| In 1937-1940 the GBW/KGB/AW's
      wooden caboose fleet were rebuilt with bay windows and steel underframes.
      They were renumbered 601-612 at that time.  | 
  
  
    603 (1966) 
       
      More: 
      603 (1969) 
     | 
    603 
      Wooden caboose #603 was rebuilt as a business car in 1947 and painted
      "coach green" with gold lettering and no GREEN BAY ROUTE herald.
      It was usually assigned to Whitehall Supt. Van Dreese at Wisconsin Rapids.
      The original gold 'GB&W' was applied to the short side and '603' was
      applied near the end of the long side. Later it was repainted with a
      warmer green color with 'GBW' and '603' beneath it centered on the lower
      half of the long side between the bay and car body window. Still no GREEN
      BAY ROUTE, but with yellow grab irons. 
      Photo credit: Joe Stauber, collection of Scott
      Janz 
      Date: 1966.10.07 
      Location: Wisconsin Rapids, Wis.
        
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    X604 
        | 
    X604 
      GBW #604 was rebuilt with bay windows, but later they were removed and the
      caboose renumbered X604; it was then used as a transfer caboose around
      Green Bay.  Last seen in the spring of 1967, presumably it was
      rebuilt as steel transfer caboose #604 sometime between July 1967 and
      April 1969. 
      Photo credit: unknown 
      Date: 1964 
      Location: Unknown
        
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    607 
        | 
    607 
      In the late 1930s cupolas were removed and bay windows were added to most
      of the caboose fleet. A photo taken in 1939 shows the car to be a
      'standard' length; the #607 in this 1967 photo is definitely longer. Not
      certain if the caboose was stretched or it is a different car. 
      Photo credit: Joe Stauber, collection of Scott
      Janz 
      Date: 1967.02.11 
      Location: Wisconsin Rapids, Wis.
        
     | 
  
  
    609 
        | 
    609 
      Wooden caboose #609 was usually assigned to the Plover local in the 1960s
      until the arrival of #618 in 1969. 
      Photo credit: unknown, collection of Scott
      Janz 
      Date: 1966.08 
      Location: unknown
        
     | 
  
  
    611 
        | 
    611 
      Wooden caboose #611 was typical of the road cabooses used by the GBW from
      the late 1930s through the 1960s. 
      Photo credit: Charles Reed, collection of Scott
      Janz 
      Date: 1965.06 
      Location: Green Bay, Wis.
        
     | 
  
  
    33 
        | 
    33 
      The only caboose to avoid the renumbering was Ahnapee & Western's lone
      caboose #33. It kept its appearance relatively intact throughout the years
      and remained in service until 1972 -- the last of the wooden cabooses. It
      is now preserved at the National Railroad Museum in Green Bay. 
      Photo credit: unknown 
      Date: 1966.09.06 
      Location: Sturgeon Bay, Wis.
        
     | 
  
  
    | In the 1960s the wood road
      cabooses were phased out in favor of new steel ones. The entire fleet was
      renumbered from the 600- series to the 100- series in the late 1970s. | 
  
  
    113 
        | 
    113 
      Steel bay window cabooses #613 and #614 came from Thrall Car Manufacturing
      Company in 1961. These cabooses remained in service through the end of the
      GBW in 1993. This image shows its appearance after many of the windows
      were plated over and it was renumbered in the early 1980s. 
      Photo credit: Ryan Berrend, collection of Scott
      Janz 
      Date: 1993.08.02 
      Location: Green Bay, Wis.
        
     | 
  
  
    614 
        | 
    614 
      Caboose #614 shows its appearance before the 1980s renumbering. 
      Photo credit: Albert Krueger, collection of Scott
      Janz 
      Date: 1979.06 
      Location: Green Bay, Wis.
        
     | 
  
  
    615 
        | 
    615 
      #615, 616 and 617 came from International Car Company as shells and GBW
      forces completed the interiors. #615 and 616 went into service in 1966 and
      #617 the folowing year. 
      Photo credit: Albert Krueger, collection of Scott
      Janz 
      Date: 1979.05.27 
      Location: Wisconsin Rapids, Wis.
        
     | 
  
  
    116 
        | 
    116 
      After the Wisconsin Central's purchase of the GBW, #116 spent some time in
      transfer service around Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. It was eventually
      fully plated over, painted in WC solid maroon paint and renumbered #19. 
      
        
          More: 
            WC 19 
            (unknown 2000.07.15 Fond du Lac, Wis.) | 
         
        
          GBW
            116 
            (Vern Wigfield, collection of Jim
            Sands 1980.1 Green Bay, Wis.) | 
         
       
      Photo credit: Scott Janz 
      Date: 1994.07 
      Location: Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.
        
     | 
  
  
    117 
        | 
    117 
      GBW #117 was the last of the International Car Company cabooses to go into
      service, in 1967. It has been preserved by the Portage County Historical
      Society. 
      Photo credit: Scott Janz 
      Date: 1994.07 
      Location: Wisconsin Rapids, Wis.
        
     | 
  
  
    | Several wooden cabooses were
      rebuilt into transfer units using frames from the wooden cabooses. | 
  
  
    601 
        | 
    601 
      #601 was typical of the transfer cabooses #601, 602, 604 and 605, although
      specific details varied on each. 
      
      Photo credit: Roger Habeck, collection of Scott
      Janz 
      Date: 1979.08 
      Location: Green Bay, Wis.
        
     | 
  
  
    102 
        | 
    102 
      Photos tend to indicate that wood caboose #602 wasn't the donor for the
      frame of transfer caboose #602. 
      Photo credit: Roger Habeck, collection of Scott
      Janz 
      Date: 1984.03.25 
      Location: Green Bay, Wis.
        
     | 
  
  
    104 
        | 
    104 
      Another transfer caboose rebuilt from the frame of a wooden caboose. 
      Photo credit: Roger Habeck, collection of Scott
      Janz 
      Date: 1981.12 
      Location: Green Bay, Wis.
       
       
     | 
  
  
    | The last of the original 600-
      series cabooses to be rebuilt were #608 and #618 in 1969 for way freight
      service. The bodies were fabricated by Kraft Steel in Green Bay and had
      small fiberglass bay windows. | 
  
  
    608 
        | 
    608 
      GBW #608 was typically assigned to trains No. 5 and 6 (Green Bay to
      Amherst Junction). Photos indicate that the frame of wooden caboose #608
      was used for the 'new' caboose #608. 
      Photo credit: Albert Krueger, collection of Scott
      Janz 
      Date: 1979.08 
      Location: Green Bay, Wis.
        
     | 
  
  
    118 
        | 
    118 
      Caboose #618 was similar to #608. It was typically assigned to trains No.
      7 and 8 (Wisconsin Rapids to Plover/Manawa). 
      Photo credit: Joe Kubus, collection of Scott
      Janz 
      Date: 1984.07.16 
      Location: Green Bay, Wis.
        
     | 
  
  
    | The final caboose to arrive
      on the railroad was #112, built by International Railway Car in 1956 as
      Kansas Oklahoma & Gulf #1549. | 
  
  
    112 
        | 
    112 
      GBW #112 was purchased 1980 when an increase in traffic often required a
      second Green Bay - Winona train. It was the only cupola caboose from 1940
      onward. 
      Photo credit: Bob
      Schoneman 
      Date: 1982.12 
      Location: Plover, Wis.
        
     |