News & Reviews News Wire Floodwaters spare Midwest railroad museums NEWSWIRE

Floodwaters spare Midwest railroad museums NEWSWIRE

By Chris Anderson | March 21, 2019

| Last updated on November 3, 2020


Get a weekly roundup of the industry news you need.

Email Newsletter

Get the newest photos, videos, stories, and more from Trains.com brands. Sign-up for email today!

MidContinent
Mid-Continent Railway Museum’s proximity to the swollen Baraboo River in March 2019.
Mid-Continent Railway Museum
The recent deadly flooding across the Midwest has caused scores of problems for railroads, and after some close calls, railroad museums and preservation operations across the nation’s heartland continue to monitor nearby waterways for signs of trouble.

Trains “News Wire” reached out to dozens of Midwestern museums and preservation operations. Among those was Mid-Continent Railway Museum in New Freedom, Wis. A museum representative says, volunteers and staff members were mobilized last Friday in anticipation of the Baraboo River cresting its banks and encroaching upon the museum grounds. Prior to the start of sandbagging, the river gauge began to drop and floodwaters receded, the representative says. Mid-Continent is all to familiar with the affects of flooding. It fell victim to significant flooding in June 2008 that damaged 95 of its 117 railroad artifacts.

At the Stuhr Museum of the Prairie Pioneer in Grand Island, Neb., approaching water was diverted around the town, sparing the museum and its collection, which includes railroad rolling stock. Among the museum’s collection is former Union Pacific 2-8-0 Consolidation steam locomotive No. 437.

The recent floodwaters, the result of springs rains and melting snow, have killed at least four people and have caused nearly $1.5 billion in damage, according to Reuters. President Donald Trump approved a disaster declaration for Nebraska on Thursday, and more rainy weather is expected in some parts of the Midwest. The devastating flooding has affected Union Pacific Railroad and BNSF Railway’s Midwest operations.

Although some preservation operations experienced close calls, others, while still dealing with abnormal amounts of water, were relatively unscathed by the recent flooding. Representatives from both the Union Pacific Railroad Museum in Cedar Bluffs, Iowa, and Sioux City Railroad Museum say standing water on the museum grounds caused some minor issues, but the museums were untouched by moving floodwaters and experienced no equipment damage.

Several other operations could not be reached by phone for comment.

2 thoughts on “Floodwaters spare Midwest railroad museums NEWSWIRE

You must login to submit a comment