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The CPH
South Yard Storage and
Restoration Facility
is located just east of the Huntington AMTRAK station, 1101 Eighth
Ave, near 11th Street, I-64 Exits 8 or 11. Chapter volunteer
mechanical personnel are usually at South Yard each Saturday, 9
A.M. to 5 P.M., and are available to answer questions or show you
around the facility. Call Bill Conley at 304-544-7603 for other
dates of operation.
Braddock Inn - Lounge Diner
This is a parlor/lounge
car with daytime seating for 42 people. The Braddock Inn fetures 18 Capitan Chairs which recline and have a small fold out table at each seat. The car also has 6 table seats which hold four a piece. Also, the car has a full service kitchen with a stove, two ovens, refridgerator, and sink, Which lots of dry storage. The car was build by the Budd Company in 1949 for the Pennsylvania Railroad as a 21 roomette sleeping car, numbered 8346 and named the Braddock Inn. The Braddock Inn was renamed Peter Schoenberger in 1956. The car was rebuilt in 1963 to a 64-seat coach with a 12-seat smoker room, and numbered 1509. It became Penn Central 1509 in 1958 and sold to NJDOT in 1976. The car was then renumbered 5411, and was eventually aquired by MARC and rebuilt for use on the Martinsburg, WV train until 2003. The car was aquired by the chapter in September 2004.
NYC-38 full length
lounge car
The NYC-38 is
a full length tavern lounge car with daytime seating up to 52
people. 32 in the lounge area and 20 at tables. The NYC-38 has a
small kitchen for light refreshments.
History:
The NYC-38 was aquired by our chapter in 2001. The NYC-38 was built by the Budd Company in 1944. The New York Central Railroad placed an order with Budd for 13 cars in March 1944. The 13 Cars were part of the Budd Job number 9808-004. The cars were built as Tavern Lounge Cars with seating for 47. Four of the cars were wrecked in the 1960's (36, 42, 35, and 41). Car 42 was retired in 1967 and later scrapped .Car 45 was retired in 1964 and sold to the James E. Strates Shows. The remaining eight cars were merged into the Penn Central System with numbers in 4400 series. Our Car was PC4438. Two cars, including ours were sold to Amtrak in 1976 and ours became Amtrak 3346. The remaining five cars were sold to New Jersey Department of Transportation for commuter train use. Both Amtrak cars (including ours) were placed in work train service by Amtrak, the NYC-38's Amtrak number was 10310. Our car had five lounge seats removed in 1966 and replaced with coat and luggage racks for use as a parlor car. The original Tavern Lounge cars were built for 13 planned daytime Streamliners throughout the New York Central System. They would run in conjunction with the 13 Observation Parlor cars. Based on an internal (NYC) memo dated December 8, 1943, the 13 Streamliners would run: Cleveland & Cincinnati, Cleveland & St. Louis, Pittsburgh & Buffalo, New York & Buffalo, Boston & Albany, Cleveland & Chicago, Pittsburgh & Detroit, Chicago & Cincinnati, and New York & Montreal. (History by Wesley F. Ross)
Both of these
cars area available for rent. The cars may travel on any Amtrak
train with pre approval from Amtrak. If you are interested in
chartering one of these cars please call the office at
866-639-7487
VRE Coach’s 501, 502,
503, and 504

In late 2007,
the Society purchased four former Budd built RDC cars from
Virginia Railway Express in Manassas, VA. Two of the four cars
will be ready by late spring 2009 to be used in the annual New
River Train Trips. The other two will need much work to get them
ready for the trips and other Amtrak excursions. If you would like
to help get the cars ready, please call Bill Conley at
304-544-7603.
If you would
like to lease one or two of our railroad cars, please call the
office at 866-639-7487 for info and available dates.
 Equipment
at Other Locations
Other equipment owned by the C.P.H. chapter includes a one modern
box car, and a Virginian Caboose. On loan to other locations include
Nickel Plate RR Caboose in Belpre, Ohio, and the B&O Sleeper
“Emerald Waters”, now in the B&O Museum with LOCO.
1309. Also donated to Heritage Village in Huntington, which is
the site of the old B&O depot, is a 2-8-2 Steam Locomotive
painted Elk River Coal & Lumber.. Number 10. and the X Southern
John W Arrington Sleeper “Collis P. Huntington." In 2007,
the chapter donated to Heritage Farm and Museum Village the former
Virginia Caboose. |