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Subject: | Re: [CBQ] Montgomery Sheepyard question |
From: | "jpslhedgpeth via Groups.Io" <jpslhedgpeth=aol.com@groups.io> |
Date: | Tue, 12 Mar 2019 18:36:46 +0000 (UTC) |
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Louis..I feel a long dissertation coming on based on these photos...A few years ago there was a Burlington Bulletin featuring stock movements..It pretty well covered the waterfront.
Just for a starter here on the Lincoln and west territory there was still a significant livestock movement starting in August each year..That' when the grass fed critters started to move from the high country and down to the Missouri River markets for fattening and slaughter.
Those trains were designated..at least on the Lincoln division and west by initials...ie MWSPU...Montana--Wyoming--Stock--Pickup...So..in the manner of all railroaders they aquired a nickname were referred to as A "MONKEY WARD"...Some of you guys should be able to figure that one out.
I'm not disposed right now to declaim on these matters, but it won't go away and the "mood" will strike me before too long. I've got to print those photos out so I can point out who is who and what they do as I write
Stay tuned..more to come
Pete
-----Original Message-----
From: Louis Zadnichek via Groups.Io <LZadnichek=aol.com@groups.io> To: CBQ <CBQ@groups.io> Sent: Tue, Mar 12, 2019 12:52 pm Subject: Re: [CBQ] Montgomery Sheepyard question March 12, 2019
Pete - I don't have anything at the moment to contribute on the Montgomery Stock Yards, but I can share a couple of Lines West images of a sheep load out and a stock train departing at the "end of the round-up." This will give the younger members of our List an idea of how the sheep (woolies to train crews) got from the stock yards to Montgomery. Whereas I can't be positive that these two undated images I'm attaching show live stock that were actually consigned to Montgomery, they nonetheless show how it was done across the Q system.
The first image shows Wyoming sheep being loaded into double deck stock car No. 59075D, the "D" meaning double deck. Both decks are being loaded simultaneously by herders with "Tom Mix" style cow boy hats. Double deck stock car No. 50475 at right has already been loaded. For whatever reason, this car doesn't have the "D" next to its number. Pete, may be you can answer this, but from this image and others I've seen of stock loading it appears to me that each individual stock car was first uncoupled and hand brake set before being loaded. Then, after loading, it was shoved ahead and another empty spotted. If this is correct, was it to minimize slack action and possibly injuring the stock making for a future freight claim?
The second undated image is a real classic. Here we find way car 14199 ready to depart Cody, WY, with a stock train. Of the men on the way car platform, I'll speculate that the ranch owner or manager is at center with railroad officials such as the live stock agent and station agent on either side. Note the old open platform passenger car coupled ahead of the way car for the herders accompanying the train. Like you might say, this was "the end of the round-up." I can't tell if the stock car shown is double deck or not, but if double deck then this stock train was loaded with sheep and might've been headed to Montgomery.
Sheep were notorious for having ticks, even though they were dipped in insecticide baths. Although I would've been only about six or seven years old, I can still recall my Dad taking me to a live stock yard in Casper, WY, in the early 1950s when he was the trainmaster there. I came home with a couple of tuffs of sheep wool as a souvenir and my Mom had a FIT that I might've gotten bitten by a tick.... Funny, the things you remember from your childhood when you become an old man. Best Regards - Louis
Louis Zadnichek II
Fairhope, AL
In a message dated 3/11/2019 11:54:10 AM Central Standard Time, jpslhedgpeth=aol.com@groups.io writes:
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