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Railroads > flbtrain  > Railroads > I'VE BEEN WORKING ON THE RAILROAD > Santa Fe
After my two years of active duty in the U. S. Transportation Corps, in 1968 I joined the Santa Fe Mechanical Department and was based in Topeka, Kansas. My Santa Fe career extended for about 14 years with stops in Kansas City (twice), Fort Madison, Iowa and Topeka (twice). I began my Santa Fe career as the first ever management trainee in the Mechanical Department. From that point I spent time in Industrial Engineering at the Car Shops In Topeka, Kansas. My next assignment was as an ASDE (Assistant Supervisor Diesel Engines) in Kansas City (Argentine Locomotive Shops) and then in Fort Madison. After 15 months of riding riding trains/locomotives as a troubleshooter, I returned to Argentine Locomotive Shops as a 2nd shift ramp foreman.

Santa Fe made the decision to try one more time to make a go of the refrigerated traffic business. At that time I was assigned to the General Car Inspectors office in Topeka with my main responsibilities to design, implement and manage a data system to monitor the performance of Santa Fe's refrigerated fleet - both cars (MTCs) and vans. The system as designed was one of the first "total" data bases in the mechanical side of the railroad industry. In addition to the mechanical records for each piece of equipment we brought in movement history, waybills, Refrigeration Department line-of-road inspections, traffic data and claims. A complete picture was painted so that management could evaluate and make more informed decisions going forward.

Remaining in Topeka at the Motive Power Building, home of the Mechanical Department staff, I was made a Department Head with the goal of designing a total Mechanical Department information system.

I left the Santa Fe in 1981 to pursue a change in my railroading career from the Class Is to Short Line - as Chief Mechanical Officer of the Ann Arbor Railroad.

The images in this Gallery reflect Santa Fe operations, equipment and my work experiences while I was there.
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Santa Fe FM H-10-44 #534 with scrap "gons" rolls past KCUD on a rainy day.  Kansas City, MO, 6/1/1969.
Santa Fe's Progress & Locomotive Simulator train on display in Los Angeles, CA.  September, 1969.  Santa Fe and Southern Pacific were the first railroads to have simulators.  While SP chose to make their's a fixed facility, Santa Fe elected to build their simulator in a retired baggage car, making it mobile.  The plan was to move the simulator to locations where train crews would be trained rather than bring them to a "central" point.

I was lucky enough to be assigned to the Air Brake Department during development of the entire project.  One of my  most important responsibilities was to analyze hundreds and hundreds of "speed tapes" in preparation to entering the data from the tapes into the train handling criteria of the simulator's software so that the proper mechanical characteristics come out as the actual train when the student was operating the locomotive."

Interestingly, one of the major "problems" we had was getting the aspects of the signals to stay "in the signal."  It was nothing to be operating the simulator, look for the signal aspect and it would be somewhere up in the air or on the ground.

Prior to start up Santa Fe elected to "tour" the train to some of the main cities and division points served by the Railroad.   In this scene, taken at LAUPT, the train is ready and open for a tour by railroad and governmental officials, union representatives, the local press and other dignitaries.
Santa Fe's rebuilt SD24s, designated as SD26s, 4678 + 4676 + 1 lead the Rustler Springs to Texas City, TX molten sulfur train out of town.  There is a 2 unit RCE (DPU), also SD26s, helper consist two-thirds of the way back in the train.  Clovis, NM, 3/1/1974.  The sulfur was transloaded to ships and exported in Texas City.
Westbound trailers on Santa Fe led by U33C 8524 through Melvern, KS.  9/1974.
An eastbound N&W manifest departs Santa Fe's Argentine Yard as it rolls past the Caboose track.  12/1974.
A westbound Santa Fe manifest, running on the eastward main (Main #2), rolls under the signal bridge and past the hot box detector at Quenemo, KA.  Leading the train is U36C 8741 + 2.  6/1/1975.
Road switcher west led by Santa Fe built CF7 2575 hits the SP diamond at Tower 17.  Rosenberg, TX, 12/1975. MP 66.2.
An eastbound Santa Fe manifest on the Illinois River bridge at Chillcothe, IL.  Leading the train is GP38 3610.  4/1977.
Santa Fe eastbound manifest, led by SD45 5621 + SD45-2s 5646 & 5672 + U36C 8748, crosses the Illinois River in Chillicothe, LA.  4/1977.
Santa Fe FM H-10-44 #534 with scrap "gons" rolls past KCUD on a rainy day. Kansas City, MO, 6/1/1969.
Santa Fe FM H-10-44 #534 with scrap "gons" rolls past KCUD on a rainy day.  Kansas City, MO, 6/1/1969.
Santa Fe FM H-10-44 #534 with scrap "gons" rolls past KCUD on a rainy day. Kansas City, MO, 6/1/1969.
Original size: 3323x2215 |
Current: 600x400 |
Keywords: santa fe 1 6 kansas city mo 1969.
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