During train rides snacks and drinks can be purchased and enjoyed in the newly decorated cafe car or taken back to your seat.
Is This Locomotive For The Birds?
This mourning dove thinks it is. She has at least 2 baby birds under her wings.
More pictures by Joe Pagano [Read more...]
Caboose Rides For Vickie’s Angel Walk
2nd Annual Ride the Rails For Cancer
On Sat., June 12 from 11am-5pm and Sun., June 13 from 11am-4pm the Conrail Historical Society is sponsoring caboose rides on the M&H tracks to benefit Vickie’s Angel Walk.
Vickie’s Angel Walk is a non profit with a mission of helping families who have difficulties paying their bills during the challenging times of fighting cancer. Their goal is to take the financial worry away from the family so the family can focus on the cancer and not their finances.
Tickets are available the day of the event at the boarding platform next to Hoffer Park for $5.00 per person and children under age 5 are $1.00.
This is the same day as the Middletown Arts & Craft Fair so there will be lots to see.
Join the fun and help families battling cancer!
Fun On The Easter Bunny Train
Back to School For Our Engineers and Conductors
Our annual rules class held on March 13, 2010.
For other blogs that participate in Wordless Wednesdays visit wordlesswednesday.com.
Restoring A Passenger Car
This is a Chicago made Pullman car from 1916 that was showing it’s age.
It became the big project for the winter of 09-10. [Read more...]
How Did It Get The Nickname Milk & Honey Railroad?
Benjamin L. Bernhart, who is the Reading Railroad Museum curator, wrote an article for the January 2010 issue of Reading Railroad Magazine. It is titled Moving Milk on the Reading and gives us another clue into why the M&H is sometimes referred to as the milk & honey railroad. Following is an excerpt from that article:

Milk operations were at their height between 1910 and 1920. The Reading Railroad was moving between 3000 and 4000 cans daily. Every day, early in the morning, a special milk train left Harrisburg for Philadephia. The train began its journey with cars of milk gathered from the Gettysburg Brand and the PH&P Branch that morning.
Additional milk was taken on at the junction of the Middletown & Hummelstown Branch, just west of Hershey.
Milk cars were added at Lebanon from the Lebanon & Tremont Branch. At Reading, milk cars were added from the Reading and Columbia Branch, Wilmington & Northern, Schuylkill & Lehigh, and the East Penn Branches. East of Reading milk was added at Douglasville, Phoenixville, and the Pickering Branch finally arriving at 3rd & Berks Streets in Philadelphia late that night for process and sale in Philly the next morning. So think of the Reading Railroad as a big river of milk stretching from Harrisburg to Philly with tributary streams like the M&H.









