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Travel Town #1, affectionately christened the "Charley
Atkins," in memory of Travel Town's
founder, is the first display locomotive at the museum to move under
its own motive power since
1961. The #1 spent most of its working life as an industrial switcher.
Built in 1942 for the United
States Navy, "Charley" was one of only eleven Model 40 diesels ever
built by the Electro-Motive Corporation, a division of General Motors
based in La Gange, Illinois. This 300 h.p. prototype
locomotive, designed for switching freight cars from track to track
in railroad yards or hauling heavy loads around an industrial field,
represents early experimentation in diesel design, just as steam locomotive
manufacturers had tried so many different sizes, wheel arrangements,
and weights.
The design of this locomotive is unusual because its two Model 6-71
diesel-engines power a DC traction
generator supplying power to a pair of four-wheeled trucks—most switching
locomotives of this size would be equipped with two traction motors,
one for each wheel set.
In his early days, "Charley" worked for the Navy
hauling coal and supplies at the Torpedo Station
on Goat Island, Rhode Island. Later, "Charley" served at the Naval Air
Station, North Island in San
Diego. After a long career with the Navy, it was transferred, in 1962,
to the McDonnell-Douglas
Aircraft Corporation for use at the Naval Weapons Industrial Reserve
Plant and worked for more
than twenty-five years at the McDonnell-Douglas plant right here in
Torrance, California. On March
11, 1988, the Los Angeles City, Board of Recreation and Parks Commissioners
accepted the
McDonnell-Douglas donation of Travel Town #1. "Charley" embarked on
a new career as a switch locomotive, here at the Travel Town Museum.
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