Author picture

Freeman H. Hubbard (1894–1981)

Author of American Heritage Junior Library: Great Days of the Circus

16 Works 209 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Freeman Hubbard, Hubbard Freeman

Works by Freeman H. Hubbard

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1894-04-21
Date of death
1981-08
Gender
male
Occupations
editor (Railroad Magazine)
Nationality
USA
Burial location
Pennsylvania, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
Railroad Avenue, subtitled Great Stories and Legends of American Railroading, is a collection of articles about railroading in the United States in the 19th and the first half of the 20th Century. The subject matter includes histories, tales, poems, some pictures and illustrations, and a dictionary of railroad slang.

The histories include the obvious short biographies of individuals like Casey Jones, Jawn Henry, and Jesse James as well as individuals like Kate Shelley (a 15 year old farm show more girl who saved a passenger train from certain destruction) and Joseph A. Broady (“Steve” in the song “The Wreck of old 97”).

There are chapters on such diverse topics as the Andrews Raid, trackside graves, raildogs (and other adopted railroad pets), the crane with the broken neck – an interesting sidelight of the great strike of 1894, the origins of railroad names and logos, the Johnstown flood, the Great Hinckley fire, quick sketches of railroad worker heroism, the Chatsworth wreck, and The Kid in Upper 4; the last being a short discussion of what it was like to travel on passenger trains in the U.S. during World War II and a history of the ad campaigns mounted by the railroads at the time to emphasize the fact that you, as a non-combatant civilian, were not a priority.

The book was published in 1945 and along with A Treasury of Railroad Folklore and Slow Train to Yesterday, became one of the three best known and most widely read books about railroads in the immediate post World War II period in the U.S. The book has aged well and, while more recent research has modified or changed some of the presented facts of railroad history, it is still a very good read and I would recommend it to anyone interested in an overview of the human side of the railroad experience. (Text Length - 367 pages, Total Length - 374 pages. Includes index)
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A superb collection of US railroad folklore, including a whole chapter on Casey Jones, and a lot of railroad slang. Very interesting and enjoyable.
½
P 6 Cripple Creek Hogger Narrow Gauge
P 23 Rails in Khaki WWII Railroad solders
P 56 Amesbury, MA picture
P 106 Rantoul IL 1800 population to 30,000 in Chanute Air Core Base
P 114 Full page cartoon back in the days
P 140 Full page picture 2 foot gauge steam (good)

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Statistics

Works
16
Members
209
Popularity
#106,075
Rating
3.8
Reviews
3
ISBNs
5

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