Classic Trains – September 2019

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30 CLASSIC TRAINS FALL 2019

IN THE NATIONAL MEDIA, the Mil-
waukee Road was known for its flashy
Hiawatha passenger engines, notably its
streamlined 4-4-2s and 4-6-4s. More nu-
merous if less celebrated were its 40 S2
4-8-4 freight engines, built by Baldwin
during 1937–40. The emphasis was on
horsepower to get tonnage over the road
quickly from MILW’s main Chicago yard
at Bensenville to distant terminals like

Heav y freight and Hiawathas


At Suger Loaf, N.Y., Lehigh & Hudson River 4-8-2 No. 11
is 13 miles into a run with a freight from Maybrook,
N.Y., to Allentown, Pa., in August 1945. Donald W. Furler

Council Bluffs and St. Paul. During the
war, the Milwaukee found itself in need
of a heavy passenger engine. The S2 was
too big for such duty because of some
tight station clearances, so a smaller de-
sign was needed. The road turned to Alco
in 1944 for 10 4-8-4s based on Delaware
& Hudson’s K-62. Since the WPB would
not approve new passenger-only power,
they were considered dual-service en-

gines, and they proved to be capable
freight haulers. With their all-weather
cabs, bulky pilots, and rounded tenders,
the S3 couldn’t be called elegant. But
matching ample boiler horsepower with
74-inch drivers gave the Milwaukee a
top-notch engine, something today’s 261
demonstrates every time it ventures out
in excursion service for its operators,
Friends of the 261 [see page 86].

Milwaukee Road S3 4-8-4

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