ASTORIA, Ore. (AP) - As a child in the 1950s, Jeff Daly remembers hearing the bell and whistle of the American Legion’s Forty & Eight train during Astoria Regatta parades.
“There was no way you didn’t know it was coming,” he said. “Kids were just enthralled with it, and you were really lucky if you could get a ride on it.”
Driving through Gearhart one day in 2014, Daly noticed the nose of the train sticking out behind the Yankee Trader antique store just off U.S. Highway 101. Known for restoring odd automotive remnants from Astoria’s history such as a 1948 Chrysler clown car, he acquired the train and towed it north.
Daly hopes to have a new and improved train ready for the downtown holiday lighting ceremony next month, and fully equipped for a trip to next summer’s Burning Man gathering in Nevada.
FORTY & EIGHT
Returning World War I veterans in the newly created American Legion formed Forty & Eight in 1920 as an invitation-only honors society.
Known formally as The Society of Forty Men and Eight Horses, the group was named after the boxcars in France that each carried 40 men or eight horses to the front.
Ken Rislow, chaplain for the American Legion’s Clatsop Post 12 in Astoria and adjutant for the Forty & Eight since 2006, said the local chapter of the honor society was formed around 1920 along with the American Legion.
The train was originally built in 1945, used for parades and other celebrations and rebuilt several times throughout its life, Rislow said. On the side of the train was written “Clatsop Voiture 547,” denoting the 547th Forty & Eight chapter established nationally.
“There was a team of people that worked on it,” Rislow said of the train. “That was true until 2010. What happened was all the people that took care of it passed away.”
Charles Godwin, the second vice commander of American Post Legion 99 in Seaside, said the train came to South County about a decade ago by way of former commander Al Smith.
“I was just a neighbor and had a shop, and I offered to help him out with it,” Godwin said.
He helped fix and restore the one last time and said it ran for several years before coming to rest at a lot in Seaside. The train was eventually towed north by Clatsop County Sheriff Tom Bergin, whose wife owns the Yankee Trader.
“I just didn’t want to see it get scrapped,” Bergin said.
After finding the train, Daly said, he came down with his clown car and towed it north, first to Hammond and later to Astoria.
NEW AND IMPROVED
Parked in the basement of Daly’s subterranean workshop in downtown Astoria is a 24-foot motorhome he acquired in Knappa and had stripped down to the frame. Around it is an insulation board mockup of a seating area and conductor’s cabin he plans to install facing backwards from the motorhome’s cabin.
Daly plans to build a steel frame, surrounded by a plywood wall sheathed in decorative steel, fake rivets and wood paneling. A friend in Knappa is recreating the American Legion’s original lettering on panels he can switch out based on the use. A metalworker is designing articulated train wheels with a pulley system to mimic a steaming train, backlit by strobes.
On the ground next to the frame is the original steel train engine. Daly plans to install a barbecue - an idea from Bergin - and machines for smoke, bubbles and flames, along with a metal cow catcher.
Daly plans to check an item off his bucket list and drive the train to Black Rock City, Nevada, for Burning Man in August. Once back in Astoria, he plans to again use the vehicle in parades and charter it for birthdays and other celebrations. The attraction will be similar to the Glam Tram, a custom minibus for the Los Angeles Zoo Daly said he saved before destruction and renovated to an open-air downtown taxi, with blasting music and a fake fireplace in the middle.
“I just love the history of the area, and that’s why I keep bringing it back, because people are scrapping this stuff,” he said. “They were going to scrap this. The clown car was going to be scrapped. I just hate it, because it’s something I remember as a child, and I think many more people are going to enjoy it.”
While building the train, Daly has been receiving chemotherapy for prostate cancer. Having projects such as the train provides goals to keep him from getting complacent.
“It turns out I’m beating the cancer more than the cancer is beating me,” Daly said. “I’m not going to sit around the house saying, ’I don’t feel good.’”
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Information from: The Daily Astorian, http://www.dailyastorian.com
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