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Ashley, Drew & Northern Motive Power |
Fordyce, Ar / Apr 1987 / collection
collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #105
Crossett, Ar / 1949 / collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #105
Ashley, Drew & Northern #110
collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #115
Stanley collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #115
Ashley, Drew & Northern #125
Monticello, Ar / 1942 / Tedder collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #125
collection
All time Ashley, Drew & Northern diesel roster
| Number | Builder | Model | Built | Number | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 150 | EMD | SW1500 | May 1970 | 36656 | to Fordyce & Princeton #1503 |
| 170 | GE | 70 tonner | Jun 1948 | 30016 | to American Agricultural Chem #8 |
| 171 | GE | 70 tonner | Sep 1948 | 30023 | to Island Creek Coal Co |
| 172 | GE | 70 tonner | Jun 1948 | 30016 | to American Agricultural Chem #9 |
| 173 | GE | 95 tonner | Oct 1950 | 30797 | to to Eastman Kodak Co #7 |
| 174 | EMD | SW9 | May 1952 | 16940 | |
| 176 | EMD | SW1200 | Dec 1955 | 21016 | to Rail Switching Service #1206 |
| 178 | EMD | SW1200 | Jun 1963 | 28344 | to Amador Central |
| 907 | EMD | SW900 | Sep 1959 | 22504 | to Gloster Southern #903 |
| 1513 | ATSF | CF7 | ____ | Dec 1974 | to Arkansas Louisiana Mississippi |
| 1514 | ATSF | CF7 | ____ | May 1974 | to Arkansas Louisiana Mississippi |
| 1810 | ICG | GP10 | Jan 1958 | 23852 | to Chattahoochee Industrial #1810 |
| 1811 | ICG | GP10 | Jan 1957 | 22324 | to Chattahoochee Industrial #1811 |
| 1812 | EMD | GP28 | Mar 1964 | 28937 | to Arkansas Louisiana Mississippi #1812 |
| 1815 | EMD | GP28 | ____ | 29632 | ________________ |
| 1816 | EMD | GP28 | ____ | 29593 | ex Mississippi Central #211 |
units listed in orange above are featured in our scrapbook below.
Ashley, Drew & Northern #170
Crossett, Ar / Sep 1959 / collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #170
collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #150
Crossett, Ar / Jun 1971 / collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #150
Fordyce & Princeton #1503
Crossett, Ar / Apr 1987 / collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #176
Crossett, Ar / Jun 1971 / collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #176
from EXTRA 2200 South magazine - Jan 1976 / collection
Crossett, Ar / Jul 1977 / collection
Crossett, Ar / collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #178
Crossett, Ar / Sep 1973 / collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #178
Crossett, Ar / collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #907
Crossett, Ar / Oct 1987 / RWH
Ashley, Drew & Northern #907
Crossett, Ar / Feb 1977 / Tedder collection
Silver Creek, Ms / Oct 1989 / Louis Saillard 
See also our Gloster Southern shortline scrapbook for more Columbia Route photos
Ashley, Drew & Northern #1513
Fordyce, Ar / Oct 1988 / Warren Calloway 
Ashley, Drew & Northern #1513
from The Short Line magazine #80 - Sep 1986 / collection
from CF7 Locomotives: From Cleburne to Everywhere by Cary Poole / collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #1514
Crossett, Ar / Apr 1987 / collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #1514
Ashley, Drew & Northern #1810
Fordyce, Ar / Apr 1987 / collection
Ashley, Drew & Northern #1810
Crossett, Ar / Oct 1987 / RWH
Crossett, Ar / Oct 1987 / collection
Crossett, Ar / Oct 1987 / Christopher Palmieri 
Ashley, Drew & Northern #1811
Crossett, Ar / Oct 1987 / RWH
Crossett, Ar / Oct 1987 / RWH
Crossett, Ar / Oct 1987 / JCH
ne particular trip on the AD&N local was in 1980, following the shutdown of the Rock Island. Typically, Crossett traffic had been routed about 40 percent to the Missouri Pacific at Monticello, 40 percent to the Rock Island at Whitlow Junction, and 20 percent to the Arkansas & Louisiana Missouri, a 52 mile shortline that ran from Monroe, La., to Crossett. After the demise of the Rock Island, some 75 to 85 percent of the traffic was routed to the Missouri Pacific at Monticello. This resulted in AD&N trains of 75 to 90 or more cars each way. The two Paducah rebuilt GP10s, Nos. 1810 and 1811, remained the dominant motive power. On this particular trip, almost as soon as the local started leaving Monticello, one of the GP10s failed.
Noel Burchfield, a longtime skilled engineer on the AD&N’s roller coaster grades, was running the train that night. I thought to myself that he will never get this train of some 90 cars back to Crossett with only one unit running and towing one that was dead. However, I had underestimated the skill of Mr. Burchfield who nursed the train up and over the razorbacks and roller coaster grades by manipulating the throttle to avoid slipping, albeit at a very slow speed. The 41 mile southbound trip took over three hours. The sanders were empty when we pulled into Pond Pass Yard at Crossett. The steepest grades were on the northern end of the railroad. Once we left Ladelle and Valley Junction, although the lone engine took a while to get up to speed, it eventually was running from 25 to 30 miles per hour with the long train.
UNCOMMON or UNUSUAL locomotive
Ashley, Drew & Northern #1812
Monticello, Ar / Oct 1987 / JCH
Ashley, Drew & Northern #1812
Fordyce, Ar / Oct 1987 / JCH
Crossett, Ar / Oct 1987 / JCH
Crossett, Ar / Oct 1987 / RWH
Fordyce, Ar / Oct 1987 / RWH
collection
See also our complete EMD GP28 featured road switcher collection in Lagniappe
Fordyce, Ar / Oct 1987 / RWH
Whitlow Junction, Ar / Jun 1996 / Tedder collection
Fordyce, Ar / Aug 1984 / collection
hen I went to the AD&N in 1976, they were using five switchers, one SW900, three SW1200s and one SW1500. The SW1500 and one of the 1200s was used on the Monticello Local, the designation for the five day week roundtrip freight. The others were used on five of six switching jobs that operated around the clock serving the mills at Crossett. At this time, Georgia-Pacific had just opened a new tissue mill that added a lot of carloads to AD&N's traffic base. We were handling 70 outbound boxcar loads of product per day, besides an equal number of inbound empty boxcars--plus all the raw materials, chemicals and pulpwood, used in the paper making process. All told, line haul and switching, we were handling in excess of 50,000 carloads per year in the late 1970s.
I decided that we needed another engine or two, and road engines at that. Thus, a decision was made to go with a Paducah (ICG) rebuild of a GP9 which Paducah designated as GP10s. Thus the 1810 was born. One of the many decisions I had to make was to pick a paint scheme. I pored over all the back issues of Extra 2200 South, looking at various paint schemes on Geeps. I finally settled on the GM&O as the basis for the new AD&N paint scheme, with a little influence from the RF&P which was somewhat similar. Working with Paducah's engineers, we came up with the green and white scheme that is now familiar on AD&N and affiliated roads' loocmotives. This scheme carried over to the GP28s which were bought in 1986, including one ex-KO&G (MP) unit and one former Mississippi Central unit that was then owned by ICG. Besides the GP10s and GP28s, we repainted all of the switchers in the same color scheme.
Concurrently with the new painting, I also implemented a new numbering system, posthumously applied to the three GE 70-tonners and one GE 95-tonner that were the AD&N's first diesels. The number scheme combined the first two digits of the horsepower with the last two digits in numerical sequence of the various acquisitions. Thus, the 70-tonners were 601, 602, and 603. The 95-tonner was 604. The EMD switchers began with 1205, 1206, 907 and 1208, followed by 1509 for the SW1500. Starting with GP10 1810, the remainder of the units fell into their respective places, GP10 1811, GP28 1812, CF7s 1513 and 1514, followed by the last GP28s, 1815 and 1816.
Russell Tedder, 2011
Clippings
from The Short Line magazine #102 - Mar 1990 / collection
from EXTRA 2200 South magazine - Aug 1968 / collection