<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_395" id="Page_395"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>III</h2>
<h3>SOME MEMORIES OF THE GREAT RECORD-BREAKING RUN FROM CHICAGO TO BUFFALO</h3>
<div class='cap'>THERE is a place in New York—the very last
place one would think of—where stories without
end may be heard about locomotives and the men who
drive them; it is not a place of grime and steam, but a
quiet and luxurious club spreading over the top floor
of a very tall building on Forty-second Street, and
here every day at luncheon-time railroad officials
gather: superintendents, managers, and various heads
of departments, men who may have grown prosperous
and portly, but are always proud to talk about the boys
at the throttle, and recall experiences of their own in
certain exciting runs.</div>
<p>In the wide hall near the entrance of this Transportation
Club is a driving-wheel, green painted, from
the De Witt Clinton, the first locomotive that drew a
passenger train in the State of New York. It is
scarcely larger than a wagon-wheel, though made of
iron, and an inscription sets forth how it made the
historic run from Albany to Schenectady on August 9,
1831. The walls show many pictures, famous locomotives,
scenes of accidents, and there are thrilling memories
here in abundance if one have with him some
veteran of the road to recall them.</p>
<p>"It's not always the most serious accidents that
frighten a man most," remarked a high official on the
New York Central, one day, while the rest of us listened.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_396" id="Page_396"></SPAN></span>
"One of the worst scares I ever had was on a
freight train when there really wasn't anything to be
scared about. We had just pulled out of Ottumwa,
Iowa, one dark night, with a caboose full of passengers,
when rump—ump—bang—rip! You never heard such
a racket. First one end of the car was lifted up off the
rails and slammed down again, and then the other end
was treated the same way; up and down we went,
bump, bump, bump! and smash went the window, and
out went the lights. Now, what do you suppose it
was?"</p>
<p>"Hog under the wheels?" suggested one of the group.</p>
<p>"More likely a mule," said another. "There's nothing
so tough as the hind leg of a mule. Isn't a
car-wheel made that'll cut through one."</p>
<p>"It wasn't a mule or a hog, and it wasn't anything
alive, but it got us into a panic, all right. We waved a
lantern like fury to the engineer ahead, but he didn't
see it for a good while, and we just bumped along, expecting
every second to be split into kindling-wood.
We stopped at last, and found it was a beer-keg; yes,
sir, an empty beer-keg that had got caught under the
caboose between the rear axle and the bolster of the
truck, and had rolled along over the ties with the car
balanced on it like a man riding a rail. Wasn't
broken, either; no, sir, not a bit; and we had to chisel
through every blamed hoop before we could get it
out. Talk about making things strong—that beer-keg
was a wonder!"</p>
<p>"I had a more exciting experience than that," said
another official—he was in the freight-handling department.
"It was a long time ago—yes, back in '63. I
remember getting out at a station near Cincinnati to
look at some soldiers, and before I knew it the train
started. I was up by the engine, and as the drivers<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_397" id="Page_397"></SPAN></span>
began to turn I jumped on the cow-catcher. You see,
I had often ridden there, being a railroad-man, and
the engineer knew me.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus88.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="281" alt=""AS THE DRIVERS BEGAN TO TURN I JUMPED ON THE COW-CATCHER."" title="" /> <span class="caption">"AS THE DRIVERS BEGAN TO TURN I JUMPED ON THE COW-CATCHER."</span></div>
<p>"Everything went well for a few miles, and I sat
on the bumper enjoying the rush of air, for it was a
hot summer's day; but presently, as we swung around
a curve, the engine gave a fearful shriek, and just
ahead I saw a farmer's wagon crossing the track.
There were two old men on the seat and an old white
horse in the shafts. The men were so busy talking
they never heard the whistle, or perhaps they were
deaf. Anyhow, we were right on them before they
looked up, and then they were too dazed to do anything.
One of them made a grab for the reins, but I
saw it was too late, and I drew my legs up off the
bumper and leaned back against the end of the boiler
(I must have made a picture as I crouched there); and
the next second—"<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_398" id="Page_398"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Well?" said somebody.</p>
<p>"Well—I guess you wouldn't care to hear how
things looked the next second. We struck the white
horse just back of his forelegs, and I had him on my
lap for a hundred yards or so. No, it didn't hurt me,
but it wasn't pleasant. The two old men? I don't
think they felt anything, it was so sudden; they just—passed
out. No, I didn't see them; but I can tell you
this, I've never ridden on the cow-catcher of a locomotive
since that day."</p>
<p>There followed some talk about fast runs, and all
agreed that for out-and-out excitement there is nothing
in railroading to equal a man's sensations in one of
those mad bursts of speed that are ventured upon now
and then by locomotives in record-breaking trials. The
heart never pounds with apprehension in a real accident
as it does through imminent <i>fear</i> of an accident.
And so great is the nerve-strain and brain-strain upon
the men who drive our ordinary fliers, that three hours
at a stretch is as much as the stanchest engineer can
endure running at fifty or sixty miles an hour.</p>
<p>"So you see," said one of the officials, "the problem
of higher speeds than we have at present involves more
than boiler power and strength of machinery and the
swiftness of turning wheels—it involves the question
of human endurance. We can build engines that
will run a hundred and fifty miles an hour, but where
shall we find the men to drive them? Already we have
nearly reached the limit of what eyes and nerves can
endure. I guess we'll have to find a new race of men
to handle these 'locomotives of the future' that they
talk so much about."</p>
<p>He went on to consider the chance of color-blindness
in an engineer, and told how the men's eyes are regularly
tested by experts, who put before them skeins<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_399" id="Page_399"></SPAN></span>
of various-colored yarns, and make them pick out
green from red, and so on. It is not pleasant to think
what might happen if an engineer's eyes should suddenly
fail him, and he should mistake the danger light
for safety and go ahead at some critical moment instead
of stopping. Nor does one like to fancy what
might happen if an engineer should go mad at his post.</p>
<p>"I know one case where an engineer <i>did</i> go mad,"
remarked a superintendent. "He was one of our most
experienced men, and had held the throttle for years
on the fastest trains. Then, one Sunday, for no reason
at all, he went to the round-house, got out the
'pony' locomotive—that's the one fixed up with a little
parlor over the boiler, and easy-chairs and polished
wood—it makes a pretty observation-car for big officials.
Well, he got her out and started lickety-split
up the main line, running wild and without orders.
He stopped at Mott Haven, and told the men he wanted
the 'pony' rebuilt and silver-plated—crazy as a loon,
you see. Yes, he's in the asylum now, poor fellow;
that was his last run."</p>
<p>After this one of the group gave his memories of
the famous speed trial on the Lake Shore road, when
five locomotives in relays, driven by picked men, set out
to beat all records in a run of 510 miles from Chicago
to Buffalo. This was in October, 1895, and I suppose
such elaborate preparations for a dash over the rails
were never made. All traffic was suspended for the
passage of this racing special; every railroad crossing
between Chicago and Buffalo was patrolled by a section-man—that
alone meant thirteen hundred guards;
and every switch was spiked half an hour before the
train was due. The chief officials of the Lake Shore
road proposed to ride this race in person, and, if possible,
smash the New York Central's then recent<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_400" id="Page_400"></SPAN></span>
world's record of 63.61 miles an hour, including all
stops, over the 436½ miles between New York and
Buffalo. They had before them a longer run than
that, and hoped to score a greater average speed per
mile; but they wished to come through alive, and were
taking no chances.</p>
<p>It was half-past three in the morning, and frosty
weather, when the train started from Chicago, with
Mark Floyd at the throttle, and various important
people—general managers, superintendents, editors,
etc.—on the cars behind. There were two parlor-coaches,
weighing 92,500 pounds each, and a millionaire's
private car, one of the finest and heaviest in the
country, weighing 119,500 pounds, which made a total
load, counting engine and train, of something over two
hundred tons.</p>
<p>The first relay was 87 miles to Elkhart, Indiana,
and the schedule they hoped to follow required that
they cover this distance in 78 minutes, including nine
"slow-downs." Eighty-seven miles in 78 minutes was
well enough; but the superintendent of the Western
Division had set his heart on doing it in 75 minutes,
and had promised Mark Floyd two hundred good
cigars for every quarter of a minute he could cut under
that time. But alas for human plans! Between up
grades and the darkness they pulled into Elkhart at five
minutes to five, which was 85 minutes for the 87 miles—not
bad going, but it left them seven minutes behind
the schedule, and left Mark to console himself with his
old clay pipe.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="Page_401" id="Page_401"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus89.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="379" alt="A RECORD BREAKING RUN." title="" /> <span class="caption">A RECORD BREAKING RUN.</span></div>
<p>One hundred and thirty-one seconds were lost at
Elkhart in changing locomotives, and it was three minutes
to five when big 599, with Dave Luce in the cab,
turned her nose toward the dawning day and started
for Toledo, 133 miles away. Great things were expected<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_402" id="Page_402"></SPAN></span>
in this relay, for about half of it was straight as
a bird's flight and down grade, too, so that hopes were
high of making up lost time, especially as Luce had the
reputation of stopping at nothing when it was a question
of "getting there." He certainly did wonders,
and five minutes after the start he had the train at a
62-mile gait, and ten minutes later at a 67-mile gait.
Then they struck frost on the rails and the speed
dropped, while the time-takers studied their stopwatches
with serious faces.</p>
<p>At ten minutes to six they reached Waterloo and
the long, straight stretch. As they whizzed past the
station, Dave pulled open his throttle to the last notch
and yelled to his fireman. Here was where they had
to <i>do things</i>. Butler was 7½ miles away, the first
town in the down grade, and they made it in 6 minutes
and 40 seconds, nearly 68 miles an hour. In the next
7 miles Dave pushed her up to 70 an hour, then
to 72½, and let her out in a great burst which made the
passengers sit up, and showed for several miles a top-notch
rate of 87 miles an hour. Nevertheless, taking
account of frost and slow-downs, they barely finished
the relay on schedule time, so that for the whole run
they were still seven minutes behind time; the schedule
they had set themselves called for such tremendous
speed that it seemed almost impossible to make up a
single lost minute.</p>
<p>The third relay was 108 miles to Cleveland, and they
did it in 104 minutes, including many slow-downs and
a heart-breaking loss of four minutes when a section-hand
red-flagged the train and brought it to a dead stop
from a 70-mile gait because he had found a broken
rail. The officials were in such a state of tension that
they would almost have preferred chancing it on the
rail to losing those four minutes. There is a point of<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_403" id="Page_403"></SPAN></span>
eagerness in railroad racing where it seems nothing to
risk one's life!</p>
<p>The train drew out of Cleveland 19 minutes behind
the time they should have made for a world's record.
Every man had done his best, every locomotive had
worked its hardest, but fate seemed against them and
hopes of beating the Central's fast run were fading
rapidly. The fourth relay was to Erie, 95½ miles,
and some said that Jake Gardner with 598 might pull
them out of the hole, but the others shook their heads.
At any rate, Jake did better than those who had preceded
him, and he danced that train along at 75, 80,
84 miles an hour, so the watches said, and averaged
67 miles an hour for the whole relay.</p>
<p>"It's the kind of thing that makes you taste your
heart, and packs a week into ten minutes," said the
superintendent, telling about it. "You may take <i>one</i>
ride smashing around curves at 80 miles an hour, but
you'll never take another."</p>
<p>Still, in spite of these brave efforts, they pulled out
of Erie 15 minutes late, and started on the last relay
with gloomy faces. It was 86 miles to Buffalo, the
end of the race, and they must be there by eleven thirty-one
to win, which called for an average speed of over
70 miles an hour, including slow-downs. No train
in the world had ever approached such an average, and
their own racing average since leaving Chicago was
much below it. So what hope was there?</p>
<p>There was hope in a tall, sparely built man named
Bill Tunkey, whom nobody knew much about except
that he was a good engineer with a rather clumsy
ten-wheel locomotive not considered very desirable in
a race. All the other locomotives had been eight-wheelers.
Still, the new engine had one advantage,
that she carried water enough in her tank for the whole<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_404" id="Page_404"></SPAN></span>
run, and need not slow up to refill, as the others had
done. She had another advantage—that she carried
Tunkey, one of those men who rise up in sudden emergencies
and <i>do</i> things, whether they are possible or
not. It was not possible, everybody vowed, to reach
Buffalo Creek by eleven thirty-one. "All right," said
Tunkey, quietly, and then—</p>
<p>Within forty rods of the start he had his engine
going 30 miles an hour, and he pressed her harder and
harder until 11 miles out of Erie she struck an 80-mile
pace, and held it as far as Brockton, when she put forth
all her strength and did a burst of 5 miles in 3½ minutes,
one of these miles at the rate of 92¼ miles an
hour, as the watches showed. "And I never want any
more of that in mine," said the superintendent.</p>
<p>The next town was Dunkirk, where a local ordinance
put a 10-mile limit on the speed of trains. Tunkey
smiled as they roared past the station at more
than 80. A crowd lined the tracks here, for the telegraph
had carried ahead the news of a hair-raising run.
That crowd was only a blur to staring, frightened eyes
at the car-windows. The officials were beginning to
realize what kind of an engineer they had ahead this
time. Whizzzzz! How they did run! Wahr!
Wahr! barked the little bridges and were left behind!
H-o-o-o! bellowed a tunnel. And rip, whrrr! as they
slammed around a double reverse curve with a vicious
swing that made the bolts rattle in the last car. Men
put their mouths to other men's ears and tried to say
that perhaps Mr. Tunkey was getting a <i>little</i> overzealous.
Much good that did! Mr. Tunkey had the
bit in his teeth now and was playing the game alone.</p>
<p>At eleven-six they swept past Silver Creek with 29
miles to go and 25 minutes to make it in. Hurrah!
They had made up time enough to save them!<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_405" id="Page_405"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>At eleven-twenty they passed Lake View.</p>
<p>"Twelve miles more, and 11 minutes," yelled somebody,
waving his hat.</p>
<p>"Toboggan-slide all the way," yelled somebody else.
"We'll do it easy. Hooray!"</p>
<p>They passed Athol Springs at eleven-twenty-four,
all mad with excitement. They had 7 minutes left
for 8 miles, and were cheering already.</p>
<p>"We'll make it with half a minute to spare," said the
only man in the private car who was reasonably cool.
He was six seconds out of the way, for they crossed
the line twenty-six seconds before eleven thirty-one,
and won the race by less than half a minute, beating the
New York Central's record per mile on the whole run
by the fraction of a second, and beating the whole
world's record in the last relay by several minutes, the
figures standing—<i>Tunkey's</i> figures—86 miles from
Erie to Buffalo in 70 minutes and 46 seconds, or an
average speed of 72.91 miles an hour.</p>
<p>"Do?" said the official. "What did we do? Why,
we—we—" He paused helplessly, and then added,
with a grin: "Well, we didn't do a thing to Tunkey!"</p>
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