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RRHX |
Railroad Passes: Baggage Checks |
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Michigan's Internet Railroad History Museum |
From the Collection of Charlie Whipp. Commentary by Dale Berry
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Airline baggage check in is
a high-tech system that relies on computers, bar codes, bar code readers,
automated routing machinery, motorized baggage "trains" and finally hard
labor to move the traveler's bags from cart to conveyor belt to the
airplane's belly. It's a pretty sophisticated process. But now take yourself back to the early days of the 20th century when people traveled almost exclusively by railroads. They still had luggage to check but there were no computers, bar codes or automated machinery. The only thing "automated" was the ticket agent's hand stamp and stamp pad as he marked your baggage claim with routing instructions. It was then up to the baggage man (or conductor for small roads) to get your bags to their destination. They were probably loaded onto a large hand cart with large wheels by the station agent and then pushed or pulled down the main track a ways so it would be ready to hand load into the baggage car of your passenger train when it arrived. Rail historian Charlie Whipp has retrieved a wonderful set of baggage claims from both the Grand Trunk Western and Michigan Central Lapeer depots before they closed in the 1960's. These baggage claims, which are mostly from Michigan railroads, tell an interesting story about the many railroad passengers that transferred from one railroad to another, in the slow process of trying to get from their home town to visit relatives or business associates in the bustling town of Lapeer. So, clear your mind of modern assumptions and take yourself back to an era one hundred years ago. Imagine trying to get your luggage, your dog, or yourself from your home town to Lapeer...
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© Dale J. Berry, all rights reserved.