Photo from
the author. Sara and Eddie Etgen, 1941, in Springfield, Missouri..
Before
the advent of America’s interstate highway system with its
pristine ribbons of concrete making coast-to-coast transportation
more efficient, the popular mode of long-distance transportation for
Americans was riding the train. My brother and I were children of the
50s and, as such, grew up riding the train, enamored with the spirit
of adventure associated with traveling by train to places unknown
.
Our
train rides always began at Union Station—an elegant building
built in 1916 and one that’d withstood the test of time,
remaining steadfast amidst the ever-changing Dallas skyline. Dad
dropped off my mother, brother and me at the front entrance. With
suitcases in tow, we stepped onto the upper level concourse. I
always paused, gasping for breath, its 48-foot vaulted ceilings
engulfing me. I usually closed my eyes breathing in the musty, old
building smell and gently touching the worn surfaces of its
unassuming, antiquated chairs.
“Come
on!” Mother exclaimed, tugging on my sleeve. “We have a
train to catch!”
She
corralled my brother and me close to her, ushering us toward the huge
staircase that led to the lower level passenger platforms. I paused
once more, imagining the stairs led to a gigantic, enchanted portal
that would magically propel me to faraway places—the ones I’d
read about in books and learned about at school.
Mother
tugged on my sleeve one more time. “Let’s go!”
We
clamored to the bottom of the staircase where the train sat idling,
the engine’s elusive steam magically floating across the huge
steel wheels located at my eye level. We handed our suitcases to the
porter and boarded the train where my brother and I rushed down the
aisle, finding a seat near the caboose. We settled into our seats;
and within minutes, the train’s whistle blew with the urgency
of Mother’s tea kettle.
“All
Aboard!” shouted the conductor.
The
majestic Iron Horse jolted the train forward pulling my stomach up to
my throat filling me with queasy eagerness. Clickety-clack.
Clickety-clack. I stared out the window watching the world whiz by,
the train’s rhythmic clickety-clack eventually lulling me to
sleep. When I awoke, we’d arrived at our destination, typically
our grandfather’s house in Springfield, Missouri.
But
by the mid-1960s, the popularity and mystique of train travel
disappeared, replaced with boarding the family station wagon and
traveling over the newly-constructed interstate highways stopping at
the ever-increasing number of fast-food restaurants along the way.
Retired railroad cars and cabooses became useless relics, often sold
to cities throughout the country, quickly becoming attractions in
city parks.
Nonetheless,
my younger brother, Eddie, and I continued loving trains, unceasingly
looking for the artifacts of that bygone time while vacationing with
the family when traveling along the interstate in our station wagon. In
1964 we found one such artifact stationed in a park near our
grandfather’s house in Springfield, Missouri. The allure and
magic of train travel once again captured our spirits compelling us
to climb aboard and have our picture taken.