This Was Railroading, Part 1

This Was Railroading, Part 1

by George B. Abdill
This Was Railroading, Part 1

This Was Railroading, Part 1

by George B. Abdill

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Overview

This is Part 1 of a historical collection of rare photos and true stories about the tracks, trains and trainmen of the Pacific Northwest…including Northern California.

Railroading is the massive Mallet and the caboose hop. It is the lonely track walker, the roundhouse rumors, the water tender, the engineer’s long-spouted oil can. It is the age of steam centered in the most romantic field of industry and commerce ever to intrigue Mr. America. And here in this book of beauty and memory is the graphic story of railroading as the “New West” saw it and rode with it.

Railroading to author George B. Abdill is the sound and picture of black bulk streaking and shrieking through the night with a jet of steam trailing back along the boiler. He saw and heard this as a boy on an Oregon farm and has carried it in his heart ever since. Now as a Southern Pacific engineer—“hoghead” to you—and a dedicated collector of railroadiana, he raises the lid of his personal locker to all other railroaders, active and armchair.

Get into the cab and as Engineer Abdill steams up the grade he’ll spin you tales of the rails and illustrate them with a part of his precious collection, many of these photographs museum pieces of the first water, most of them never before published, all are rare.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781787208278
Publisher: Papamoa Press
Publication date: 01/12/2017
Series: This Was Railroading , #1
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 140
File size: 34 MB
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About the Author

George B. Abdill (May 30, 1920 - October 11, 1982) was the son of Archie B. and Vivian (Dodge) Abdill. He was educated in the public schools of Newberg and Dayton, Oregon.

He married Annette (Gibbons) DeDobbelare in Roseburg, Oregon in 1955. The couple had three children: Michelle, Daniel and Karen. They divorced in 1973. Abdill married his second wife Joyce Ellen Ruff in 1974 in Sunnyvale, California.

Abdill worked for 39 years with the United States Army’s Military Railway Service in the United States, France, Belgium and Germany. After resigning, he became the Director of the Douglas County Museum and published a number of railroad history books. He served as director of the Douglas County Historical Society and editor of the “Umpqua Trapper.”

He passed away in Roseburg, Douglas County, Oregon in 1982, aged 62.
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