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The Reading T-1 was a class of 4-8-4 "Northern" type steam locomotives owned by the Reading Company. They were rebuilt from thirty "I-10sa" class 2-8-0 "Consolidation" type locomotives between 1945 and 1947. Out of the thirty rebuilt, four survive in preservation today, those being numbers 2100, 2101, 2102, and 2124.
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Between 1923 and 1925, the Baldwin Locomotive Works constructed fifty I-10sa class locomotives (Nos. 2000-2049) for the Reading Company (RDG) in Pennsylvania. The I-10sa’s generated a tractive effort of over 71,000 pounds (32 tonnes), as compared to 19,390 pounds (8.80 tonnes) of the railroad's 2-8-0s built in the 19th century.[2] The consolidations were solely used for heavy freight service on the RDG's branch lines, as well as the mainline on occasion.
Prior to the end of World War II, the RDG decided to create larger and more powerful locomotives than their 2-8-0, 2-8-2, and 2-10-2 locomotives to haul their growing freight traffic.[2] While the war was nearing its end, the War Production Board denied the RDG from building a new locomotive design, but they allowed them to rebuild or modify their existing locomotives.[3] The RDG's then-president, Revelle W. Brown, took inspiration from his previous experience on the Lehigh Valley Railroad, and he wanted the RDG to roster a fleet of 4-8-4s similar to the Lehigh Valley's 4-8-4 locomotives.[2][3] Between 1945 and 1947, the RDG moved thirty of their I-10sa class consolidations (Nos. 2020-2049) to their locomotive shops in Reading, Pennsylvania.[2][3]
There, the I-10sa class 2-8-0s were heavily rebuilt into 4-8-4 "Northerns", and they were reclassified as T-1s, renumbered to 2100-2129. The RDG's locomotive and rolling equipment superintendent, E. Paul Gangewere, worked with designers from the Baldwin Locomotive Works to plan out the rebuilding process.[2] Several critical and minor parts from the original I-10sa's were salvaged and reused for construction of the new T-1 locomotives, including all the boilers, most of the Wootten fireboxes, the grate rigging, the air pumps, the water gauges, the safety valves, the headlights, the whistles, and the bells.[2][3]
Some other components of the I-10sa's were reused on other small locomotives, such as the 61+1⁄2-inch (1,560 mm) driving wheels being reused for the I-9sb class.[2] Baldwin supplied various new components to the RDG's locomotive shops, including the 70-inch (1,800 mm) driving wheels and various extension parts used to expand the boilers of the new T-1's.[2][3][4] New cast steel underframes, which weighed 60,000 pounds (27 tonnes) apiece, were supplied by General Steel Castings of Eddystone.[4]
Roller bearings supplied by Timken or SKF were used on the four-wheel pilot and trailing trucks, as well as the six-wheel tender trucks. The first twenty locomotives (Nos. 2100–2119) used plain journal bearings on the eight driving wheels, while the final ten (Nos. 2120–2129), which were intended as dual service locomotives, had roller bearings throughout.
The T-1 class entered service between 1945 and 1947 and were used primarily in fast freight service, and their operating territory encompassed most of the RDG system, including the railroad's mainline and some branch lines in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.[2] The T-1's were quickly deemed successful locomotives.[4] The T-1's were primarily used to pull time-sensitive mixed freight trains and coal trains, and some locomotives were used for pusher service. The T-1's were also frequently used in pool service in Maryland with the Western Maryland Railway—it led to them becoming the basis for the Western Maryland's "Potomac" class of 4-8-4s.
In revenue service, the T-1's were cleared to pull trains up to 150 cars in length, and they were allowed to travel as fast as 65 miles per hour (105 km/h); the RDG tested some T-1's to pull 200 cars.[2][3] While they were primarily designed for freight service, the T-1's were also able to pull heavy passenger trains, if needed, and Nos. 2120-2124 were equipped with steam heating for this purpose; cab signals were also applied to some locomotives for use on the Bethlehem Branch in 1948. During revenue service, the T-1's rarely pulled passenger trains beyond post–World War II troop trains.[5]
As steam locomotives that were manufactured in the mid-1940s, the T-1's were only used in revenue service for less than ten years before the end of revenue steam operations on the RDG, with all thirty 4-8-4's being withdrawn by 1954.[4] A traffic surge in 1956 briefly brought some back in service.[4] Nine T-1's (Nos. 2107, 2111-2115, 2119, and 2128) were leased to the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR), while others ran upstate in Pennsylvania on the RDG, until early 1957. Some T-1s were also loaned as steam generators to Steel mills. Upon returning to the RDG the following year, the PRR-leased locomotives, with the exception of No. 2128, were dismantled for scrap.[6]
By the summer of 1958, the RDG had still rostered twenty of their thirty T-1's, and railfans were keen on seeing some of the T-1's operate again.[7] On May 2, 1959, the New Jersey Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society (NRHS) and the New York Division of the Railway Enthusiasts sponsored a diesel-powered excursion fantrip from Jersey City, New Jersey to Reading, and photographers were allowed to take photos of T-1's in storage.[7]
The RDG subsequently made pragmatic considerations of running their own steam excursion program that consisted of some T-1 locomotives, and with approval of then-president Joseph A. Fisher, the railroad decided to run a program all by themselves with maximum control and self-benefit.[7] The new program, which was to be dubbed the "Iron Horse Rambles", was to be primarily run by the RDG's passenger department, their fully-staffed public relations department, and executives from other departments to ensure safe and luxurious operations.[8] Four T-1 locomotives were selected for the Rambles; Nos. 2100 and 2124 were to be used to pull the trains, No. 2101 was set aside as back-up power, and No. 2123 was cannibalized for spare parts.[8][9]
No. 2124 pulled the RDG's first Ramble train on October 25, 1959, from Wayne Junction in Philadelphia to Shamokin, Pennsylvania, and 950 passengers were on board that day.[8][9] Fifty Ramble excursions would follow suit within the next four years, and they consisted of Fall Foliage excursions and tours of the Civil War battlefield at Gettysburg; the latter was the most common out of sixteen destinations the Rambles took place.[8][9][10] In 1962, No. 2124's flue time expired, and it was sold off while a fifth T-1, No. 2102, took its place.[9] Since 1960, the RDG had begun to run into financial troubles, and since maintenance on the T-1's were becoming expensive, the railroad had to discontinue the Iron Horse Rambles.[11]
The final Rambles excursion run was originally scheduled October 19, 1963, but due to drought weather conditions, state authorities asked for the excursion to be pulled by diesels, instead, and one of the T-1's was fired up for display at the Reading shops for the passengers.[10] As a compensation for the unexpected change, the RDG scheduled some more Rambles for 1964.[10] The final Rambles excursion officially took place on October 17, 1964, between Philadelphia and Tamaqua.[11][12] Fifty-one Rambles took place over five years, having carried around 50,000 passengers while attracting many bystanders.[3]
All four of the T-1's used in the Iron Horse Rambles excursion service are preserved, and they are the only remaining examples of the class.
2100 was sold to Streigel Equipment & Supply of Baltimore, Maryland in September 1967.[13] It spent almost a decade in the firm's scrapyard until 1975, when it was purchased along with sister 2101 by Ross Rowland to be used as a source of spare parts for the former for his American Freedom Train. After 2101 was damaged in a fire in 1979, 2100 swapped tenders with its sister and was stored in the former Western Maryland Hagerstown, Maryland roundhouse until 1988, when a group called the 2100 corporation, which was led by Rowland and owner of Lionel Trains Richard Kughn, restored it to operating condition.[14] They only used 2100 to run on the Whinchester and Western before it was eventually donated to the Portage Area Regional Transportation Authority, who in turn put it up for auction. Jerry Jacobson, who briefly test ran it on his Ohio Central Railroad, placed a bid on the locomotive, but he lost in 1998 to Thomas Payne.[15] Payne moved 2100 to the former New York Central's St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada, shop, where it was converted to burn oil, with plans to use the locomotive to pull excursions throughout the Rocky Mountains. These plans never came to fruition, and in 2007, 2100 was moved to Tacoma, Washington where it briefly ran on the Golden Pacific Railroad's Tacoma Sightseer trains until 2008, when it was placed in outdoor storage in Richland, Washington. In 2015, 2100 was leased to the American Steam Railroad Preservation Association and moved to the former B&O roundhouse in Cleveland, Ohio where it is presently being restored to operating condition.[16]
2101 was sold along with 2100 in September 1967 to Streigel Equipment & Supply of Baltimore, Maryland. It spent almost a decade in the firm's scrapyard until 1975, when it was purchased along with sister 2100 by Ross Rowland for use on his upcoming American Freedom Train, and subsequently renumbered to AFT 1. Restored to operating condition in 30 days, AFT 1 pulled the American Freedom Train throughout the eastern United States before handing the train over to ex-Southern Pacific 4449. In 1977, AFT 1 was renumbered back to 2101 and painted in the Chessie System livery for the Chessie Steam Special, an excursion train to celebrate the 150th birthday of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. 2101 ran these trips until November 1978. In March 1979, it was damaged in a roundhouse fire at Stevens Yard in Silver Grove, Kentucky. The Chessie System arranged a deal with Rowland and traded their Chesapeake and Ohio 614 for the 2101, which was cosmetically restored as AFT 1 for static display at the B&O Railroad Museum in Baltimore. As of 2024, No. 2101 is planned to undergo a cosmetic restoration.
2102 was sold to Bill Benson of Steam Tours of Akron, Ohio in 1966 and spent the next 23 years running on various fan trips in the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic and Midwest and made a brief appearance on the Greenbrier Scenic Railroad running between Durbin and Cass, West Virginia. In 1985, 2102 was moved to Reading, Pennsylvania by the RCT&HS and used on their "40th Anniversary of the Reading T-1 series of Iron Horse Rambles" on Conrail former Reading Trackage. In May 1986, 2102 was purchased by Andy Muller for his Blue Mountain and Reading Railroad in Hamburg, Pennsylvania. 2102 spent the next six years pulling tourist trains on the BM&R as well as occasional off-line trips until its flue time expired in 1991. In 1995, 2102 was moved to Steamtown National Historic Site for a restoration which never occurred and was returned to Reading and Northern at Port Clinton, Pennsylvania in 1997 and was stored inside the Reading Blue Mountain and Northern Railroad's steam shop in Port Clinton, Pennsylvania, occasionally being brought out for display by the Port Clinton Station. In January 2016. Reading Blue Mountain and Northern started a mechanical evaluation on the locomotive to see if it was in a suitable condition for restoration, and soon after announced the locomotive would be returned to service. 2102 was fired up for the first time in 30 years in January, 2021, and on April 6, 2022, the locomotive made its first test runs, restored to the black and yellow Iron Horse Rambles livery with Reading & Northern lettering. The 2102 made its excursion debut on May 28, 2022, hauling a 19 coach Iron Horse Rambles excursion between Reading Outer Station and Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania.
2124, an all-roller-bearing-equipped locomotive, was purchased by New England seafood magnate and steam locomotive collector F. Nelson Blount in 1962 for static display at his Steamtown, U.S.A. museum in North Walpole, New Hampshire. In 1965, 2124 was moved to Steamtown, U.S.A.'s new location in Bellows Falls, Vermont. In 1984, 2124 along with the majority of the Steamtown collection was moved to Scranton, Pennsylvania. In 1986, ownership of 2124 was transferred to the United States National Park Service along with most of Steamtown, U.S.A.'s assets as part of the new Steamtown National Historic Site. As of 2024, No. 2124 is on static display at Steamtown.
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