One headache for Railroads was the
opportunity for a shipper to divert a load. In practice, this
made the reefer into a rolling warehouse. The unsold produce was
loaded in California and headed east. At any time it could be
sold, and that car would be redirected. These cars of unsold produce
were known as rollers. Historically, 25% of the cars leaving California
were rollers. The record for diversions for a single car was 29
times! Santa Fe subsequently changed the rules allowing for 3
free diversions before substantial charges were added. The major
diversion points were Belen, Kansas City, and Chicago, but it
could happen at nearly any location.
Bill Messecar provided a quote from
the ATSF at a 1956 ICC hearing "In 1954 we accomplished a
total of 43,581 diversions on perishables originating in Mountain-Pacific
territory, approximately one-third of them at Belen, New Mexico.
Aside from the telegraphing and clerical work involved in handling
these 43,581 diversions, considerable additional switching was
required."
Tim Gilbert reported: "Due to
the number of days it took to get the produce to the auction block,
shippers usually loaded and dispatched a car unsold. Page 379
of Pacific Fruit Express notes that 85% of the cars (in
the Northwest) left the fields unsold. Tony Thompson wrote that
the routing for most of these unsold loads was Chicago. Somewhere
en route, the car would be sold to a broker. The car could be
rerouted (diverted), held for a day to wait for a better market,
or resold. Indeed, there was no extra charge for three of such
changes. "
"Where cars were diverted could be determined
by looking at a map. Any junction could be a diversion point.
Belen, for instance, was the diversion point where reefers could
be pulled from the Santa Fe's Chicago Green Fruit Express
(GFX) trains to go to Denver; Clovis for Texas and the southeast;
Kansas City for the St. Louis and beyond. Generally, however,
most of the produce for the northeast from both the SFRD and PFE
were delivered east of Chicago by the ERIE. At Huntington, IN,
the ERIE's Train 98 picked up produce from ART; at Marion OH,
cars for Detroit, Toledo, and Cincinnati could be dropped from
the 98. At Akron, cars could be diverted to Cleveland and Pittsburgh;
at Hornell NY, for Philadelphia via the RDG at Newberry Jct. PA;
at Binghamton NY for northern New England including Boston; at
Port Jervis NY, for southern New England via the New Haven. Finally,
the residue of cars would be floated across the Hudson River to
ERIE's Duane Street Market in the wee hours of the morning."
"At auction houses like Duane Street, samples
would be shown to buyers, and, then the auction would begin. Patsy
Totaro, the green grocer from New Canaan, CT (where Tim grew up)
would drive his van into Lower Manhattan every morning to pick
and choose the produce which he would sell to the ladies of New
Canaan the next morning. Patsy was somewhat typical of most green
grocers in the area. Some super market chains like A&P, Gristedes,
and Grand Union would likewise buy at the market. These chains,
however, were somewhat at a disadvantage to green grocers like
Patsy because they could only deliver produce via truck; hence,
that produce would arrive much
later in the day. Buying at auction houses provided the purchaser
an opportunity to examine the quality of the goods before he bought."
"That's the way it was before the supermarket
chains got their produce directly, and not through auction houses.
Gherke's commented about the market preferring rail over truck
because there was better intelligence of when produce would arrive.
There was no such intelligence about the arrival of trucks which
could distort the market. So the decline of reefer traffic and
green grocers could be attributed partially to super markets being
able to circumvent the auction markets by getting their produce
directly via trucks."
Yet another reefer operation through
the 50s involved "Meat Peddler Cars," LCL meat delivery
on local trains. Meat packers would take orders from butchers
along a line and run a weekly route reefer to service them. This
car was usually placed next to the combine or caboose and would
stop at depots along the line to be met by the butcher. Such runs
could be circuitous and could require up to 3 days to complete
their deliveries.
When asked about the mix of non ATSF
and ATSF reefers on ATSF trains in California, Andy Sperandeo
replied, "The SFRD cars dominate on the ATSF, of course,
but many others could and did show up occasionally. I've spotted
Fruit Growers Express, Western Fruit Express, Illinois Central,
North Western Refrigerator Line, Northern Pacific, and Milwaukee
Road (URTX) cars in Santa Fe trains or yards. That's in addition
to the ART cars you mentioned, and of course the most common non-SFRD
reefers on the Santa Fe were PFEs. And that's not counting the
various meat packers' cars that brought loads into southern California
- most of the major Midwestern packers had branch houses in California."
Stan Wilson, curator of the Shafter
Depot Museum near Bakersfield, CA, reported that at the beginning
of the potato season, virtually all cars would be SFRD cars. However,
when the stockpile of cars were exhausted, the railroad would
use any empty it could get its hands on including WFEX, FGEX,
ART, MDT, BREX, BAR, REX, and even a meat reefer. He does not
remember seeing any PFE provided by the ATSF in Bakersfield. Potato
cars were often sent to the field clean, but not iced. They would
be loaded, then fumigated, before being iced back in Bakersfield.
Up to 700 loads would depart Bakersfield for the east in a single
day.
Richard Hendrickson has written a
most informative report tracing one SFRD reefer from Escondidto,
CA, to New York. Click here to view this pdf
file.
John More has transcribed a fascinating
bit of testimony from D. A. Baumgartner before the ICC of
September 5, 1956, which details the vast fluctuation between
car needs at various times of the year, the need for extra locomotives
and crews to handle that need, and the variations in the equipment
required for various types of loads. You can find this on Jim
Lancaster's Southern
California Packing House website.
Baumgartner illustrated the variations
with figures from 1955. Bakersfield shipped 507 reefers in January
but 11,583 in June. At an average of 77 cars per train, that is
a difference of 144 trains per month, with engines and crews.
Glendale, Arizona, shipped 5 cars in September but 5,940 in November.
At an aveage of 69 cars per train, this amounted to 86 trains
per month. West of Belen, the Santa Fe loaded 2,168 cars in February
but 17,033 in June. These cars had to be preped and stored in
anticipation of the rush. Of course the need for local switch
crews and way freights also varied to match this seasonal need.
The SFRD Rule book makes allowances
for caretakers who might accompany a shipment via reefers. For
sensitive perishables, they would be in charge of the heaters
or icing and were to ride in the caboose. Caretaker's instructions
supersede anything on the waybill but must be in writing.