A Joe Photo Study
I had a special request for a few more detail shots of the Milwaukee Road's only surviving Little Joe. If you can, she's worth a visit in Deer Lodge, MT, but plan on spending some time around her. She's loaded with interesting features and dripping with stories. I could write something for each of these shots, but for now, I'll let them speak of their own accord. Enjoy.
Comments
best regards, Michael Sol
Your tiny photos do not do the E70 justice! That paint is fabulous.
As an aside, I bought a collection of railroadiana from someone who was a BIG Milwaukee Road fan. Many of his materials I had never seen before. It has been great seeing electrics back in the day, and you taunt me with photos of the nearest survivor to my location...
Dan
What I would like to know is why everyone buys into the Stalin linkage and never has any comment about Little Joe mountain seven miles from ST. Regis Montana (which was by the Milwaukee tracks) or the St. Joe river or Little Joe creek in the same area or the St. Joe mountain range. Lot a "Joes" in that part of the country. One of your fellow bloggers suggests that the creek and mountain were named after the electrics!
The internet is a wonderful tool but I do lament its ability to spread the unfactual at a most rapid clip.
Stan
One has to remember that all you need to do to post to Wikipedia is come up with a nickname and valid email address and you can post new material to, and edit existing material on, pages of your choice. Indeed I have edited an entry or two.
It’s also been my considerable lifetime experience in the communication field, that misinformation is generated when people do not correctly process information coming in to them, and have a proclivity to alter material when they pass it on to someone else.
Accuracy, as I was taught as a radio news director, was to verify from at least three independent sources before “going to press,” if at all possible and depending on the “social impact” of the information.
So we accept the fact that President Truman stopped the sale of “strategic goods” to Communist nations in 1948, kicking off the “Cold War” and sticking General Electric with a track full of undeliverable electric locomotives ordered by Russia.
The General Electric 750 locomotive was quickly dubbed “Little Joe” and was referred to as such in all but official memos and operating documents.
Source 1: “… an unknown employee named them Little Joes.” Page 118, The Milwaukee Road Electrics, Noel T. Holley
Source 2: “These ALCo-GE units, dubbed “Little Joes” after Josef Stalin because they were originally built for use in the Soviet Union, were acquired in 1950.” Page 11, “The Milwaukee Electrification: A Proud Era Passes,” published as a supplement to The Milwaukee Road Magazine (the official house organ) Volume 61, Number 3, July/August 1973 issue.
Two out of three - that’s good enough for me! A copy of this magazine is available on the Internet.
best regards, Michael Sol