Waltersburg

Waltersburg
12-1 sleeping car
Manufacturer Pullman
Order number 4762
Constructed 1924
Refurbishment 1935
Diagram Plan 3410; later 3410A
Capacity 27 in 12 sections and 1 drawing room
Operator(s) Pullman Company for Pennsylvania Railroad
Specifications
Auxiliaries 32 Volt
Train heating Steam heating; mechanical air-conditioning (from 1935)
Bogies Type 242
Braking system(s) Type UC
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Notes
[1]

Waltersburg is a heavyweight Pullman sleeping car named for a city in Western Pennsylvania. The unit was built by the Pullman Company in 1924 as 12-section 1-drawing room heavyweight sleeper (collooquily a “12-1”).[2] The car featured open sections with fold-down upper berths and lower berths made by folding the seats down in each section, and a drawing room a large enclosed room with three berths and its own toilet and sink.[3]

Waltersburg was one of 71 cars built on Lot 4762, all to Plan 3410. It was fitted with mechanical air-conditioning in June 1935, and redesignalted Plan 3410A.[1]

As a consequence of the Pullman anti-trust action, the car was sold to the Pennsylvania Railroad in 1948 as PRR 8968, Waltersburg, and leased back to Pullman. It was renamed J. Finley Wilson in December 1952. The Pullman lease was terminated in May 1957 and subsequently rebuilt as a PRR parlor car. The unit went to the Long Island Rail Road around 1957, where it was operated as private commuter club car.[4]

Upon retirement the car was purchased and brought to Cincinnati, Ohio. It was later donated to the Railway Museum of Greater Cincinnati in Covington, Kentucky where it now awaits restoration.

References

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