EVENT INDUSTRY
We re on a freight and logistics roll this month as we take a look at a couple of neat cargo, trucking and train transport pics from bygone days. In this episode of Decibel s #tbt, we learn that the more things change, the more things stay the same. These images from back-of-the-house logistics operations over the last 150 years are full scenes both familiar and alien.
1866: Central Pacific Railroad Company
Holy moly. When this picture of a Central Pacific Railroad Company train was taken, the American Civil War had just ended, and Kodak hadn t yet invented photographic film. This image shows a freight engine hauling goods across the post Gold Rush California landscape.
1943: Sleeping Truckers
This 1943 shot by photographer John Vachon shows drivers getting a little shut-eye in bunks at a Baltimore-based trucking terminal for the Associated Transport Company. Long hours and tiring routes: the rigors of the trucking industry haven t changed much in the last 70 years. Luckily, these days, the Department of Transportation has implemented that govern the number of hours drivers can be asked to stay behind the wheel (and you can checkout our write-up on new 2013 DOT rules here).
1906: Cargo Hold
Taken around the turn of the last century and owned by the Detroit Publishing Company, this shot shows the hold of the freighter S.S. JH Sheadle, empty of cargo.
1942: Train Dispatch
Hard to imagine a pre-computer world where dispatchers had to keep track of hundreds of trains on a chalkboard, but that world did once exist. This mid-World War II shot shows the engine dispatching office in Tulsa, Oklahoma s Frisco rail yard.
1909: Storage Company Truck
Good on ya, Guarantee Storage Company, for fireproofing that warehouse.