the ferdinand magellan - Florida Online Journals
Transcription
the ferdinand magellan - Florida Online Journals
THE FERDINAND MAGELLAN The Only Pullman Car Built for the Exclusive Use of a President is One of Broward's National Register Sites By Blick Price Th e Ferdinand Mag ellan is owned and proudly displayed in Fort Laud erdale, Florida , by the Gold Coast Railroad . a non-profit organization of volunteer railroad enthusias ts. It is uniqu e among Pullman cars: it is th e only one ever custom-built for th e exclusive use of the President of the United States. Originally constructe d by th e Pullman Company in 1928. it was one of th e last private cars ever built . and one of a group of six conventional private cars nam ed afte r famou s explorers. They were , in addition to the Magellan. th e David Livingstone. Henry Stanley. Marco Polo. Rob ert Peary . and the Roald Amundsen . These cars wer e all placed in general Pullman service at about the sam e time. and wer e owned and oper ated by th e Pullman Company. Mr. Price is a mem ber of th e Gold Coast Rai lroad and is largely re spon sible fo r th e acquisition and preserva tion of th e Ferdin and Magella n. His article app ears here with the permission of th e Railroad. " Let' s make it a littl e more comfortable," was President Roosevelt 's comment to Mike Reilly. So, at Calum et , the number of staterooms was reduced from five to four , creating more room in the dining room and observation lounge. Steel armor plate , fiveeig hths inch thick , was riveted ont o th e sid es , floor , roof and en d. Three inch , bullet-proof glas s replaced conventional safety glass in the windows. Two escape hat ches were constructed - one in the ceiling of the obser vation lounge one on the side near th e center of the car , abov e the shower bath. Special trucks , wheels and roller bearings wer e installed to support th e additional weig ht. A standard, heavy-weight Pullman , of the type built prior to World War II, weighed 160,000 pounds. The rebuilt Magellan weighs 285 ,000 pounds . or 142'/ 2 tons . Until lat e 1942. the President of th e United States rode in a standard. private Pullman whe n he traveled by train. He did not ride in a specific car. alth ough the Roald Amundsen was frequentlv assigned to him . Whit e House aide s Micha el Reilly and Steve Earl y felt that the Chief Executive should have a custom-built railroad car - one that would afford maximum protection when he tr aveled by rail. President Franklin D. Roosevelt approved of the idea when he was told that su ch a car would be not only for his use . but for the use of future Presidents as well. The Ferdinand Mag ellan was chosen to become U.S. Car No.1. So, in 1942 , it was withdrawn from general service and ret urn ed to Pullman 's Calumet shops near Chicago for complete rebuilding. The only Pullman car ever to be owned outright by th e United States Government . the Magellan was to become the traveling home of three Presidents - Roosevelt, Truman , and Eisenhower thus assuring for itself a place in our nation's history. Th e car, painted original Pullman green, is 83'/ 2 feet long, 14 1/ 2 feet high, and 10 feet wide . Inside . on either side of the front entrance aisle, are refrigerators. an ice hatch, and storage compart me nts . Next is the galley. pan try, and serv ant s' qu arters , th e latt er containing small upper and lower berths , a lavatory and shower, and a small closet. Overhead are hot and cold water storage tanks , air conditioning app ar atu s, blowers, and fan s . 5 The dining and conference room on the Magel/an has bee n painstakingly restored to its former elega nce . All the furniture is original. The elegant dining room or conference room is the largest room in the car . It contains all the original furniture, including a beautiful solid mahogany table , thirty-eight by seventy-two inches, which seats eight. Matching chairs are upholstered in a green and gold striped satin da mask. Wall candelabras and chandeliers are gold- plated . The four china cabinets and eleven buffet drawers are felt- lined. 1 11 ~ walls are paneled in limed oak, and the ceiling is : -ory, etched in antique gold . The two center rooms , C and B, form the Presidential Suite, with a connecti ng ba throom betw een . Sta teroom C is th e Presidential Stateroom , paint ed a blue-green , with matching deep-pile carpet , and satin-chrome fixtures . The lower be d is a permanent one, slig htly larger than a conve ntional Pullman berth. An upper berth pulls down fro m above . Stateroom B, for the First Lady, is tastefully decorated in shades of peach and beige, with satinchrome hardware. It is equipped with a full-sized, permanent bed, vanity table, closet, wash bas in and cabinet. The connecting room has a bath tub and shower , toilet, wash basin, and cabinet, with bright chrome fixtures, and a black -and-white check linole um floor . Between the dining room and observation lounge are fou r staterooms , D, C, B, and A. Guestrooms D and A are ide ntical; each contains an upper and lower berth , toilet, closet, vanity table , chair, and medicine cabin et above the wash basin. Both are carpeted in dark green, with light green walls and brass electrical fixtures and hardware. The luxurious, twe lve-foot observation lounge is spacio us and restful. It has soft crea m woodwork, with 6 Outside ar e many special devices . For example. un de r th e ca r are sixteen lockers for ca rrying 110-220VA C / 32VDC electrica l rectifier s. te lephone equip me nt . p ublic address a mplifiers. AC / DC e lectr ical inpu ts . a standby air compressor for the plumb ing system. batteries . and six tho usand pounds of ice for the air conditioning . To cool the car. a water pump forces ice water through cold coppe r tubing up to a ceil ing eva porator. whe re blowers force cool air out th rough ce iling ventilat or s which run the len gth of th e interior . Thermostats contro l the te mpe rat ure . Durin g operation . st eam gen era ted in the locomotive . travel s in pipes un der the car and is used for heating in the winter . as well as for hot water for the sta terooms and galley. The main water ta nk holds 274 ga llons . an d th ere are seven air sto rage ta nks for t he brakes. plumbing and air conditioning . Two se ven and a ha lf kilowat t, thirty-two volt DC, axle -driven ge nerators produ ce th e necessary electr icity to charge the batteries when the car is movi ng . green ea rpet ing . Walls are pad ded a nd tufted in an att rac tive ligh t b rown mat eri al resembling leath er. All th e furn iture through out th e ca r is orig ina l. In th e loun ge are two ba rr el chai rs and a sofa . uph olstered in medium blue. and four arm chai rs in brow n. Eig ht windows and sixteen light fixtures in the ceiling illum ina te the lounge . Although portio ns of the interior have been repainted as part of the Gold Coast Railr oad ' s mainten an ce prog ram. all paint has bee n care fully matched with the original colors. so the de cor rem ains un ch ang ed. Eac h room has a telep hone . Wh e n the President ia l train was standi ng. the telephone system was connec te d to a tra ins ide out let. Wh e n t he train was traveling. communicat ion was handled by Signa l Cor ps per sonn el in Communications Car # 140 1. a converted B&Obaggage car. The ope n-end. brass- ra iled plat form was oft en used by th e Presid ent as a podiu m for speech-ma king . It has five microp hone connect ions for the public address sys tem and for rad io broadcasting. On the roof abov e th e platform are pe rma ne nt loud speakers . wh ich carrie d the speeches to th e crowds . Outp uts for additional sp eaker s . as well as for te lep hon es. are in sma ll boxes on eithe r sid e of th e observation pla tform . The rebuilt M ag ellan was presented to President Franklin D. Roosevelt on Decembe r 18. 1942. exactly fourteen years to the day from th e date it was outs ho pped. For security reas ons du rin g World War II. only the word " Pullman " appea re d on the outside. so Though it lacked any distinguishing marking s. U.S. Car No. t was equipped with a variety of features which set it apart from other Pullmans. The rear platform was provided with microphone s , spea kers, and a built-in podium . 7 that from a distance this rolling fortress looked just like an ordi nary private railroad ear. Whenever it was par t of a tra in. however . the train moved under the code word POTUS. meaning President of th e Unite d States . Every railroad knew that POTUS had th e righ t of way over all ot her railroad traffic . last car, into which th e casket was placed by removing a side window. The heavy, bullet-proof glass in th e M agellan could not be re moved . Consequentl y. the M agellan was not used as the funer al car. After having been leas ed to th e Unite d States Government by the Association of Ameri can Railroads since 1942, th e M ag ellan was sold to the Government in 1946 for $10.00 . and th ereafter carried th e official design ati on of U. S. Car No. I. The actual cost of th e car has never been revealed . To lessen th e chances of sabotage during Wor ld War II. the car did not have a permanent location in Washington . D.C. It was moved aro und when not in use and was stored variously on a sid ing at Washington' s Union Stat ion. the Potomac railroad yards . the Naval Gun Factor y at the Navy Yard . and in the sub -basement of the Bureau of Engraving and Prin ting. At the Navy Yard. a specia l elevator was insta lled on the observation platform to enable President Roosevelt to board the car from a wheelchair . This elaborate device was rem oved after Roosevelt's death . President Harry S. Truman perhaps traveled in the Ma g ellan more than Roosevelt. In his famous 1948 barnstorming campa ign alone , Truman covered 21.000 miles and delive red more than 300 speeches from the rear platform. Unlike Roosev elt. Truman preferred speeds up to eighty miles per hour. According to a letter from President Truman , th e heavy car "gave nigh tmares to every railroad engi neer in the country who had to pull it on the back of his train." On Janu ary 9. 1943. a five-car tra in was qu ietl y assembled in Wash ington. The President's Navy mess attendants from the yacht Potomac were summoned to perform th e services ordinarily render ed by Pullm an porters . Officials in charge of makin g up thi s speci al train were told not to issue any instruc tions that would cause specul ation. The train left Washington at 10:00 P.M. with President Roosevelt aboard the Magellan, and traveled north . ostensibly to Hyde Par k. However , it wen t only as far as Fort Meade . Marylan d. An hour later, it headed so uth . Thus be ga n the first leg of President Roosevelt' s jou rney to the now-famous Casab lanca Conference . Before daw n on January 11. 1943. the tra in arrived in Miam i at S.W . 27th Avenue and Dixie Highway via the Florida East Coast Railway. Her e. the President was dri ven by car to Dinner Key, whe re he boarded a seaplane for Africa . The train the n left for Jacksonville , but retu rned again at 8:00 A. M ., Ja nuary 26. At 6:00 P.M .. on the 30th, the tra in left Miami for the re turn trip to Washington, with President Roose velt aboard . A report of this trip by the Pu llman Special Agent-Inspector, the late P. Clifto n Dar cey, is on display in the car . Twe nty-t hr ee years later, Mrs. Darcey wrote: " . .. I remember the trip so well. I didn't hear from him for almost a month. After he was gone about five days, the White House called me and said if 1 had to get in touch with him to call the m. They would get word to him in five minu tes. I never knew where he had been until I found the report, as 1 ne ver asked any question s about any of th e trips . .. " Th e third and last President to occupy U. S. Car No.1 was Dwight D. Eisenhower. who used it ver y littl e . He did us e it occasionally on trips to Philadel ph ia , once on a trip to upstate New York, and also on a state visit to Canada in November 1953 to address the Canadian Parliament at Ottawa. The last tim e th e Mag ellan was used officiall y was in 1954, when Mrs . Eise nhower went fro m Was hington, D.C. to Grot on. Conn ecti cut to christen the world's first atomic submarine, Nautilus. After th at, the car stood idle for four years. It was declared surplus Government property in April 1958 and was transferred to th e U. S. Army 's Fort Holabird in Maryland , ending sixteen years of officia l service. All Army records of the car were ordered destroyed six months later. The radio, telepho ne, and publi c address equipment were removed and sold as surplus , but the historic car iself was eagerly sought after by th ose who knew about it. It was not until 1958 that a member of the Gold Coast Railr oad read abo ut t he car in a railroad trade pub lication . Losing no time , the founders of the Gold Coast Railroad, a Senator from the State of Florida. and th e President of the Unive rsit y of Miami became interested parties. Negotiations re sulted in the United States Government transferring the Magellan to the Florida Development Commission, who, in turn , gave the ca r to th e University of Miami. The General Servic es Administration valued the surpl us car at $80,2 77.53, exclusive of its value as an historical property. Roosevelt cove red abo ut 50,000 miles in th e Magellan. preferring to travel at thi rty-five miles pe r hour . This car was part of the eighteen -car funeral trai n that carried th e President's body from Wa rm Springs, Georgi a, to Hyde Park, New York, April 13-15, 1945. Mrs . Roosevelt rode in the Magellan , which was next to the last car. The Conneaut. normally second from the rear on Presiden tial rain s, was the On January IS, 1959, the Ma gellan arrived at the University of Miami' s Campus, nine miles south of Miam i. where the Gold Coast Railroad was already giving train rides to th e public in a coach and a caboose pulled by a full-sized, steam locomotive. Since 1959, the Ferdinand Ma gellan has be en one of the 8 main attractions at the Ra ilroad . On November 13. 1966. the Gold Coast Railro ad mov ed its operations to Fort Lauderdale. and shortly th ereafter outrig ht ownership of th e Mag ellan pas se d to t he Gold Coast Railroad, Inc.. a non-p rofit corporation . In 1977 the car was placed on the Natio nal Regi st er o fHis torical Place s. STEAM TRAIN TO THE PAST at Eac h year , over 10.000 visitors tour the Magel lan. Adm issions and do nation s. which are tax-deductible. hel p pay for maintenance materials. Preve ntive maintenance is performed on thc ca r eve ry week by unpaid volunteer me mbe rs of the Gold Coast Ra ilro ad . No attempt is made to " mod ern ize " or "i mprove" the original appearance. All efforts are toward pre serving it. rather than cha ng ing it. FT. LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA on The sta te ly Mage llan is prot ected fro m th e weather now. a nd rests on con ne ct ing trackage ins ide the Gold Coast Railroad ' s large te rminal b uilding a t 3398 S.W . 9th Avenue , Fort Lauderdale, Florida. It is open to visitors every Sunday afternoon. {;:{ Operating Full-Size Steam Locomotive {;:{ Featuring Famous U. S. Presidential Pullman {;:{ Cabooses, For Children of All Ages {;:{ Aut hentic, Old-Fashioned Cars {;:{ Historic Displays In Museum Car {;:{ Conveniently Located - Close In IN OPERATION EVERY SUNDAY AFTERNOON " YEA R ROUND" SUMMER 1:00 to 5:00 P.M . WINTER 12 Noon to 4:00 P.M. HEADQUARTERS The Gold Coast Railroad has man y attractio ns othe r t ha n the M agellan . The Railroad also ope ra tes several steam locomotives and maintains an ext raordi na ry ex hibit of artifacts and mode ls. 9 3398 S.W, 9th AVENU E