Archive for the 'News Articles' Category

‘Railroad brat’ now the man in charge

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

As Strasburg Rail Road marks its 50th

By Cindy Stauffer
Lancaster New Era
August 2, 2008

Linn Moedinger started out cleaning the toilets and diesel parts for Strasburg Rail Road.

That was 40 years ago this month.

A “railroad brat” — his parents were among the founders of the attraction — and someone who has performed most of its jobs during its history, Moedinger now is the president of the whole shebang.

But that’s just one of his titles, and not the one that he loves best. He’s also the chief mechanical officer of the tourist railroad, which celebrates its 50th anniversary this year.

So though he’s the prez, you won’t find Moedinger in a suit and tie. He wears a denim shirt, blue jeans and work boots while on the job.

That’s because when he’s not crafting budgets, overseeing about 100 employees or performing other administrative tasks, he is toiling on a boiler or some other contraption on contract work the shop does for railroads all over the country.

Moedinger, 57, is a man straddling two worlds: the historic world of steam locomotives and the modern world of tourism.

He’s a machinist and a marketer, a welder and a webcast launcher.

At heart, though, he’s really just a guy who loves trains.

“They just fascinate me,” he said as he stood in the machine shop, a dark, sulfury world, where workers are dwarfed by hulking pieces and parts of the fire-fed engines.

“Thoreau said the steam locomotive was as close to life as man would ever create. When you go into an engine house at night and they’re there, with their boilers full … that thing is sleeping. They make little noises, like they’re snoring. They seem to all have personalities,” he said.

Take Engine No. 1223. She — engines are always referred to as “she” — is a real prima donna. Other engines get attention, she gets jealous and has a breakdown.

But Engine No. 9331? She’s the Energizer Bunny. You ask her to do something and off she goes.

Moedinger, a thoughtful and rather quiet man, smiles broadly as he talks. He’s in his element here.

His love of the railroad was planted and nurtured when he was a child. His folks, William and Marian Weaver Moedinger, both purchased a share, costing about $450, of Strasburg Rail Road in 1958, when its line was rescued from abandonment and turned into a tourist attraction.

His dad, who worked for a time as a Pullman conductor and wrote for train magazines, was a vice president. His mom was appointed the secretary and started the gift shop at the railroad.

Moedinger grew up on the grounds and tracks of the railroad, which takes passengers for a trip through county farmland and allows visitors to view engines and rail cars.

“It was a fantastic place,” he said.

His first paying job started when he was 17, and he was doing grunt work. He was promoted to fireman, the person who shovels coal in the locomotive.

He enlisted in the Army in 1969 and spent several years as an electronics instructor at a base in New Jersey.

Moedinger returned to Strasburg, where his re-entry job was accompanying an engine from Vermont to Strasburg. This was in the summer of 1972, and Hurricane Agnes literally derailed him in Wilkes-Barre, when the floodwaters rose 3 feet above the engine’s stack.

He later was promoted to engineer, shop foreman and chief mechanical officer. When the railroad’s president left in 2000, Moedinger threw his hat into the ring and got that job, too.

His wife, Susan, operates the gift shop at the railroad. The couple, who have two grown children, live in a 1765 brick home on a West Lampeter Township farm his family has occupied since 1711.

The tourist business has dramatically changed since the 1960s, when Moedinger began at Strasburg. He jokes that it used to be so easy to run a tourism business back then that attraction owners could practically put out a five-gallon bucket with a sign, “Put money here,” and visitors would comply. Now, with a flagging economy, a shrinking world and increasing competition for the tourist’s dollar, attractions constantly must find ways to be fun and interactive.

The railroad is considering offering streaming video webcasts, which people could view on their cell phones, from locomotive cabs and its mechanical shop. It also is considering adding a tagline or slogan to its name.

As the future unfolds, Moedinger sees himself becoming more of a teacher for his younger counterparts.

“There are things I’ve seen they will never see,” he said, noting that can be both bad and good.

Railroading will always be in his blood.

“This,” he said, “is where I grew up.”

Will the whistle stop?

Friday, August 1st, 2008

Excursion train might be derailed for good

By York Daily Record
August 1, 2008

The East Broad Top in my opinion may well be the largest historic artifact in the United States,” said Linn Moedinger, president of the Strasburg Rail Road in the March/April issue of Preservation, a magazine published by the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

Read the full article from the York Daily Record.

Enjoy elegant lunch while riding the rails in Lancaster County

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

By Mary Bradley
Patriot News
July 29, 2008

Hop aboard the Strasburg Rail Road’s President’s Car for a fancy lunch while riding through the Lancaster County scenery. Built in 1913, the President’s Car is back on the tracks for regular service.

Trains operate 11:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 p.m. through Labor Day. Hors d’oeuvres, desserts, wine, coffee and tea will be served with seating for 14 passengers. Passengers must be 21 years old with photo identification. A ticket is $45. To order, visit online or call 717-687-7522.

The trip through Strasburg and Paradise townships takes 45 minutes. Lunch is passed by a waitstaff and served on Strasburg Rail Road china and stemware on small side tables throughout the car. The menu features finger-type foods such as quiche, beef Wellington and miniature kabobs.

The President’s Car, known as Reading Car 10, belonged to the president of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, which later became the Reading Railroad. It transported railroad presidents and dignitaries to business meetings and functions.

The car was acquired by the Strasburg Rail Road and restored at a cost of $150,000. Rich with solid mahogany, maple and oak, the car originally had a lounge or sitting area, three staterooms, a dining room, a kitchen and service area and bathroom. As part of the renovation, the bedrooms were transformed into sitting areas to accommodate four or five people. New plumbing and air conditioning were installed.

Hometown Vacations

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

With money tight, more families taking ’staycations’

By CINDY STAUFFER
Lancaster New Era
June 10, 2008

As gas prices approach or exceed $4 — and the cost to fill the tank for that trip to the Outer Banks starts to look like a budget buster — more families are taking vacations close to home.

Linn Moedinger, president and chief mechanical officer of the Strasburg Rail Road, encourages hometown vacationers to include Strasburg Rail Road as a destination. “This would be a great time for locals to get acquainted with us. We hope they do that.”

Read full article here.

How to Make the Most of a Weekend in Pa.’s Amish Country

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

By Sue Kovach Shuman
Washington Post
April 16, 2008

Washingtonians travel to Lancaster County, Pa., about 2 1/2 hours from the Capital Beltway, for a glimpse of Amish life. Horse Drawn buggies. Men in broad-brimmed black hats. Women in bonnets and long dresses. And don’t forget those “No Sunday sales” signs. Lancaster is home not only to Amish but also to Mennonites. Sundays, many locals go to church and relax… and close up shop for the day.
So how do you pack the most into a Pennsylvania Dutch weekend if many things are closed half the time? Not to worry. Lancaster is quiet, but we found plenty to do on a Sunday. Tip 1: Make the Pennsylvania Dutch Convention and Visitors Bureau (800-723-8824) on Route 30 your first stop.

Travel in a steam train from Strasburg to Paradise on the Strasburg Rail Road. Rides start at $12. The Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania is across the road, and the National Toy Train Museum is nearby.

Riding the rails in Ronks, PA

Monday, April 14th, 2008

Ready to Go Nowhere Overnight?
By Andrea Sachs
Washington Post
April 6, 2008

The Red Caboose Motel sits beside the Strasburg Rail Road tracks, I waited on my caboose porch for the locomotive to arrive. I heard the whistle first, then spotted the plumes of white smoke. I walked the few steps to the tracks, sat on a bench, then felt the blast of motion fluff my hair. I waved at children pressed up against windows and returned the twinkle in the conductor’s eye.

Read full article here

Visit Pennsylvania Dutch Country via Antique Train

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

Visit Pennsylvania Dutch Country via Antique Train
Evelyn Kanter
Green Travels

Take the train to visit picturesque Pennsylvania Dutch Country. An antique train, that is.

Rolling farmlands set the scene for a leisurely tour on the Strasburg Rail Road. It’s a 45-minute ride to Paradise, Pennsylvania and back.

There are scenic tours during the day, attracting railroad buffs of all ages. It’s a great family excursion.

There’s also a sunset ride, for adults only, with wine and cheese, that combines the romance of antique railroading with — well — the romance of wine and cheese at sunset.

Strasburg Rail Road is America’s oldest short-line, celebrating 50 years since its rebirth in 1958. That’s when a group of twenty-four visionaries saved the line from abandonment, keeping it alive to introduce and entertain a new generation to the wonders of travel by train.

Train travel is green travel.

The Railroad Legacy of Pa. Dutch Country

Monday, March 31st, 2008

The Railroad Legacy of Pa. Dutch Country

By Dan Schlossberg
Trips & Getaways
Spring 2008

Pennsylvania Dutch Country. The name conjures up images of men in black riding horse-drawn buggies on country roads carved through rolling hills.

Until they get there, however, few visitors realize that the region also has a rich railroad legacy.

The steam-powered Strasburg Rail Road, America’s oldest operating short-line service, takes passengers on a nine-mile, 45-minute round trip through rural Amish farmland.

Across Route 741 from the East Strasburg station, the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania has tracks, trains, turntables and artifacts dating back more than a century.

Not far away are the National Toy Train Museum, featuring five operating layouts, and the Choo Choo Barn, with 135 animated figures and 17 running trains packed into a 1700-square foot display.

Thoroughly smitten rail buffs can even opt for overnight accommodations in the Red Caboose Motel & Restaurant, where rooms are in real cabooses and dinner is served in an old dining car. Owner Larry Demarco has transformed 19 Pennsylvania Railroad cabooses, weighing 25 tons each, into a 40-room motel that offers the most unusual overnight accommodations in Lancaster County. The Red Caboose marks its 40th anniversary in 2009.

For information, call 888-687-5005 or visit www.redcaboosemotel.com.

Many out-of-town railroad buffs begin their day at the East Strasburg Depot, a handsome Victorian edifice moved in nine sections from its original 1882 location, 20 miles away. It is even older than the line’s antique locomotives (including one built in 1902).

Since some of the Strasburg’s rolling stock consists of open-platform coaches from the turn of the century, fresh country air makes a pleasant substitute for air-conditioning. Photography is also easy from the slow-moving train — with Amish buggies most visible at any of the railroad’s four crossings.

The right-of-way is flanked by farms that depend upon wind, water and animal power, since many Amish disdain the use of electricity or motorized vehicles.

There’s also a unique tourist attraction called the Maize Maze, where kids carrying tall, flag-topped poles try to find their way through a maze carved out of a thick cornfield.

Also along the Strasburg route is Groff’s Grove, a picnic area typical of 19th century short-line railroads. A siding at the site marks the spot where trains headed opposite ways can pass.

The railroad, founded in 1832, runs daily trains during the summer, operates on weekends into December, then shuts down for the winter. Adult admission to Strasburg Railroad is $12 while admission for children 3-11 is $6.

Weather poses no problems for the adjacent railroad museum, a deserving member of the National Register of Historic Places.

Exhibit highlights include a 1915 depot, 62-ton freight engine, vintage World War II coach, and a Hall of Locomotives — all housed in a giant room designed to look like an old train shed. Counting the outdoor displays, the railroad museum has more than 100 locomotives, many of them retired from the Pennsylvania and Reading railroads.

Inside the museum, administered by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, visitors can enter the cab of a mighty steamer, view plush parlor cars, and even walk underneath a 62-ton steam engine in the simulated repair shop. The museum will salute Veterans Day weekend Nov. 8–9 with troop train rides during the day and a Swing Train ‘40s dance on Saturday night.

The Toy Train Museum, which doubles as national headquarters of the Train Collectors Association, also has hands-on activities — every Friday during July and August. Videos and railroad films run continuously, and visitors can run many trains themselves.

Strasburg is located in Lancaster County, tucked into southeastern Pennsylvania 57 miles west of Philadelphia.

The area is best known as home of North America’s largest contingent of “Plain People,” some 70,000 members of the Amish, Brethren and Mennonite faiths. Half of them wear traditional clothing and more than 25,000 still use horse-drawn vehicles.

Horse-drawn buggies are dark, travel less than 8 miles per hour and are especially hard to identify at night. But all display triangular warning signs with orange centers and red borders. The best bet is to leave impatience at home.

For many of the locals, little has changed since they fled Germany for religious freedom a half-century before the American Revolution.

The Historic Strasburg Inn is equidistant from the outlets and the railroad attractions. The home of an annual Summer Craft Fair, it is also next door to Gast Classic Motorcars, a year-round museum that does for auto enthusiasts what the Strasburg Rail Road does for train buffs.

For information, call 717-687-7691 or visit www.historicinnofstrasburg.com.

‘Modern Marvels’ in Strasburg

Sunday, January 6th, 2008

History Channel chugs into town to film locomotives.
By Jon Rutter
Sunday News
At one minute past 11 in the morning, Andy Sellers opened the throttle and sent the six-car Strasburg Rail Road train steaming into history. Make that The History Channel.

A camera crew visited the railroad Friday to take a special excursion and collect footage for an upcoming installment of the network’s “Modern Marvels” series.

Producer, writer and director Greg DeHart said he expects the Strasburg steam engine to puff across television screens sometime in March.

DeHart said his project will showcase the technology and the human story behind railroad locomotives.

The Los-Angeles-based documentary filmmaker returned from exploring locomotives in Panama two weeks ago.

After Strasburg, he said, he’ll travel to Canada to check out a modern-day locomotive builder and to France to see “the fastest locomotive on earth.”

DeHart will also visit the Brookville Equipment Corp., a steam engine maker in northern Pennsylvania, among other destinations.

Seven more shooting days are planned.

The Strasburg line, with its coal-black engines towing carefully restored coaches past Amish farms, will star in the documentary’s romance chapter.

Even if you don’t like locomotives, DeHart said, you can’t help but admire the massive symmetry of the steam engine.

“They look so complicated but there’s something aesthetically beautiful about them.”

Locomotion
DeHart, whose previous work for the History Channel included a 2002 look “Inside Pol Pot’s Secret Prison,” said he didn’t start out raving over locomotives.

But then he became fascinated.

Friday, he arrived at Strasburg to capture the sights and sounds of the iron horse with cameraman Dan Lantz and soundman Adrian Sam, both out of Philadelphia.

“We’re really here to get the ins and outs from a technical standpoint,” DeHart said.

In fact, said Hope Banner of Scheffey Integrated Marketing, which represents the Strasburg Rail Road, the shop where Strasburg rebuilds locomotives weld by weld was a key factor in wooing the filmmakers.

The shop is rebuilding a Rio Grande Southern narrow-gauge 10-wheeler trucked in from Colorado, among others, said machinist Erich Armpriester.

“Most of the parts are custom-made. Obviously, you can’t just go to Baldwin Locomotive supply and order parts off the shelf anymore.”

But you can still commute 3 1/2 miles by steam on the country’s oldest short-line.

Before setting out, Sellers, whose friends call him “Doc,” swooped his hands through the air, explaining the geometry of Engine 90.

The cylinder bone is connected to the piston bone, said Sellers, standing before steel drive wheels nearly as tall as a man.

Up in the cab with the filmmakers, he stomped on a pedal. Angled doors parted, exposing a firebox stoked to a volcanic red glare by fireman Richie Maggs.

A feather of steam hissed from the boiler-top safety valve outside, letting off pressure.

The engine was made in Philadelphia and hauled freight for the Great Western Railroad in Colorado before Strasburg got it in the late 1960s.

Each locomotive has quirks that make you love — and sometimes hate — them, said Strasburg Rail Road President Linn Moedinger.

So does the terrain, added Moedinger, who once piloted an engine up a slippery hill by getting a run for it, just as a car driver would.

Number 90 waited in the freezing morning air, panting softly.
That characteristic sound means the locomotive is pressurizing the air brake system, explained conductor Mark Andrews.

“If you don’t hear panting we don’t have brakes.”

Andrews called “All aboard!” and climbed into the turn-of-the-20th-century Boston & Maine Railroad coach he had helped restore.

Number 90 jingled its bell and chugged out of the station on its special journey (the line is normally closed to tourists in midwinter).

“It’s pretty exciting,” said Moedinger before stepping into the coal stove-warmed coach. “We’re thrilled” to be featured on The History Channel show, he added.

Driving in reverse for the first half of the trip as usual, the train ambled northeast up the track, introducing the filmmakers to classic “Road to Paradise” sights.

Seven bundled-up Amish kids stood at a crossing and waved as the coaches trundled by.

The train paused once and blasted its whistle across the bare fields until an answer echoed back.

The “ghost whistle” is supposed to be from an engine on the long-defunct Lancaster, Oxford and Southern Railroad, Andrews explained with a twinkle in his eye.

Coal smoke perfumed the air. Puffs of backlit steam whiffed past the coach windows, as if the train were flying in and out of the clouds.

In Paradise, where the Strasburg corridor parallels the trunk line between Philadelphia and Lancaster, Sellers shuttled Number 90 to the other end of the cars before heading back.

Suddenly, an Amtrak express shot past at more than 90 mph, dragging the falling-note blat of its horn behind it.

The scene made a perfect picture of locomotives then and now.

“If they would let us back on the main line,” Andrews joked, “we would’ve caught ‘em.”

History Channel Films at Strasburg Rail Road

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

Strasburg Rail Road, America’s oldest short-line railroad, will be featured on the History Channel’s Modern Marvels series. Modern Marvels is a series that tells the stories of everyday items, technological breakthroughs and man-made wonders.

The episode featuring Strasburg Rail Road will focus on locomotives and steam engines. The Modern Marvels crew filmed at the railroad all day on Friday, January 4th. The show is expected to air in March of 2008.

Watch WGAL news coverage.