Working on a Dream
The Milwaukee Road is famous for a number of things, not the least of which is its bold electrification, famous electric locomotives, and that wonderful slogan, "America's Resourceful Railroad." Huge trestles and long dark tunnels remain through the mountain passes to this day, reminding the 21st century of dreams from 100 years ago.
Not as famous, but breathtaking in its own right is the Milwaukee's crossing of the great plains - the lands east of electrification.
The lands east of electrification are lands of Big Sky and open plains. These are the lands of crystal blue skies and deepest black nights where grasses sway in summer breezes or stand stiffly in a frigid January coating of snow and ice. Here on the plains the Milwaukee also rolled its trains across the Western Extension. ABS signals stood in place along the single-track mainline to the bitter end, when dead freights were the order of the day and derailments averaged 1 per day across Montana.
Earlier days saw the Olympian and Columbian race beneath these same unending skies, through small outposts like Vananda as seen in the photograph. Like the railroad that once pierced the landscape here, today this small Montana town exists more as a memory. It is a memory of dreams and high hopes from those who came west with the Milwaukee into these big plains. Today, in Vananda, the nights are long and the days are lonely, but there was a time when there were people here who believed in something and dreamed of a different future than the present reality.
When the Milwaukee Road pushed west with the people who would settle the great plains, they were all working on a dream.
Comments
But the Milwaukee Road was finished before that winter. It died because of a lack of locomotive power. And this was the reason I was the first Milwaukee to go to the B.N., in August 1978. If you are interested I will explain to you how that came to be, because it was all human error and was not inevitable.
John Crosby
Milwaukee Road trainman
Burlington Northern trainman/Conductor
Seattle, Washington
Incidentally, I've enjoyed your collection of photos for sale on DVD. I encourage anybody else who might read this to check it out. Some great shots of the Milwaukee in action in its last seasons alive.
-Leland
Dean
-Leland
And, your comment about the future summarizes that nicely: the future for them was in the success of their democracy and the success of their children. There is nothing like it in the history of this planet symbolized so succinctly by the "dreams," set in stone in schoolhouses, as in the prairies of Eastern Montana.
A nice essay and a perfect photograph for it.
Best regards, Michael Sol
Best to you as well,
-Leland
Michael Sol will remember the MILW@onelist thread "Suicide or coup de gras" wherein I introduced the subject of the catastrophic motive crisis starting the winter of '77-'78. It was at this time that the Road lost a third of its motive power to human negligence. I am working up an essay on this and will post sometime soon. It seems to me that this subject should be preserved somewhere on the internet, and since I lost control of the site which bears my name, your site looks like the most appropriate place
John Crosby
Seattle
8 February 2009
Best,
-Leland
Best regards, Michael Sol
Best,
-Leland