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Hank, I Can't Hear That Lonesome Whistle Blow.
by Bob Ciminel © 2007
My earliest childhood
memories are of steam locomotives struggling up the long hill behind our
house near Pittsburgh, PA,
on the Pennsylvania Railroad’s Panhandle Division mainline that ran
westward from Pittsburgh to St. Louis. The unfamiliar sounds of
whistles and staccato exhaust were foreign and frightening to me,
particularly when they woke me at three o'clock in the morning. The railroad
behind our house was a great mystery, a place of strange noises made by
strange beasts at all hours of the day and night.
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Photo by Bob Williams ©
2007
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My initial fright over the
railroad across from our backyard ended when our neighbor, George Llewellyn,
who worked for the Pittsburgh
and West Virginia Railroad at the Rook roundhouse, explained to me why steam
engines made so much noise. Soon, I began looking forward to hearing the
locomotives approaching, knowing that a kindly engineer or fireman would
smile and wave back at me. The sound of a multi-chime whistle echoing up the
valley became my security blanket, a sign that everything was right in the
world and that even in the dead of night, in pouring rain or blowing snow,
there was a friendly soul out there.
After those first
formative years, we somehow always managed to live near railroads, and being
near Pittsburgh
meant there were trains wherever we went. The trains ran close to all of my
relative’s homes; they were near my schools; and we rode next to,
under, or over them on our Sunday drives. I don’t think I even took notice
of the transition from steam engines to diesels. They were still trains, and
the engineers still waved.
Today, I live near Atlanta, a city created
by the railroad, as were many of our cities in the south. In 1837, Georgia
chartered the Western & Atlantic Railroad, which still exists and is
still owned by the State, to operate from the Chattahoochee
River northward to the Tennessee
River at Ross’ Landing, later named Chattanooga.
The railroad’s
southern terminus was defined as "some point not exceeding eight
miles" from the southeastern bank of the Chattahoochee. State surveyor, Stephen Long, marked the
spot by driving a stake into the ground in the Georgia wilderness and
pronouncing the site “a good place for a tavern, a blacksmith s shop, a
general store and nothing else.”
The most southern point
on the Western & Atlantic was named Terminus. However, in 1843 it was
renamed Marthasville in honor of the governor's daughter. Two years later, J. Edgar Thompson,
the chief engineer for the Georgia Railroad and later the Pennsylvania
Railroad, who built the PRR’s Horseshoe Curve, renamed the town Atlanta.
Atlanta thrived as a railroad town
until the Civil War when Union General William Tecumseh Sherman did a bit of
urban renewal around the city. After the retreating Confederates blew up 81
boxcars filled with gunpowder, creating the huge fire made famous in the
movie version of “Gone with the Wind,” Sherman had his Bluecoats
pile up every railroad car, wagon, and anything they couldn't carry with them
in Union Depot and burn it.
Atlanta was gone, but it rose again
phoenix-like from the ashes. Five years later, Henry Grady, editor of the
Atlanta Constitution, said, "I want to say to General Sherman, who is
considered an able man in all parts, though some people think he is a kind of
careless man with fire, that from the ashes he left us in 1864, we have
raised a brave and beautiful city."
I’m not near the railroads any longer. I can't hear a train whistle from my
home in Roswell, northeast of Atlanta. Event my daily commute to work
doesn't take me near a railroad. If it were not for weekly "fixes"
working on the Blue Ridge Scenic tourist railroad in North
Georgia, I would be going crazy. I miss the sound of a
locomotive horn in the night. I need that feeling of security I had as a
child living across the street from the former Standard Railroad of the
World.
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