- Phoebe Snow (character)
Phoebe Snow was a
fictional character created to promote theDelaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad , and, in later years, the name of a pair of passenger trains.1900: The advertising campaign
Rail travel around the year 1900 was not pleasant. After a long trip on a
coal -powered train, travellers would frequently emerge covered in blacksoot . The exception to that rule were locomotives powered byanthracite , a clean-burning form of coal. The Lackawanna owned vast anthracite mines inPennsylvania , and could legitimately claim that their passengers' clothes would still look clean after a long trip.To promote this fact, their
advertising department created Phoebe Snow, a youngNew York socialite , and a frequent passenger of the Lackawanna. For reasons never explained, Miss Snow often travelled toBuffalo, New York , always wearing a white dress.The first ad featured the image of Phoebe and a short poem:
:"Says Phoebe Snow":"about to go":"upon a trip to Buffalo":"My gown stays white":"from morn till night":"Upon the Road of Anthracite"
The campaign became a popular one, and soon Phoebe began to enjoy all the benefits offered by DL&W: Gourmet food, courteous attendants, an observation deck, even on-board electric lights:
:"Now Phoebe may" :"by night or day":"enjoy her book upon the way":"Electric light":"dispels the night":"Upon the Road of Anthracite"
Phoebe soon became one of the
United States ' most recognized advertisingmascot s. DuringWorld War I , anthracite was needed for the war effort, and its use on railroads was prohibited, thus ending her career, but her legend remained alive among railroad fans.1949: Lackawanna passenger train
On
November 15 ,1949 , the Lackawanna launched a streamlined passenger train named after its mascot, The Phoebe Snow. It assumed the train numbers 3 and 6 of the railroad's previous premier train, "The Lackawanna Limited", and ran on a daylight schedule between Hoboken, New Jersey, and Buffalo, New York. Westward, the sleeper and some coaches would continue on to Chicago over the Nickel Plate Road (New York, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad ) and, on return, would be attached in Buffalo to train No. 10, the "New York Mail". Motive power was initially provided by an A-B-A set of passenger-equipped EMD F3 diesels, later supplanted by a pair of EMD E8A diesel-electric locomotives.1963: Erie Lackawanna passenger train
Under the
Erie Lackawanna , the train ran from 1963 to 1966 on a more southerly Hoboken-Chicago routing, skipping Buffalo by heading west from Corning, New York over the main line of the formerErie Railroad . The train remained mostly unchanged from its Lackawanna version.1966: Disposition of cars
Both of the tavern-lounge cars from the "Phoebe Snow" wound up in the possession of Metro-North where they serve in the Metro-North business train after being used as parlor cars by the
Long Island Rail Road on trains to Montauk, Greenport, andThe Hamptons .The coaches were also split up with most being sold to the
New York MTA where they were used as commuter cars. At least one coach ended up in the hands ofConrail where it was used on the "Valpo Local" out of Chicago.The two Budd-built streamlined diners built for the "Phoebe Snow" also survive today. Diner 470 (EL 770) is currently owned by the [http://www.eldcps.org Erie Lackawanna Dining Car Preservation Society] , a non-profit historical group, and will be undergoing a full restoration in the future. Diner 469 (EL 769) is at the Memphis Transportation Museum.
1979: Amtrak era
In 1979,
Amtrak ran an inspection train over Phoebe's route between Hoboken and Scranton as part of an expansion plan, however Amtrak had to discontinue numerous routes due to budget cuts at the hands of the Carter administration. In1991 Amtrak consolidated itsNew York City operations into Penn Station; five years later theKearny Connection opened, allowing trains on the Lackawanna to access Penn Station. On January 25, 2008, New York SenatorCharles Schumer announced that Amtrak and the New York Department of Transportation were studying a passenger rail line between Binghamton and Scranton to connect with a potentially restoredLackawanna Cutoff .
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.