Classic Trains is a quarterly magazine celebrating the “golden years of railroading.” Each issue covers the North American railroad scene from the 1920s to the late 1970s with extraordinary photographs and compelling writing. Giant steam locomotives, colorful streamliners, down-home local trains, great passenger terminals, recollections of railroaders and train-watchers . . . they’re all in the pages of Classic Trains.
Contents
Glory Days: Off to Work They Go
Electrics in the Diesel Age
Icebound Off Ludington
Great Photographers: For Richard Solomon, Trains Have Come Full Circle
Denting New York Central’s Last Steam Bastion
Photo Classics
Hitchin’ a Ride
Memoirs of a Railroad Janitor
Two Bad Days for a K4
A Little Time for an Old Enemy
Classic Railroad Advertising: The Bitter End
Departments
Editor’s Page
What Might Have Been
Fallen Flags Remembered
St. Louis-San Francisco
A Classic Year
1935: Hard times, high speed, and a bridge called Huey
The Way It Was
Talking to the Man in the Hat, by Michael G. McHale • Some Water on the Cheap, by C. K. Marsh Jr. • A Window in Thrums, by Steven Duff • Outfits I Have Known, by Michael J. McLaughlin • ACL No. 1 Falters, by Thomas Francis • Scene from a Sunday Drive, by Charles M. Mizell Jr.
Bumping Post
King Street and Union stations, Seattle