Flying Yankee Explained

Flying Yankee
Powertype:Diesel
Builder:Budd Company and Electro-Motive Corporation
Buildmodel:BM-MEC 6000
Builddate:1935
Totalproduction:1
Aarwheels:B-2
Bogies:Jacobs Bogie
Primemover:Winton 201-A
Enginetype:Diesel
Cylindercount:8
Operator:Boston & Maine Railroad
Locale:North America
Deliverydate:February 1935
Lastrundate:May 7, 1957
Currentowner:Flying Yankee Association
Disposition:Undergoing restoration to operating condition
Flying Yankee
Type:Inter-city rail
Status:Discontinued
Locale:New England
First:1935
Last:1957
Formeroperator:Boston and Maine Railroad
Maine Central Railroad
Start:North Station
End:Bangor Union Station
Distance:254miles
Journeytime:5 hours
Frequency:Daily, except Sunday
Trainnumber:Northbound: 15
Southbound: 16
Seating:Streamline coaches (1954)
Catering:Restaurant lounge car, catering by The Armstrong Company

The Flying Yankee is a diesel-electric streamliner built in 1935 for the Boston and Maine Railroad by Budd Company and with mechanical and electrical equipment from Electro-Motive Corporation. It was the third streamliner train in North America.[1] That train ceased passenger service in 1957 and is stored at the Conway Scenic Railroad in New Hampshire. It was owned by the state of New Hampshire, until it was purchased by the Flying Yankee Association after being selected by the state of New Hampshire to receive ownership of the diesel streamliner.

History

Prior to 1935, the name Flying Yankee referred to a passenger train that ran between Bangor, Maine, and Boston, Massachusetts, at least back to 1891. The train was pulled by an early 4-6-2 Pacific steam engine; cars were standard heavyweight construction.

The new Flying Yankee in the 1930s was a lightweight train constructed with welded stainless steel using Budd's patented process. The engine was an 8-cylinder Winton 201-A diesel, driving a generator;[2] the lead truck was equipped with traction motors. It was fitted with air conditioning in all cars. No dining car was provided; instead, meals were prepared in a galley and served to passengers in trays that clipped to the back of the seat in front.[3]

It was the third streamliner in service after the Union Pacific Railroad's M-10000 and the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad's Pioneer Zephyr. The Flying Yankee was a virtual clone of the latter, except that it dispensed with the baggage/mail space to seat 142 in three articulated cars.[3]

The train was delivered in February 1935, and toured the BM-MEC railroad system before entering service on April 1.[3] The daily route served began in Portland, then to Boston, followed by a return to Portland and continuing to Bangor, Maine, returning through Portland to Boston and finally returning to Portland late in the day, a distance of per day. This schedule was kept six days a week; the trainset spent Sundays undergoing maintenance. The train proved extremely successful, attracting new ridership and earning a profit for its owners.

Later on, as newer equipment replaced it on one route, it would be switched to other routes, bearing the names The Cheshire, The Minuteman, The Mountaineer, and The Business Man.[3]

As railroad passenger ridership declined in the 1950s, the Yankee was also getting old, and thus the trainset, as The Minuteman, was retired, running its last on May 7, 1957.[3]

Most of the train's route is currently operated by Amtrak's Downeaster, which runs as far north as Brunswick, Maine.

Current location

The railroad donated the trainset to the Edaville Railroad tourist/museum operation in Carver, Massachusetts, in 1957. The train remained on static display there for about 35 years until it was moved in 1993 to Glen, New Hampshire, after being purchased by Bob Morrell, then-owner of Story Land.In 1997, the train was moved to the Concord and Claremont Railroad's shops in Claremont, New Hampshire, for a restoration after it was purchased by the state of New Hampshire. By 2004, the major structural restoration had been completed, and detailed restoration of components is ongoing with the goal of restoring the train completely to running condition. The train was moved on August 10, 2005, to the Hobo Railroad in Lincoln, New Hampshire.

Plans to move it to Concord, New Hampshire, site of a former Boston & Maine railyard, fell through in 2017.[4] In November 2023, the state of New Hampshire put the equipment up for sale, with a focus on "the relocation and encouraged restoration" of the trainset.[5] In April 2024, the trainset was sold to the Flying Yankee Association, who hopes to restore and operate the set in the Mt. Washington Valley, with a possibility of running it on the Conway Scenic Railroad.[6]

Models

HO scale

O scale

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Two Veterans Retire. Boston and Maine Railroad Magazine. May–June 1957. May 18, 2012. Wikimedia Commons.
  2. http://flyingyankee.org/history/story-of-the-flying-yankee Story of the flying Yankee
  3. Web site: Two Veterans Retire. Boston and Maine Railroad Magazine. May–June 1957. May 18, 2012. Wikimedia Commons.
  4. Web site: Flying Yankee train won't be returning to Concord. Concord Monitor. June 3, 2017.
  5. Web site: State of New Hampshire seeks to sell ‘Flying Yankee' streamliner. Trains.com, November 5, 2023. November 5, 2023.
  6. Web site: Franz . Justin . 2024-04-08 . New Hampshire Sells ‘Flying Yankee’ . 2024-07-14 . Railfan & Railroad Magazine . en-CA.