Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Let's Go to Wisconsin to see the ALCOs!!

The picture on the front of this post card is of freshly painted C430 and C424 ALCO locomotives. They are heading out of Green Bay, Wisconsin in August of 1977. The railroad that owns these two ALCO locomotives is the Green Bay & Western Railroad (GB&W). Sadly, it is no longer operational as the GB&W.
In my mind, there is no better source for the history of a “Fallen Flag” railroad than that railroad’s historical society. The information below is taken from the Green Bay & Western Railroad Historical Society. I strongly recommend that you visit their website for their unique perspective on the history of the Green Bay & Western Railroad (GB&W). This is their address: Green Bay & Western Historical Society, Inc. P.O. Box 940 Plover, WI 54467 This is their website address: https://www.gbwhs.com/gbw.html All the information below was taken from their website. Please go in and take a look around; it is very interesting. The Green Bay & Western Railroad packed a lot of fascination into just 248 miles of mainline and precious few branch lines. The GBW was chartered in 1866 as the Green Bay & Lake Pepin Railway. At the time, many railroads tried to link major waterways, and in 1873 the railroad, then called the Green Bay & Mississippi, linked the Great Lakes with the Mississippi River. Ultimately it ran from the Lake Michigan port of Kewaunee to Green Bay and west through the paper mill town of Wisconsin Rapids to the Mississippi River at Winona, Minnesota, the only place where it left the state of Wisconsin. The GBW even had a subsidiary on its east end, the Ahnapee & Western, which was twice independent and twice a part of the GBW. But the Great Depression dealt a heavy blow to the marginal railroad. Its frugal president, Frank B. Seymour, managed to keep the railroad alive. But it took a visionary man to see a prosperous future for the GBW. Homer E. McGee, a former Katy executive, became president of the GBW in 1934 and began an upgrading program that would improve the railroad’s track, rolling stock and financial health over the coming decades. Early on, however, the railroad was a financial failure. Traffic was sparse in the Wisconsin wilderness; passenger trains never found a real home on the “Grab Baggage & Walk.” The railroad’s resources were drained by derailments, roundhouse fires and floods. The GB&M would emerge from bankruptcy in 1881 as the Green Bay, Winona & St. Paul Railroad, only to go bankrupt again and emerge in 1896 as the Green Bay & Western Railroad. On August 28, 1993, the GBW was purchased by the Wisconsin Central Limited. Its traffic and employees were absorbed by the WC, and the remaining ALCOs were dispersed to other short lines across the U.S. Today, two-thirds of the GBW’s mainline remains in service as part of the Canadian National. The GBW was famous for ALCO power, the Harley-Davidsons of diesel locomotion. They were an ALCO customer since the 19th Century, even before steam locomotive builders like Brooks, Dickson and Schenectady merged to form the American Locomotive Company (ALCO). Every diesel the GBW ever owned – from the HH660 they bought in 1938, to the FA1s and RS2s that banished steam, to their 16-unit fleet when the railroad passed into history in 1993 – was a snorting, smoking, four-stroke product of Schenectady, New York. But the GBW was much more than ALCOs. For most of their history, their eastern connection was a fascinating cross-lake car ferry operation. From 1892 to 1990, sturdy vessels of the Ann Arbor Railroad and the Pere Marquette Railway (later the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway) battled November storms and winter ice to force railroad reliability upon treacherous Lake Michigan. In the 1950s, hundreds of freight cars moved across the lake every day, and even though this market would eventually vanish, you can still ride a car ferry across Lake Michigan.
This is the back of the post card. You can see that it was published by RAILCARDS.COM , a no longer existing company about which I can find no information.

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