Railroad History in a Nutshell
Two coal trains in the Powder River Basin in Wyoming illustrate the astonishing growth of railroad freight in the U.S. and Canada. Matt Van Hattem
North American railroading has a rich past. How can it all be encapsulated? Where can you go to learn its roots? The Center for Railroad Photography and Art, based in Madison, Wis., demonstrates how photographs and art can contribute to a wider understanding of railroads’ impact on the growth, economic life, and people of America
Launched in 2000 by CRPA founder John Gruber, Railroad Heritage gave the Center a publishing platform. Of the first thirty-one issues, two were critically acclaimed special issues, “Railroad History in a Nutshell” and “Railroad Preservation in a Nutshell”, both also in collaboration with Jack Holzhueter as well as Scott Lothes
We titled former Trains Senior Editor Matt Van Hattem’s picture (above) “Coal Traffic Booms in the Powder River Basin,” using it to show the growth in freight traffic. An added feature to this entry was an oral interview with a Burlington Northern executive who proposed the building of the Powder River line to BN board of directors in the 1970s — one of railroading’s most important successes.
JOHN GRUBER is a long-time Trains contributor, founder and president of the Center for Railroad Photography and Art, and editor of Railroad Heritage. He has been a freelance railroad photographer since 1960, and received a railroad history award from the Railway & Locomotive Historical Society in 1994 for lifetime achievement in photography.