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(Source of picture: Florida State Archives)
At one time, cabooses crisscrossed Jacksonville, a major rail center. This one was photographed in the River City on October 12, 1945. It ran for the Seaboard Airline Railroad Company. CLICK HERE for another caboose in Jax, given in a website called "Main Lines East."
BRINGING UP THE REAR -- If your 30th birthday is behind you, then you probably remember, like I do, waving to caboose crews as a child. What a neat job I thought that the Florida railroad men had, just rolling along up in the caboose cupola and waving back at kids. Actually, of course, there was a lot more to their work than just that.
A caboose was a railroad car that brought up the rear of a train. Whatever the nickname for a caboose -- "van," "crib," "palace," "shack," "crumb box," or even "loony bin" and "monkey wagon"* -- this railroad car used to serve several purposes:
1
-- A caboose acted primarily as a safety device. I 2 -- The cupola up on the c Longtime Jacksonville resident, Jack Fry, the son of a railroad man, remembers how caboose crews constantly watched for "hot boxes." Thirty or more years ago, wheel bearings on train cars were of the "friction" type, that is, a brass or other metal "hub" which rotated in a brass sleeve. For lubrication, the hub also revolved in a bed of oil-saturated cotton "waste" at the bottom of a box. If the waste ran dry or got wedged between the hub and sleeve, the friction's heat could cause the waste in the box to catch fire. If unattended, the heat buildup could eventually create a meltdown of the bearing brasses, possibly leading to derailment. And wooden railroad cars could be destroyed by hot box flames too. 3 -- Along with its safety function, the caboose doubled as
a train conductor's office. Prior to computers, a conductor faced
endless paperwork at his caboose desk.
4 -- A caboose served a home away from home for the conductor and brakemen. It contained beds, benches, chairs, a washstand, a toilet, and a coal stove for heat & cooking, as well as lockers for tools, clothes, and personal items. Some cabooses were even decorated with posters and magazine pictures. In addition to the usual personnel, other people occasionally occupied cabooses. These included the caretakers of livestock and perishable fruits and vegetables. 5 -- Cabooses provided a place from which to signal. Doors opened onto platforms at each end of a caboose, and a ladder went to the roof, from which the caboose personnel could signal to the locomotive engineer or to other crew members. Brackets on the corners of the car held signal lights too.
THE END OF THE LINE -- Whatever happened to cabooses? In the computer age, it seems the personal touch often isn't needed anymore: Cabooses have been replaced by various warning instruments.
Freight
trains are monitored by remote radio mechanisms called "End of Train"
devices, or EOTs. Mounted on railroad cars, EOTs transmit safety
info to locomotive engineers. In addition, infrared trackside
detectors are usually spaced every 10 to 20 miles and at some hazard
spots like the bottom of hills and at the ends of railroad yards. They
are embedded underneath the track and scan every axle of the train for
any hot spots emanating from brake pads or locked wheels.
Other factors have also served as nails in the coffins of cabooses:
(1) Trains have become so long that it's really tough to watch over them from a caboose.
(2) Railroad cars have grown taller in height, making it much more difficult to see over them.
(3) Labor agreements have limited the amount of time that train crews can spend on the job, therefore diminishing the need for cabooses as living quarters.
A local place to visit an old caboose is at the Clay County Historical Museum, which offers an impressive railroad memorabilia collection. This institution is located in Green Cove Springs, 20 miles south of downtown Jacksonville. For a "Catalog of Captive Caboose Locations" -- including a few in Jacksonville -- CLICK HERE for lengthy info about cabooses posted at a Yahoo.com message board.
*A ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME -- In addition
to those listed above, other nicknames for a caboose included
accommodation car, ape wagon, back box,
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