerce and
manufacturing, was prime territory for electric railway lines. Like Indiana
(but unlike Illinois) these lines were built and operated by a large number of
different companies. In western Ohio, it started in 1896 when Dayton Traction
constructed a line from Dayton south some nine miles to Miamisburg. These early
lines were barely interurbans – more suburban streetcar routes – but before
long the electric railways expanded.
In 1900
the Dayton Springfield & Urbana built an interurban line from Dayton
northeast to Springfield, extending north to Bellefontaine and east to the
state capital in Columbus within two years. In 1902 the line to Miamisburg was
extended south to Cumminsville, on the northern fringes of Cincinnati, where a
connection with the Cincinnati Street Railway’s broad-gauge streetcar system
was made.
It wasn’t
until 1908 that the system that would eventually become the Cincinnati &
Lake Erie was completed. By that time the Ohio Electric (OE) had been formed to
unify the operations of several smaller interurban lines in western Ohio. The
OE system ran north from Cumminsville to Bellefontaine, east to Columbus, west
to Richmond and Union City in Indiana, and included a line from Lima to Fort
Wayne, Indiana. The next year, 1908, the route north from Springfield was
extended from Bellefontaine all the way to a terminus in downtown Toledo. There
a connection was made with Lake Shore Electric interurban cars bound for
Cleveland and Detroit United (later Eastern Michigan-Toledo) cars bound for
Detroit. From Toledo to Cincinnati one could ride an Ohio Electric car for 220
miles, with another 45 miles on the branch to Columbus. It was a true
interurban, but it wouldn’t last. In 1921 OE went bankrupt and the various
interurban lines were once again made independent.
A freight motor on the Indianapolis Columbus & Eastern loads freight at Greenville. Krambles-Peterson Archive.
What
emerged was a network of smaller, weaker interurbans that in some respects were
only as strong as their weakest connecting line. Lines that would eventually
make up the C&LE included the Cincinnati & Dayton, which ran between
Dayton and Cumminsville and had separated from OE in 1918; the Indiana Columbus
& Eastern (IC&E), which ran from Dayton to Springfield, Lima and
Columbus; and the Lima-Toledo Railroad, which connected with the IC&E in
Lima and ran to Toledo. The Columbus Newark & Zanesville, which ran east
from Columbus, and the Dayton & Western, which connected the other lines
with the Indiana interurban network in Richmond, Indiana, were also made
independent.
And as separate
companies these lines proceeded through five years of the Roaring Twenties. But
times were not as good for the interurbans as for the country at large.
Increased prosperity meant more automobiles and better roads, which meant fewer
riders. The ex-OE lines were deteriorated, out-of-date, and hadn’t developed
much freight business. In common with many smaller interurban lines across the
country, the western Ohio lines were slowly dying.
Into this
breach stepped Dr. Thomas Conway. Born in 1882, Conway had attended the
University of Pennsylvania, graduating in 1908 with a doctorate. He had taught
at Penn’s Wharton School of Finance until he started taking consulting
positions during the Great War with some small interurban lines. In 1922 he
joined forces with some financial backers to embark on an experiment to put
some of his theories to the test. He and his associates purchased the Aurora
Elgin & Chicago, a failing interurban line in Illinois, and went about
rehabilitating the property. Over the span of just two or three years he
brought it back from the brink of insolvency by improving the right-of-way,
ordering new and modern rolling stock, and instituting high-speed operation.
But the CA&E was a relatively short-haul line with limited potential.
Conway was looking for something bigger.
He saw it
in western Ohio. In 1926 he and his associates purchased the Cincinnati &
Dayton, renaming it the Cincinnati Hamilton & Dayton (CH&D). The line
was 54 miles long and was among the most run-down properties in the state.
Virtually no equipment on the line had been built since 1908; power came from
an uneconomical coal-fired power plant; freight business was poor and only
contributed 20% of gross revenue; the company made no profit. Conway was sure
he could do better.
One of the modern interurban cars Conway purchased for the CH&D was this 100-series combine built by Kuhlman in 1927.
Conway’s
plan was to modernize the property, improve passenger service, and develop a
freight service in cooperation with adjoining lines to provide transshipment of
LCL freight from Toledo on the Great Lakes to Cincinnati on the Ohio River –
and all points in between. New Birney cars were bought for the streetcar lines
in Hamilton, 40 new wooden freight trailers were procured, and 20 brand new
interurban cars were purchased from Cincinnati Car Company: ten suburban
lightweights and ten modern interurban combines and coaches. Power was now
bought commercially and an empty factory in Moraine, just south of Dayton, was
bought and rebuilt as a new shop complex.
Things
started to turn around. But as they did, interurban lines around the CH&D
were starting to fail. Conway saw that he needed to preserve the route from
Toledo to Cincinnati, and the best way to do that was to take over the other
lines with which he connected: the Indiana Columbus & Eastern (IC&E)
between Dayton, Columbus, and Lima; and the Lima-Toledo Railroad (LTRR) north
of Lima. At the end of 1928 the state of Ohio approved the merger of the
CH&D, IC&E, and LTRR.
Anticipating
approval by the Interstate Commerce Commission, which was still pending, Conway
nonetheless unified operations and divided the operating territory into
divisions: the Cincinnati Division (54 miles long) south of Dayton, the
Columbus Division (71 miles long) from Dayton to Columbus; and the Toledo
Division (138 miles long) from Springfield to Toledo. The new system was 323
miles long and owned 200 cars – a true behemoth in the interurban industry, and
a company determined to be a pacesetter as well.
Through
express trains started running while extensive work to rehabilitate the
right-of-way and ease grades south of Dayton was undertaken. Studies were also
begun in cooperation with Cincinnati Car Company to develop a revolutionary type
of high-speed interurban car. In August 1929, Conway ordered 20 of the new
high-speed cars and 15 new freight motors – both of them rare investments in an
industry that was continuing to suffer from automobile and truck competition.
In October, through express freight service between Cincinnati and Cleveland
over Conway’s system and the Lake Shore Electric was inaugurated, with freight
traveling 340 miles in 18 hours (reduced to 12 hours in 1931). And on the last
day of the year, approval for the merger having been obtained from the ICC, the
new line was officially christened the Cincinnati & Lake Erie.
A Modern Freight
Motor
Conway saw
that the success of his interurban line would rest in roughly equal measure on
its two principal sources of revenue: passenger fares and freight traffic. And
he believed that the key to success in both was speed. For passenger service,
that meant high-speed cars. The 20 “Red Devil” cars delivered by Cincinnati Car
Company in the summer of 1930 were designed for comfort and economy but especially
for speed.
The "Red Devil" high-speed cars revolutionized interurban car design and were forerunners of the Indiana Railroad high-speeds and the Brill Bullet cars. Cincinnati Car Company builder's photo.
For
freight service, speed meant a number of different moving parts working
together. Freight terminals had to function efficiently to route incoming
freight shipments. Interchange arrangements and through operations over other
lines had to be coordinated effectively. Switching in yards had to be done
quickly and safely. And freight trains had to make it over the road reliably
and as rapidly as possible.
That last
item would be difficult to accomplish using the rolling stock Conway inherited
when he bought the CH&D. Like most traction lines, it had a hodgepodge of
freight motors, some homebuilt or rebuilt from passenger cars. It also didn’t
have nearly enough for the increase in freight traffic Conway foresaw. He could
have tried to rebuild some of his old wooden interurban cars as makeshift
freight motors; but his new shops in Moraine were already keeping busy
retrofitting and modernizing passenger cars. So he did what was, in late 1929,
unthinkable: he ordered a series of brand new freight motors.
The 15
motors ordered by Conway on August 21, 1929 would not actually be 100% new
cars. The bodies would be completely new, constructed by Cincinnati Car
Company. But the trucks, motors, and control equipment would come from old
wooden IC&E passenger cars that were being scrapped. Late in the year
dismantling of these cars began and the electrical and mechanical components
started to make their way to Cincinnati.
But even
with elderly innards, the new freight motors would be as top-of-the-line as
anything hauling freight for an interurban anywhere in the country. The
CH&D had ordered a single freight motor in 1927 from Kuhlman, numbering it
604, and initial plans for the 1929 order were for a similar design: double-ended
with deeply curved ends, truss rods to support the body under a large baggage
door, a shallow arched roof. But plans were changed; the new freight motors
would be a new design that, perhaps coincidentally, shared a handsome and
modern look with the new high-speed passenger cars on order.
Cincinnati Car Company builder's photos of car 639. The top photo is taken from the rear looking forward; the bottom photo is looking towards the rear of the car. Note the air tanks and walls reinforced with boiler tubes. IRM Collection courtesy Bill Fronczek.
The new
motors, which would be numbered 635-649, were solid steel cars built in
Cincinnati alongside the “Red Devils.” The design was for a single-ended car,
but one that had a full set of controls and headlights at both ends for use in
switching. The riveted steel bodies had a drop girder under a single centered
baggage door on each side; a standard canvas-over-wood roof with “lobster trap”
slats over the rear bonnet to protect the roof; end windows set directly in the
posts, eschewing window frames for a cleaner and more modern appearance. The
front cab had a door on the left side while the rear cab had a door set in the
end of the car, rather than the side, but offset to the left to leave room for
the headlight.
For illumination,
the new motors would be positively decked out. Each end featured a dim
headlight mounted low on the dash for street running as well as a larger,
removable arc headlight mounted above it directly under the center window. The
mounting bracket for this larger headlight had an unusual feature: it could be
adjusted to “droop,” or point downward at an angle, using a mechanical linkage
designed in the 1920s by IC&E Master Mechanic F.J. Foote. The reason was
that motorists in cities had objected to the blinding arc headlights shining in
their faces as freight trains proceeded down the street, yet the dim street
running headlight had proven largely ineffective even if only used in street
running sections. The front end of the car also featured additional
illumination in the form of two number boxes protruding from the dash on either
side of the headlight which featured black numbers on a frosted, backlit piece
of glass. The rear end sported simply a painted-on number. Brackets for the
usual kerosene-fired marker lanterns were provided at all corners.
The front motorman's position of car 639. Main cutout switch above and hand brake below the left window; motor cutout switch above and headlight tilting handle below the center window; controller and brake stand below the right window. The box in the ceiling may be headlight resistors. IRM Collection courtesy Bill Fronczek.
At both
ends, the motorman was granted an austere wooden bench seat upon which he could
sit to manipulate his Westinghouse controller and brake valve. At the front
end, behind the wooden bench sat a stove and coal bin for warmth, with a barrier
wall made of boiler tubes behind that to prevent freight from sliding forward
in the event of a sudden stop; at the rear end the boiler tube barrier was
mounted directly behind the bench seat. At both ends the boiler tube wall had a
doorway to the motorman’s left for walking back into the car’s interior.
The rear motorman's position on car 639 was much simpler than the front operating position. IRM Collection courtesy Bill Fronczek.
While
motors 635-649 were the most modern cars of their type anywhere from the floor
up, below the floor the reuse of trucks, motors, control, and brake equipment
made them decidedly outdated mechanically. All 15 members of the fleet had AMM
brakes with M-2B triple valves, D2EG air compressors, S6 governors, and
Westinghouse HL control. Cars 635-638 were fitted with four 90-horsepower
Westinghouse 121 motors, ancient M-15 brake valves, and type 15-B2 master
controllers, all salvaged from IC&E combines built in 1908. The remaining
11 cars numbered 639-649 were fitted with four 100-horsepower Westinghouse 303A
motors, M-22 brake valves, and type 189-D2 master controllers, this equipment
salvaged from a variety of combines built for Ohio Electric in 1911 and 1912.
All of the motors were equipped with outdated Taylor MCB trucks with the
exception of cars 642-644, which got Standard C80P trucks. The entire series
was fitted with Van Dorn radial MCB couplers, boiler tube pilots at both ends, US
trolley bases, curved air horns at the front, air whistles at both ends, and MU jumper sockets at both
ends for multiple-unit operation.
The
strikingly modern appearance of the new freight motors extended to their livery
as well. The dark Duco 244-1675 red formerly used by the CH&D was retained
by the C&LE. The new motors were dark red overall with tan roofs, black
tack molding and underbody equipment, and gold lettering. As built the car
number appeared in a painted-on box twice on each side of the car, low on the car
side over each truck. The rectangular C&LE emblem appeared twice on each
side of the car as well, over the trucks, high on the car side. To the right of
the baggage door the C&LE name was painted along the belt rail while in the
lower left corner of the car side was painted several lines of dimensional
information in small lettering. A gold pin-stripe along the floor of the car,
from end to end, completed the appearance of the new cars.
Cincinnati & Lake
Erie Days
The
Cincinnati Car Company was on hard times in 1929. It had been months since the
car builder’s last order for electric cars, a series of curve-side suburban
cars built for West Penn. When the freight motor order from the CH&D
(renamed C&LE while the cars were being built) arrived in August, the firm
got right to work. Late in the year the mechanical and electrical components
arrived from Moraine, where the railway had disassembled many of its old wooden
combines. Newly-built bodies were united with refurbished running gear and
early in 1930 the cars started to roll out of the Cincinnati works. On February
19, 1930 the first six cars arrived at Moraine shops under their own power in
two trains of three cars each. Car 640 was the last car of this initial group,
but within the next two weeks the remaining nine cars of the order were
completed and shipped out to Moraine. The “Red Devil” passenger cars wouldn’t
start arriving for another three months but the first modern electric cars
built for the C&LE were ready for service.
Although not of great quality, this photo does nevertheless show car 640 early in its career, still with its original lettering. Judging from the long shadows and the marker lantern it's being readied for overnight work. Author's collection.
They were
immediately put to work. Conway’s ambitions of making the C&LE a major
gateway for LCL freight and a serious competitor of the steam roads for local
carload freight traffic were starting to be realized. The C&LE had followed
up its freight motor order with orders for more box trailers and gravel cars
and it had invested heavily in easing the grades on Symmes Hill and College
Hill on the Cincinnati Divison. Freight agents were also active in several
major cities along the line, soliciting for business from companies as yet
unaware of the depths the nascent economic recession would reach.
The new
freight motors, fast, powerful and reliable, took over the lion’s share of the
freight haulage for the C&LE. In October 1929 daily through freight service
on the LSE to Cleveland had been inaugurated. Freight traveled in both
directions each night, one way handled by an LSE motor and the other by a
C&LE one, departing at 6:00pm and arriving at their destinations 340 miles
away by noon the next day. In 1931 the pace was quickened, with “first morning”
arrival now at 6:00am. Also in 1931, through freight service was begun from
Cincinnati to Detroit in coordination with the Eastern Michigan-Toledo (EMT).
This line had already been an important feeder for the C&LE, carrying auto
parts from Flint and Pontiac along with numerous products of Detroit’s
factories to Ohio via the interurban.
Car 636 in Lima around 1933. Note that the car has already received a second, slightly modified paint job. V.L. Smith photo from the Krambles-Peterson Archive.
But signs
of economic decline were already appearing. By the end of 1930, gross revenue
had declined from $3,081,600 in 1929 to $2,532,700 – a drop of some 15%. Net
income was just $20,900. The economic outlook was increasingly bleak as
companies continued to furlough and lay off employees. The effect on the
C&LE was obvious, as fewer workers rode the cars to their jobs, fewer salesmen
(an important constituency) could make a go of continuing on their rounds, and
companies with reduced workforces shipped fewer products by rail. During 1931
the struggling EMT abandoned its lines to Pontiac and Flint, cutting off
important sources of freight traffic. In
July the C&LE took over management of the faltering Dayton & Western,
its primary link to the Indiana Railroad, which was a major contributor of
freight traffic as well.
Conway was
doing what he could to cut costs and keep the C&LE profitable. Moraine
Shops rebuilt interurban cars for one-man crews and sped up suburban cars to
better compete with the automobile. And in August 1931, the C&LE reached a
new agreement with its unions that reduced the number of required crewmen on
long-haul freights from three to two. Previous to this, all freight trains had
required a motorman, conductor, and brakeman. While locals – which did a lot of
switching – would continue to have three-man crews, long-haul road freights
would see a reduction in crew size.
Of all of
the freight trains run by the C&LE, some 60% were long-haul freights. These
trains, including hotshot through runs to Cleveland and Detroit, dropped or
added freight cars at major cities and freight houses, but didn’t stop at small
towns, nor did they pick up or drop off LCL freight. Freight trains weren’t
scheduled; all ran as extras, and while there were departure times that were
effectively recommendations, leeway was given to accommodate a shipment that
might arrive slightly late or to allow an early departure if everything was
loaded. The railway’s network of freight terminals fed the freights: they
accepted deliveries until 5:00pm, after which loading and switching of cars
(done by the road crew – Conway had eliminated dedicated switching crews)
commenced. Sometime between 6:00pm and 1:00am or so, depending on the run, the
train would be ready and would depart, with scheduled arrival in the morning
before passenger traffic picked up. Train lengths varied widely; hotshot
freights typically had 3-4 trailers but lengthier trains of as many as 8-12
freight trailers were sometimes run. Trains to Columbus averaged about three
trailers but Springfield-Lima trains were typically longer, with four or five
trailers being more typical. Freight trains on the Toledo Division bound for
interchange with other lines often had 8-10 trailers. The freight motors
typically hauled their trains solo; although capable of MU operation, that
capability was mostly used for deadheading equipment.
Motor 642 is at the head of a four-car train in Springfield on August 10, 1936. Note the white flags; all freight trains ran as extras on the C&LE. J.P. Shuman photo from the Krambles-Peterson Archive.
The local
runs, which comprised the remainder of freight trains, picked up what was left
over. Unlike the long-haul freights, locals could operate during either day or
nighttime hours. They were slower and made stops at small towns along the
C&LE, sometimes for LCL shipments and sometimes for delivery of carload
freight to individual businesses. There were numerous carload customers along
the C&LE including Champion Paper in Hamilton, National Cash Register in
Dayton, and Metal Casket Company in Springfield. The line also shipped bulk
materials like cement and stone. But about 90% of the interurban’s freight
business came from LCL freight, most of it accepted and loaded at the freight
terminals.
As the
Great Depression deepened, the fortunes of the C&LE fell. The end of 1931
brought the company’s first year of financial loss. On January 16, 1932 the
state ruled that all C&LE freight trains must have three-man crews; the
two-man crew was a dead issue. Some two weeks later, on the 28th,
the C&LE went into receivership. It didn’t have the cash to pay the
interest on debt related to the grading projects of 1929 and 1930. Conway was
appointed receiver and operations continued.
On June
30, 1932, the Fort Wayne-Lima quit, severing the direct connection between
those cities and one of the C&LE’s interchange points with the Indiana
Railroad. But more significant for the C&LE itself was the wreck that
occurred that same day: a C&LE lightweight collided head-on at speed with a
hotshot freight headed by an LSE freight motor. Nine people were killed. A
month later, a Dayton & Troy freight train fell through that line’s bridge
over the Miami River. The line was formally abandoned days later. And the worst
blow yet to the interurban’s freight business fell on October 4th
when the Eastern Michigan-Toledo abandoned its Detroit-Toledo line. The
C&LE’s second most important interchange connection was gone.
C&LE 640 in storage late in its C&LE service life. This later, simplified paint scheme omitted striping and some lettering. Note that it seems to have lost most of its stovepipe. IRM Collection.
The
company’s finances were in a freefall. Net operating losses for 1932 totaled
some $387,000 and gross revenue was down 25% from 1931. The operating ratio was
123.8: the railroad was running too many trains, both freight and passenger,
and those trains were running far short of capacity. During 1933 steps were
taken to cut costs; redundant and little-used passenger runs were abandoned
while freight train departures were rationalized. By the end of 1933 the
operating ratio was down to 104 and operating losses were some $45,000, both
figures that held steady through 1934.
By the
mid-1930s it seemed as though the C&LE might be able to survive the Depression.
Although it was still losing money, the operating loss was reduced to $33,000
in 1935. And investment in the physical plant was also being made. Cars were
being repainted, including the freight motor fleet. The 635-649 series cars
were repainted in a slightly simplified livery. The car numbers no longer had
boxes painted around them; there was only one herald, on the upper car side to
the left of the baggage door, while the company name was painted higher on the
car side to the right of the baggage door; the stripe at the floor line was omitted; and the dimensional information was
painted in the lower right corner instead of the lower left. Other changes were
minimal except that the entire fleet lost the pilots at the rear ends of the
cars.
Car 642, shown at Toledo with a variety of freight trailers in the yard, sports an unusual variation of the simplified freight motor livery. It has lost one herald and the boxes around the numbers but retains its sill stripe and lower company name. Author's collection.
But then
in 1936 the C&LE’s fortunes began to really slide. In August of the
previous year there had been another wreck that had killed six people. In April
1936 two C&LE cars collided head-on, killing two, and just a month later in
late May a “Red Devil” hit a freight motor, resulting in the death of the freight
train’s motorman. Riders began deserting the interurban in droves due to fears
over safety. Revenue plummeted.
As 1937
began the outlook was bleak. The economy was sinking again; the tepid recovery
of the previous couple of years seemed over. On May 9 the Dayton & Western
was abandoned, as was the Indiana Railroad’s line to Richmond. The connection
between the Indiana and Ohio interurban networks was severed and the C&LE
had lost another major contributor of freight traffic.
A varied lineup of freight power is on display at Detroit Avenue in Cleveland c1936. From left to right, C&LE 632, an earlier wooden freight motor; an LSE homebuilt steel motor; C&LE 637; and an LSE freight motor rebuilt from an ancient Barney & Smith interurban coach. Krambles-Peterson Archive.
But the
axe truly fell a week later when, on May 15, the Lake Shore Electric’s freight
handlers and clerks went on strike. The LSE, hanging by a thread and unable to
meet their demands, immediately abandoned all freight service. The effect on
the C&LE was immediate: freight traffic on the Toledo Division fell some
50%. Without a way to replace that revenue – and there was none, with passenger
traffic down and no freight traffic to be had – the operating ratio shot
impossibly high. Permission to abandon the Toledo Division in its entirety was
granted for November 19, 1937.
With
abandonment of the line to Toledo, Conway’s great gateway between the Great
Lakes and the Ohio River was closed, and with that closure most through freight
traffic on the C&LE was curtailed. But freight service between Cincinnati,
Dayton, Springfield, and Columbus was still key to the survival of the reduced
C&LE. However in 1938 the state courts ruled that Stordor Freight, a
C&LE subsidiary and the source of much of the interurban’s LCL traffic, had
to close. Stordor was a freight forwarder, a company that would assemble
quantities of small LCL freight and ship them by the carload for reduced
haulage rates, pocketing the difference. But unlike most freight forwarders,
which shipped by the cheapest way, Stordor always shipped on the C&LE even
if the forwarder lost money on the deal – a practice ruled discriminatory. At
around the same time, Hamilton County won a court case that required the
C&LE to relocate its tracks along a stretch of the Cincinnati Division for
a road widening project. The interurban couldn’t afford this project,
particularly with its freight business in shambles following the closure of
Stordor, and requested permission to abandon its freight operations. On June 3,
1938, the last freight shipments were accepted on the C&LE. The last train
left Cumminsville for Columbus, arriving early the next morning. All of the
freight motors were put into storage. The era of interurban freight in Ohio was
over.
What was
left of the C&LE main line lasted about another year, though the
Dayton-Columbus line was abandoned in October, leaving only the stretch from
Dayton to Hamilton. That route, as well as a short freight line in
Cumminsville, was abandoned in May 1939, leaving only the Dayton city operation
and the line to Moraine. Those were abandoned on September 27, 1941: the true
end of the C&LE.
Rebuilding and
Retirement
As freight
service declined in early 1938, the 635-649 series freight motors were put into
storage at Moraine Shops. Conway hoped that the modern freight motors would
find buyers among other interurban lines, much as the “Red Devil” high-speeds
had been sold to Lehigh Valley Transit in Pennsylvania. The 635-649 series
freight motors were put up for auction in 1937 but none sold. In May 1938 all 15
freight motors were moved to Cincinnati and around the same time ownership
reverted to the equipment trust holder, Railway Accessories Company. Another
auction in June didn’t result in any sales. But the cars were kept in storage.
A rare color photo of motor 641 shows it in March 1940 in Sapulpa, Oklahoma after having been sold to the Tulsa-Sapulpa. Frank E. Butts photo from the Krambles-Peterson Archive.
In 1939
three of the modern freight motors were sold. The buyer was the Illinois
Terminal, which rebuilt them for use as unpowered freight trailers and numbered
them 601-603. Later that same year another three of the C&LE motors were
purchased by American Aggregates Corporation, a large gravel mining corporation
with several quarries around the Midwest. Cars 639, 640, and 649 were bought by
AAC and sent to the company’s headquarters in Greenville, Ohio to be rebuilt as
diesel-electrics. AAC would eventually purchase a total of seven of the
C&LE motors, rebuilding all of them into diesel-electric locomotives. Of
this first group of three, cars 639 and 649 were heavily rebuilt with shorter
carbodies and one Cummins L1600 diesel.
Car 640
saw fewer changes: it retained its original lines and received two Cummins L1600
power plants. The car had all of its electrical equipment removed save its
traction motors; it also kept its original Taylor MCB trucks. Besides the two
Cummins diesel engines, the interior of the body acquired a 300-kW generator,
small auxiliary generator, belt-driven air compressor, fuel tanks, and other
new equipment. Heavy steel channels were welded onto the car’s underframe to
strengthen it, mostly to help support the heavy diesel equipment. The roof
walks were removed and a thin sheet metal roof was installed directly over the
original wood-and-canvas roof, which was left in place. Much of the
idiosyncratic interior appointments such as the coal stove, boiler tube cargo
barriers, and headlight drooping levers were removed. The handsome dark red
livery with gold striping gave way to an overall white color with dark blue
stripes at the floor and belt rail.
American Aggregates 640 is pictured in its short-lived silver paint scheme on August 17, 1941. It is in service at the Oxford gravel pit. Donald S. Moore photo from IRM Collection.
Thus
rebuilt, car 640 – still keeping its C&LE number – was sent to the AAC
gravel pit in Oxford, Michigan, some 35 miles north of Detroit along the New
York Central’s Bay City Branch. The other six C&LE motors rebuilt to
diesel-electrics were distributed to various AAC operations. Car 637 had its
height (but not length) reduced and went to Urbana, Ohio. Car 639 had its
length (but not height) reduced and, fitted with only one Cummins diesel, went
to New Miami, Ohio. Cars 645 and 646 both went to Green Oaks, Michigan; 647
went all the way to Port Washington, New York; and 649 went to Columbus, Ohio.
This left five of the modern freight motors remaining, and all of those went to
other traction operations: three went to the west coast and were rebuilt with
Brill 27MCB3X trucks and GE Type M control equipment for 1200-volt operation on
the Central California Traction line out of Stockton, while the last two went
to the Tulsa-Sapulpa Union Railway in Oklahoma and operated essentially
unmodified there until 1955.
Two photos of American Aggregates 640 in service at the Oxford gravel pit on July 17, 1948. By this time it had already been painted in a simplified blue and white livery with a silver roof. Both photos by James J. Buckley, from the Krambles-Peterson Archive.
The AAC
diesel-electrics soldiered on for many more years than their sisters, all of
which were retired from service in the 1940s and 1950s. They led a rather
obscure existence, switching gravel and sand cars around various industrial
mining operations. Largely operating in areas off-limits to the public, they
were rarely photographed and good records are difficult to come by. For car
(now locomotive) 640, it remained at the gravel pit in Oxford until 1984, by
which time it was nearly 55 years old. That year it was sold to the Waterfront
Electric Railway in downtown Toledo. The WER was a small tourist line owned by Charley
Sheets. Operation consisted of a GE 25-tonner towing a Chicago 4000-series “L”
car through an industrial area along the Maumee River. AAC 640 was moved to the
WER site, only a few blocks from the site of the old C&LE Toledo freight
terminal, and its diesel engines were removed.
This photo showing 640's front cab was taken in 1994 after removal of the prime movers, one of which was located in the left foreground. The control position underwent significant changes and the interior walls were removed. IRM Collection.
By the
1980s several of the C&LE freight motors had been acquired by museums and
railfans, joining a quartet of C&LE “Red Devil” high-speed cars that had
been saved to represent the interurban in preservation. Car 648, which had gone
to Oklahoma, was acquired by the Seashore Trolley Museum in poor but complete
condition. The other preserved freight motors were all AAC rebuilds: 646 went
to the Indiana Railway Museum (and later to the Texas State Railroad) while 637
and 639 were acquired by a private collector in Ohio. But 640 was the least
modified of the ex-AAC motors and stood the best chance of ultimately being
restored to original condition. In the mid-1990s, WER sold its land in downtown
Toledo and transported its collection to a new site in Grand Rapids, Ohio. But
car 640 didn’t join in the move: instead it was sold to the Illinois Railway
Museum. It was moved to Union by flatbed truck and was unloaded at the throat
of Yard 10 by C&NW 6363 on November 6, 1994. Acquired at the same time were
spare parts appropriate for car 640 including motors, switch group, reverser
and air compressor.
At top, car 640 is loaded onto a flatbed truck in Toledo in 1994 for transportation to IRM. It still wears its later American Aggregates livery. Above, the remaining main generator is removed from the car in January 1995 behind Barn 4. Both photos, IRM Collection.
At the
time, IRM had just constructed two new car barns, barns number 6 and 8, and
space in these buildings was mostly allocated to the Electric Car Department. And
so car 640 was put indoors immediately. It spent a few months in Barn 4, where
most of its remaining diesel-electric equipment (including the main generator
installed by AAC) was removed. Bob Bruneau and Carl Illwitzer also performed
some welding repairs to the car, replacing some steel along the floor line
where it had rusted out. Then the car was moved into Barn 8 (which until 2000
was a “dead barn” not wired for 600 volt operation) and placed on display.
The
C&LE freight motor remained on display, largely unaltered and still in
latter-day AAC dark blue and silver, for five years. In the fall of 2000 IRM
acquired Lake Shore Electric 150 – which would have encountered C&LE 640
many times during the latter’s use in through freight service to Cleveland – from
the Pennsylvania Trolley Museum near Pittsburgh. Since the LSE car was a wooden
interurban it was a priority to put it into indoor storage, and car 640 – with
its sheet metal roof and metal construction – was judged the candidate best
able to withstand being put outside. And so car 640 was tarped and moved
outside, first stored in Yard 5 and then later in the museum’s south yards.
Car 640 is shown following unloading at IRM in November 1994. The car's appearance has remained essentially unchanged since. Photo by Bill Wulfert.
It was 15
years later, in the spring of 2016, that car 640 was again moved into indoor
storage – this time, hopefully, for good. The condition of the artifact is
generally good. The body is solid, with relatively little rust damage except
for some along the floor line at the ends of the car. Most of the steel work
that would need to be done involves grab irons and doors. The car’s original
wooden roof is evident from inside the car and, while much would need to be
replaced, most of the carlines are solid. The car’s interior is a shambles;
large sections of the floor were chopped out or sheeted over with heavy steel
plate when it was made into a diesel-electric and there are signs of its
makeshift rebuilding everywhere. But as a freight motor, not much would really
need to be re-created in order to put it back to original configuration. Most,
if not all, of the appropriate electrical control and brake equipment is on
hand. The biggest modification that would need to be undone – if possible –
would be to try to remove the heavy steel reinforcement that was added to the
car’s frame.
It would
be a big project. But of the preserved C&LE freight motors, car 640 is
arguably in the best condition. With enough time, money, and determination,
C&LE 640 could once again grace the rails as a rolling symbol of Dr.
Conway’s revolutionary interurban railway.
APPENDIX A:
MECHANICAL INFORMATION
Exterior
Length: 50’4” over anticlimbers
Exterior
Width: 8’8”
Exterior
Height: 13’3” over roof boards
Interior
(Freight Compartment) Length: 33’6”
Interior
Width: 8’1”
Interior
Height: 7’0”
Weight:
85300 lbs
Capacity:
80000 lbs
Trucks:
Taylor MCB (635-641 and 645-649) or Standard C80P (642-644)
Motors: 4
x Westinghouse 121 (635-638) or 4 x Westinghouse 303A (639-649)
Control:
Westinghouse HL
Master
Controller: Westinghouse 15-B2 (635-638) or Westinghouse 189-D2 (639-649)
Switch
Group: Westinghouse 264B
Contactor:
Westinghouse 264B (635-638) or Westinghouse 140993B (639-649)
Line
Switch: Westinghouse 264A
Reverser:
Westinghouse 279C4
Air Brake
Schedule: AMM
Motorman’s
Brake Valve: M-15 (635-638) or M-22 (639-649)
Triple
Valve: M-2B
Air
Compressor: D2-EG
Governor:
S-6
Couplers:
Van Dorn #3040
Trolley
Base: US (front), Bayonet (rear)
Elevation drawing by Jack Deschenes.
A closeup of one of 640's trucks reveals interesting clues to the car's history. The journal box covers have IC&E cast into them, a holdover from the interurban car for which the trucks were built. The circular plate is for the trustee, though it's not clear whether this plate dates to the the construction of the original IC&E car or the reuse of the trucks under car 640. IRM Collection.
APPENDIX B: AFTER THE
C&LE
635 – sold 1940 to Central
California Traction 9 (fitted with Brill 27MCB3X trucks, GE 205 motors, GE Type
M control); sold to Pacific Electric 1947, damaged in transit, scrapped at
Torrance, CA
636 – sold 1940 to Central
California Traction 8 (fitted with Brill 27MCB3X trucks, GE 205 motors, GE Type
M control); sold to Pacific Electric 1947, damaged in transit, scrapped at
Torrance, CA
637 – sold 1942 to American
Aggregates 637 (rebuilt to diesel-electric with 2 x Cummins engines, height
reduced), assigned to Urbana, OH; sold to private owner 1982, moved to Buckeye
Lake, OH
638 – sold 1940 to Central
California Traction 10 (fitted with Brill 27MCB3X trucks, GE 205 motors, GE
Type M control); sold to Pacific Electric 1947, damaged in transit, scrapped at
Torrance, CA
639 – sold 1940 to American
Aggregates 639 (rebuilt to diesel-electric with 1 x Cummins engine, length
reduced); assigned to New Miami, OH; sold to private owner (year?), moved to
Buckeye Lake, OH
640 – sold 1940 to American
Aggregates 640 (rebuilt to diesel-electric with 2 x Cummins engines), assigned
to New Oxford, MI; sold to Waterfront Electric Railway 1984, moved to Toledo,
OH; sold to Illinois Railway Museum 1994, moved to Union, IL
641 – sold 1941 to Tulsa-Sapulpa
Union Railway 203; retired 1955 and sold to scrapper; stored at scrapyard until
dismantled for parts in 1974
642 – sold 1939 to Illinois
Terminal 601 (rebuilt to freight trailer with Baldwin MCB trucks); retired 1956
and scrapped
643 – sold 1939 to Illinois
Terminal 602 (rebuilt to freight trailer with Baldwin MCB trucks); retired 1956
and scrapped
644 – sold 1939 to Illinois
Terminal 603 (rebuilt to freight trailer with Baldwin MCB trucks); retired 1956
and scrapped
645 – sold 1940 to American
Aggregates 645 (rebuilt to diesel-electric with 2 x Cummins engines); assigned
to Green Oaks, MI; retired and scrapped (year?)
646 – sold 1940 to American
Aggregates 646 (rebuilt to diesel-electric with 2 x Cummins engines); assigned
to Green Oaks, MI; sold to Indiana Railway Museum (year?), moved to French
Lick, IN; sold to Fort Worth Transportation Authority 1999, moved to Fort
Worth, TX and stripped of trucks; body sold to Texas State Railroad (year?),
moved to Palestine, TX
647 – sold 1942 to American
Aggregates 647 (rebuilt to diesel-electric with 2 x Cummins engines); assigned
to Port Washington, NY; retired and scrapped (year?)
648 – sold 1941 to Tulsa-Sapulpa
Union Railway 202; retired 1955 and sold to scrapper; stored at scrapyard until
sold to Seashore Trolley Museum in 1976 and moved to Kennebunkport, ME
649 – sold 1940 to American
Aggregates 649 (rebuilt to diesel-electric with 1 x Cummins engine, length
reduced); assigned to Columbus, OH; retired and scrapped (year?)
Car 648 is pictured at the Seashore Trolley Museum c1994. Although more complete and original than car 640, its condition deteriorated considerably following retirement, while in storage both in Oklahoma and in Maine. IRM Collection.
6 comments:
That was an interesting and nicely done history. Thanks
C Kronenwetter
IRM member
Frank,
Interurban freight is an interesting story not often told. In California we had the Central California Traction Company which used Box Motors pulling Interurban freight trailers and standard freight cars, between Sacramento and Lodi.
At the Western Railway Museum we have restored C&LE #111 one of the high speed Interurbans, as CRANDIC #111. And the CCT #7 a wood Box Motor similar to the CL&E motors. We also have the CCT #010 a wood freight trailer, built by Holman of San Francisco. Sadly the CCT Interurbans are long gone.
Ted Miles, IRM Member and Interurban fan
It is interesting that Seashore has a relatively complete relic in complete disrepair. Perhaps they would either provide IRM with parts from this car to finish the 640, Or that they would get another one of the preserved bodies to restore their car.
Frank, just a note of thanks for your great blog. I really enjoy reading about the going-ons and your efforts at IRM. I check it least once a day for new updates. Keep up the food work! Mike in PA
Frank,
Thanks for an excellent article filling in the many gaps re the C&LE steel box motors. May I comment on Conway's equipment purchases for the CH&D. Brill's Kuhlman operation furnished 10 steel interurbans (7 combines and 3 coaches), 1 steel freight motor and 40 wood CERA box trailers while Cincinnati Car Company furnished 10 steel suburban cars and 1 freight motor, and refurbished Birney's built several years earlier for Hamilton city service. He also purchased a locomotive from Cincinnati Car Company which had been originally built for exhibition at an AERA convention.
Bill McDowell - Louisville, KY
About 20 years ago I had a conversation with George Alton, a Western Railway Museum member, about the three C&LE cars that went from the CCT to the PE. George had worked for the PE as a switchman after the war. He was also a traction fan. He told me he was in Torrance shops one day and saw the three CCT box motors sitting there in storage. He had heard the story about them being involved in a derailment on the way south. He looked the cars over and could find no damage. He later heard that the railroad handling them had trouble with the radial couplers, maybe on the Tehachapi Loop. This may have resulted in one of the cars derailing. As I recall he said that they were in a Santa Fe train. George believed that the derailment damage had been minor and the PE never used the cars because after the war freight traffic was in a serious decline and they never needed them. This decline in freight traffic also cost George his job and he moved north. From what George said, I have always felt the traction fan story that the cars were scrapped because of wreck damage is over stated.
David Johnston
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