Railroad Heritage 22

Railroad Heritage no. 22 showcases the winners of the annual Creative Photography Award and begins a series, “Faces of Railroading,” about Jack Delano and his portraits of people and railroads in preparation for an exhibition in Chicago. Other highlights of the journal include stories about the Center’s 2009 activities, the 2010 “Conversations about Photography” conference, and profiles of photographer Frank Barry and the designer of the Southern Pacific’s 1937 Daylight passenger train. Receive your copy of Railroad Heritage with your gift/subscription today.
Photography Awards
Photo by Brandon Smith, 2010 winner.
As a part of its commitment to excellence, the Center has established annual national awards for outstanding contributions to railroad imagery. See the 2010 winners.
"Conversations" Conference

Photo by Henry Koshollek, M.A.
The Center's eighth "Conversations About Photography" conference will be held April 23-25, 2010, in Lake Forest, Illinois. Photos of the 2009 conference are on the conference page.
Center for Railroad
Photography & Art
1914 Monroe St.
P.O. Box 259330
Madison, WI 53725-9330
(608) 251-5785 / Email Us!
Railroading and photography grew up together. Only a few years separate the beginning of US railroading in 1827 and the first photographic image--and the iron horse soon became a favorite subject.
A decade after railroading gained a toehold in America, Louis Daguerre invented the first practical photographic process. Samuel F. B. Morse, a painter better known for his telegraph code, brought the daguerreotype to the US in 1839. An undated view of the 1848 locomotive "Tioga" is among the earliest American railroad photographs.
Railroads pioneered the field of industrial photography, first as a way to record their locomotives and later to promote travel by rail. Beginning in the 1930s, impressive photo books brought new attention to rail photography. Through the years, the tie between railroading and photography has remained strong, maintained by professionals, railroad companies, and skilled amateurs alike.
A silhouette made in 1962 in Minnesota serves as a symbol for the center. Photo by John Gruber
These examples of railroad-inspired creativity only hint at the 150-year legacy of thousands of talented men and women. The outstanding images suggest how deeply railroading has affected our culture, our visual heritage, and our daily lives.
Railroading was an agent of change and a powerful tool. With it, men and women reshaped the continent and made our modern existence possible. Those same Americans used and enjoyed photography, both for personal creative expression and as a powerful tool for change and development. The camera and the locomotive grew up together.
Together, railroading and photography permit us to look back over the last century and a half and realize how far we have come. But some things do not change. It is safe to assume that for as long as trains rumble through the landscape, folks at trackside will capture the moment with an image.
We thank the Donnelley and Lee Library, Lake Forest College, Lake Forest, Illinois, for sharing photographs in the Munson Paddock Collection, and photographers who contributed to the exhibition.
A catalog/brochure of the exhibit at the Nevada State Railroad Museum is available from the museum's gift shop for $6 including postage. The photo shows the display as it appeared at the museum in Carson City.
Unidentified Tioga, built in 1848 for the Philadelphia & Columbia, among the earliest known railroad photos (Smithsonian Institution)
Andrew J. Russell (1830-1902) Dan Casement and clerks at Echo City (Union Pacific Museum Collection)
Carleton E. Watkins (1829-1916) Lumberyard for the Comstock south of Carson City, Nevada, in 1876, with Virginia & Truckee engine I. E. James amid mining timbers. (Nevada State Railroad Museum)
John B. Silvis (1830-1900) Winnemucca family, Nevada (Barry J. Swackhamer Collection)
Perrie Mahaffey (1887-1961) Broadway Limited at Night, Latrobe, Pennsylvania, 1930 (California State Railroad Museum)
Albert Phelps (1917-1994) Outback meet of Nevada Northern varnish from Ely and Southern Pacific's eastbound Challenger at Cobre, Nevada, in July 1941. (Nevada State Railroad Museum)
William Rittase (1887-1968) Chesapeake & Ohio locomotives at Clifton Forge, Virginia, 1944 (C&O Historical Society)
Esther Bubley (1921-1998) CB&Q worker, Princeton, Illinois, 1948 (Newberry Library, Chicago)
Ted Wurm (1919-2004) Virginia & Truckee locomotive 27 and train no. 2 at Carson City, Nevada, May 30, 1950. (Nevada State Railroad Museum)
*Richard Steinheimer, Sacramento, California Leased Rio Grande diesels at Mina, Nevada, New Year's Eve, 1971 (Center)
*Stan Kistler, Grass Valley, California, Southern Pacific Cab Forward, Colton, California, 1952 (Center)
*Jim Shaughnessy, Troy, New York Central Vermont at St. Albans, Vermont, 1956 (Center)
Robert Hale (1912-1992) Second 24, Grand Canyon Limited, Cajon Pass, California, 1950s (M. D. McCarter collection)
*William D. Middleton, Charlottesville, Virginia, Chicago & North Western Station, Madison, Wisconsin, 1955
*James P. Gallagher (1920-2002) Maryland & Pennsylvania, Gross Trestle, 1955
*O. Winston Link (1914-2001) Train No. 2 Crossing Bridge 425, Arcadia, Virginia (Front View), 1956 (Lent by Link trust)
*John Gruber, Madison, Wisconsin Rochester 400 in the fog, Madison, Wis., 1962
Gordon Osmundson, Oakland, California Hook and Boom, Nevada Northern, Ely
*Ted Benson, Modesto, California San Jose, California, Station, 1985
Joel Jensen, Santa Barbara, California Winter Olympics, Utah, 2002
*Winner of the Railway & Locomotive Historical Society national award for photography.