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A builder's photo of mogul #53, a typical freight-hauling workhorse of the early part of the twentieth century.
GB&W #53 was built by Alco Locomotive Works in Schenectady NY. It was typical of the Green Bay Route's fleet of seventeen 2-6-0 locomotives acquired between 1907 and 1924, consisting of A&W #71,72; GB&W #27-30, 50-56, and KGB&W #36-39. All of these moguls had 56" drivers and were very similar in most respects. They weighed between 128,000 and 141,000 pounds and developed approximately 25,000 pounds of tractive effort. GB&W #53 cost $14,475 and was put into service in September 1916. It was Alco Class "260-S-139" and had cast steel drive wheel centers, an improvement over the cast iron parts used in the past. It had an Alligator crosshead, the only Green Bay Route Mogul equipped with the device.
What's an Alligator crosshead, you ask? Well, I asked that, too - see the information box on the right side of this page for details. Most of the older 2-6-0's on the roster were scrapped in 1936; the survivors were renumbered #250-260 and gradually went to the dead line over the next dozen years, except for two Ahnapee & Western units which were used until the early 1950s and GB&W #50 was sold to the Marinette Tomahawk & Western for $3000 on May 15, 1939 and finally scrapped in May, 1953. Related material
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