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El Paso & Southwestern
Locomotive Number One. Image provided by
El Paso County Historical Society Collections
Old Locomotive Number 1 El
Paso, Texas
Research Packet and
Narrative by: Joe Carlos Jerry Hernandez Dr. George D. Torok
Honors Project Spring 2004
National Endowment for the
Humanities Historical Markers Project
Narrative History: Old
Locomotive Number One Union Depot
Transit Terminal
Old Locomotive Number One
is El Paso, Texas’s legendary and thoroughly-restored steam locomotive
dating from the early era of American railroads before the Civil War. Of
less than thirty surviving engines from this period, it is the most
original and complete. Old Number One has been cherished as an historic
relic since its retirement in 1909 and has been on display at several
sites around El Paso for more than ninety years. It has recently
undergone a thorough cosmetic restoration and has been moved to a new
home in downtown El Paso.
Old Number One was
manufactured in 1857 by Breese, Kneeland, and Company of Jersey City,
New Jersey which also operated under the name of the New York Locomotive
Works. It bears the builder’s No. 73" and was constructed for the
Milwaukee & Mississippi Railroad Company which later became the
Milwaukee & Prairie du Chien Railway Company.
The locomotive served the upper midwest for more than thirty years but
by 1889 it had been acquired by the Arizona and Southeastern Railroad
Company, which later became the El Paso and Southwestern Railroad. It
was the El Paso and Southwestern Railroad’s Locomotive Number One, the
first locomotive engine to be used in the development of Bisbee, Arizona
during its great mining boom of the late 19th century.
Old Number One is a 4-4-0
locomotive, commonly called the American design. This style was patented
by Henry Roe Campbell in 1836 and became a standard for the New York
Locomotive Works. The 4-4-0 designation refers to the wheel arrangement.
The first set of numbers refers to the small wheels that lead the
locomotive; the second set refers to the number of drive wheels; and the
third set refers to the wheels that trail the locomotive. The engine has
a slab-rail frame, a unique design of the New York Locomotive Works.
After more than fifty years
of service Old Number One was overhauled and placed in a quiet park at
Stanton and Franklins streets in El Paso in June 1909. In 1924 the El
Paso and Southwestern became part of the Southern Pacific Railroad who
acquired the engine and the offices adjacent to the park. For fifty
years, from 1909 to 1960, Old Locomotive Number One remained a prominent
historic piece of Western American history and was moved only briefly by
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios who featured it in the 1938 film Let
Freedom Ring.
It was then returned to the park and remained there until the 1960 when
it was transferred to the University of Texas at El Paso’s Centennial
Museum. By the early 1960s, Old Locomotive Number One was resting
quietly at the museum but was in need of repair. The Smithsonian
Institution expressed an interest in the engine believing that it was
the last of its kind in the country. In 1968 Old Locomotive Number One
was placed in a large glass-paned structure was built to protect its
exposed, rusting exterior.
For the next forty years
Old Locomotive Number One was on display at the UTEP campus and received
only occasional cleaning and maintenance. By the 1990s, Old Locomotive
Number One was in need of extensive repair and restoration. In October
1999, the engine was officially recognized as a National Trust for
Historic Preservation Save America’s Treasures project. In 2001
more than 1.1 million dollars of Texas State Transportation Commission
and local matching funds were allocated for the removal and restoration
of the locomotive.
During 2002, steam engine restoration specialist J. David Conrad of the
Valley Railroad of Essex, Connecticut oversaw the removal and full
cosmetic restoration of the engine and tender box. The woodwork, metal,
and exterior trim were stripped, treated and painted to most closely
match the original 1909 color and condition.
In fall 2003, Old Locomotive Number, cosmetically restored to its once
great splendor, was moved to its present site at the Union Plaza Transit
Terminal in downtown El Paso.
. John H.
White, Jr., retired Curator Emeritus of the National Museum of
American History (Smithsonian Institute), comments on Old Number One
quoted in University of Texas at El Paso,
ANational
Historic Trust Preservation Services Fund Grant Application,@
(El Paso, TX 2000), 2, Sec. 12.
. Adolph A.
Stoy, “The Centennial of a Locomotive,” Password II (Aug.
1957), 78; Adolph A. Stoy,
AThe
Centennial of Locomotive: EP&SW No. 1: Its Owners - Its Antecedents,
expanded unpublished manuscript, MS 174, University of Texas at El
Paso Special Collections, El Paso, TX; Edward A. Leonard, Rails at
the Pass (El Paso, TX, 1981), illustrations.
. (Bisbee,
AZ) Daily Review, Feb. 12, 1992: (Bisbee, AZ) Brewery Gulch
Gazette, May 14, 1981.
. John H.
White Jr., A History of the American Locomotive, Its Development
1830-1880 (New York, 1968), 162-63.
. Noted in
text of 1968 Texas Historical Commission historical marker “Old
Engine Number One,” at Centennial Museum, University of Texas at El
Paso, El Paso, TX.
. Bob Miles,
“First El Paso Engine Rusts in Resting Place,”undated newspaper
clipping, c. 1965, El Paso Library Collections, El Paso, TX.
. (Manassas,
VA) Southwest Railroad Notes 30 (March 2000), 3; (El Paso, TX)
Times Dec. 20, 1999.
. (El Paso,
TX) Times, Aug. 26, 2001.
. (El Paso,
TX) Times, July 24, 2003.
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