Baldwin
'Sharknose' locomotives will eventually go to museum, owner says
By | January 10, 2020
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Newsletter
No. 1216 leads an
Escanaba & Lake Superior freight east of Channing, Mich., on Oct. 25,
1982.
Steve
Glischinski
WELLS, Mich. ¨C The
owner of the only two surviving Baldwin RF-16 "Sharknose" diesel locomotives
says they will eventually go to a museum. Escanaba & Lake Superior Railroad
owner and President John Larkin, in an exclusive interview for Trains News Wire,
says that, upon his passing, the two units will go to museums. What museum that
will be is yet to be determined, he says.
Baldwin built 109 such A units
and 51 B-units between 1950 and 1953 for Baltimore & Ohio, New York Central,
and the Pennsylvania Railroad. In 1967 the Monongahela Railway purchased seven
As and two Bs from NYC, and operated them into the 1970s. The last two As, Nos.
1205 and 1216, which were in danger of scrapping, were purchased by Delaware
& Hudson in 1974. They were used in freight service and in passenger
excursion service on the D&H until late 1978, when they were purchased by
Illinois-based Castolite Corp. That company leased them to the now defunct
Michigan Northern, and then they were moved to E&LS.
No. 1216 was
briefly used by E&LS in the summer of 1979; No. 1205 had mechanical issues
and remained stored. No. 1216 saw another revival in autumn 1982, but after a
few trips between the railroad¡¯s headquarters in Wells and Channing the unit¡¯s
crankshaft broke and it has been stored ever since.
Larkin, 73 acquired
the units in the 1980s and has kept them in indoor storage ever since. He also
acquired Baldwin prime movers and other parts in the event the units were ever
restored, but says the costs of rebuilding them would be significant. ¡°But they
are protected and out of the weather. They are inside so they are not further
deteriorating,¡± he says.
Many railfans are perplexed as to why the units
are not available for viewing and why nothing has been done with them over the
years. Despite the fact that in the 1980s the owner erected signs that banned
railfans from E&LS property, he sits on the board of the Lake Superior
Railroad Museum and has assisted that group in several restoration projects.
E&LS is working on the restoration and repainting of the museum¡¯s Northern
Pacific North Coast Limited
observation car Rainier Club.
His interest in railway preservation has resulted in his amassing a large
collection of passenger cars and locomotives, but it is his personal, private
collection and therefore is not open to the public.
The railroad is not
accepting phone calls, emails, or other correspondence regarding the
locomotives¡¯ status
?