The Crescent Sisters

CrescentCityDiagramLarge Southern Railway ran The Southern Crescent which pulled 4 sleeper/lounge passenger cars, some times referred to as ‘The Crescent Sisters’ since all four cars were identical and built simultaneously. They were, The Crescent City (2350), The Crescent Moon (2351), The Crescent Harbor (2352), and The Crescent Shores (2353). Of the four cars, only 3 remain in existence today. Built in 1949 by the Pullman Company, these sleeper/lounge passenger cars were 85 foot long, and housed 1 master bed room, 2 drawing/bed rooms, a toilet, a small kitchen, and a lounge area that filled more then 1/3 of the car.

 

SR_carhost In Atlanta, chair-car attendant J.J. Mahone stands beside his car’s steps ready to help passengers board the Southern Crescent on it’s run between New Orleans and Washington, D.C.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SR_car_inside Dinning cars of the Southern Crescent no longer have lavish interiors of polished mahogany; but sparkling crystal and snowy table linens help confirm continuing high standards of service.

 

 

 

 

 

 

2011-07-23112321 The Crescent City located at The Dalton Freight Depot in Dalton, Ga.

 

 

 

 

 

Crescent_Moon The Crescent Moon located at the Tennessee Valley Railroad Museum in Chattanooga, TN.

 

 

crescentharbor The Crescent Harbor is located at The Watauga Valley Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society in Johnson City, TN.

The Crescent Shores

The Lost Sister

1978trainwreckaerial

About 5:38 a.m., on December 3, 1978, as the Southern Railway Company’s train no. 2, The Crescent, was passing through a 5 degree 15 minute curve at Elma, Nelson County, Virginia, eight cars and four locomotive units were derailed. Six persons were killed, 60 persons were injured, and property damage was estimated to be $557,500. The National Transportation Safety Board determines that the probable cause of this accident was the failure of the engineer to observe the track ahead because he was unnecessarily distracted by a transition problem, which led to his operation of the train into a 5 degree 15 minute curve at a high speed. The high speed produced excessive lateral forces which caused the wheels of either the fourth locomotive unit or the first car to climb out of the gauge, cross the head of the rail, and derail.

Crescent_wreck_article

Newspaper Excerpts

Shipman, VA Train Wreck, Dec 1978

Posted November 11th, 2007 by Stu Beitler

Six Die In Train Mishap

SHIPMAN, Va. (AP) — “He was in tremendous pain, but never cried out,” a rescue coordinator says of a cook pinned 11 hours under a stove in the crumpled dining car of the Southern Crescent passenger train that derailed near here, killing six persons.

Bound from Atlanta to Washington, the Southern Railway train jumped its tracks at Elma, an abandoned Nelson County rail stop in mountainous central Virginia, about 5:30 a. m., Sunday.

Seven cars and three locomotives lay scattered like kindling in and around a shallow ravine beside the track. Only the lead locomotive, which broke away, and the last car remained untouched.

The 37-year-old cook, NED HAYNES of Atlanta, became the focus of attention from as many as 125 volunteer rescue workers after some 60 other passengers and crew were taken to hospitals in Lynchburg and Charlottesville.

“HAYNES is very brave,” said Capt. KIMBALL GLASS of the Lynchburg Rescue Squad.

“We fed him morphine with glucose to try to keep the pain down,” GLASS said. “He understood what we were doing. He asked us to pray for him and we all prayed for him. We talked to him and joked some with him.”

National Transportation Safety Board spokesman BOB BUCKHORN said an investigating team was sent to the scene to look for the probable cause of the derailment.

HAYNES and five other survivors were listed in critical condition at the University of Virginia hospital in Charlottesville. Twelve others were in satisfactory condition.

HAYNES suffered multiple trauma, burns and multiple fractures and was taken to the operating room and then admitted to the burn center, said WILLIAM L. LAMM, night hospital administrator.

Cleanup operations continued through the night. Southern Railway crews and a private contractor worked with cranes and bulldozers under portable lights to clear the single-track section of the railroad’s main line.

The railroad said the train carried 75 passengers and 15 crewmen.

The dead were identified as:

HOWARD LEWIS JACKSON, 59, of Alexandria, Va., a flagman.

LEWIS PRICE of Atlanta, a cook.

JACKSON HOMER HUME and EDITH CARROL HUME, an elderly couple from Madison Heights, Va.

EDWARD FRANKLIN SHAW, 14, of Wilmington, Del., said hospital spokesman BILL FISHBACK.

The sixth body, wedged under the wheel of a railroad car and the last to be removed from the scene about 10:40 p. m., was not identified late Sunday night pending notification of relatives.

Rescuers arrived on the scene about 6:10 a. m. and help poured in throughout the day down the one-lane, unused rail bed that served as a road to the isolated wreck scene.

Some passengers helped others out of cars, breaking laminated windows and prising open doors.

DR. J. DESMOND COUGHLIN of Ashville, [sic] N. C., who was riding with his wife to Washington to visit their son, stayed at the train to help. He suffered a facial laceration.

“He refused to be taken away from the train until everybody was taken care of,” said DR. KEN WALLENBORN of Charlottesville.

COUGHLIN is a Southern surgeon in Ashville.[sic]

He and his wife were riding with two railroad employees in the last car, a private coach often used by the railroad executives.

As medical technicians and a doctor huddled in the dining car kitchen with HAYNES, workers used bulldozers, cables and cutters to strip the stainless steel siding off the car so they could pull out the stove that pinned HAYNES.

“We used up 15 razor-type discs cutting the car,” GLASS said.

“As far as damage is concerned and the problems of getting a man out, this is the worst I’ve seen,” The veteran rescuer added.

Another cook lay dead in the compartment with HAYNES, GLASS said, and was removed several hours before HAYNES was brought out about 4:30 p. m.

“We had to get the dead man out,” he said. “Him seeing this man there with massive head injuries would have had some affect on him.”

About six survivors, including HAYNES, were trapped in various cars when rescuers arrived and all but HAYNES were gotten out quickly.

The News Frederick Maryland 1978-12-04

******************************************************************************************SHIPMAN, Va. (AP) – A Southern Railway passenger train jumped the tracks on a curve and piled into a ravine in mountainous south-central Virginia early Sunday. Authorities said six persons were killed and at least 60 were injured, several critically.

A severely injured cook was trapped for 11 hours in the debris of the smashed dining car, his legs pinned beneath a stove. Workers used bulldozers to peel back the side of the car and then life the heavy stove from the cook, NED HAYNES of Altanta.

DR. KENNETH WALLENBORN of Charlottesville, who climbed into the diner to attend HAYNES, said he had been pinned “from the pelvis down” and suffered third-degree burns on his chest and stomach and a broken ankle and leg.

“He is a man of tremendous intestinal fortitude … He has put up with a lot here,” WALLENBORN said.

At the scene, snow mixed with rain was falling in near-freezing temperatures. Blood was smeared on windows that had been broken when passengers escaped. Inside, seats were torn from their moorings and mattresses lay piled in a jumble in the aisles.

Four bodies were removed from the huge pileup of passenger cars and locomotives, and state police said two more bodies were known to be in the wreckage.

Four of the dead were identified as HOWARD LEWIS JACKSON, 50, of Alexandria, a flagman on the train; LEWIS PRICE of Atlanta, a cook; and JACKSON HOMER HUME and EDITH CARROL HUME of Madison Heights, Va. Names of the two other victims were being withheld until relatives could be notified.

Seven of the eight passenger cars and three of the four diesel locomotives of the Southern Crescent train, bound from Atlanta to Washington, piled up about 5:40 a. m. three miles north of Shipman, between Charlottesville and Lynchburg.

Railroad officials could not be reached for comment on how fast the train was going.

A Southern Railway spokesman said the train was carrying 65 passengers and a crew of about 12.

JOHNNY BRIDGES of Trenton, N. J., and TARIZ MUHAMMAD of Newark, N. J., were credited with leading many passengers to safety.

BRIDGES said it seemed to him the train “was sliding for about 10 minutes” after it jumped the tracks. “I could feel it just slide, just slide.”

MUHAMMAD said smoke was so thick in the dining car that “you couldn’t see people in the car from the outside .. but you could hear the screams.”

The cause of the derailment had not been determined.

CHARLES MORGRET, a spokesman for the Southern Railway, said, “There’s no way of telling at this early stage what caused the derailment.” A team from the National Transportation Safety Board was on its way to investigate.

A. H. SAWYER, associate administrator of the University of Virginia Hospital in Charlottesville, said 39 passengers were brought to the hospital.

He said five required surgery, but he did not know the nature of their injuries. All were reported in critical condition. The remaining 34 suffered cuts, scrapes and bruises and would be released from the hospital after receiving treatment, SAWYER said.

He said another 19 passengers were taken to the Martha Jefferson Hospital in Charlottesville, where they were treated for minor bumps and bruises.

Daily Herald Chicago Illinois 1978-12-04

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