UNION CITY PASSENGER DEPOT

All aboard! Passengers are now enjoying the brand-new passenger station in Union City, Tennessee.

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Label: A Christmas tradition
With apologies to the estate of Clement Clark Moore.

T'was the night before Christmas when all through the freight yard,
Not a switcher was stirring, not even a car.

The knapsacks were hung by the coal stove with care,
In hopes that Saint Nicholas would fill them there.

The track-gang was slouched in their bunk-beds while visions of rail tools danced in their heads.
And I in my red/green striped P.J. overalls and cap had just settled my brains for a long winter's nap.

When down on the mainline there arose such a clatter,
I sprang from my crew-bunk to see what the matter.

Over to the window I flew in a flash, ripped off the shade and kicked out the sash.

The moon reflected off the dusting of snow and gave the quiet rail yard a nocturnal glow.

When what to my groggy eyes should now display,
But eight tiny boxcars and a miniature locomotive, type Shay.

The little old engineer, lively and quick, gave me pause;
his antics reminded me of Santa Claus.

Faster than a speeding passenger train they came,
The driver blew the whistle, rang the bell and called each car by name.

Now Northwestern! Now New York Central! Now Milwaukee and Penn!
On Baltimore! On Frisco! On Chessie! On L&N!

To the top of the shed! To the top of the wall! Roll away, roll away all!

As cinders blow upward when the fast express rolls by, the train in passing sends them toward the sky.

So on to the crew cars they flew, with cars full of goodies and the Claus-engineer too.

And then in a moment I heard on the roof above, a jolt and bang as each car stopped with a shove.

As a pulled my head back through the wrecked window and was turning around,
down the stove pipe and out the fire door came the little engineer with a bound.

He was dressed in white denim with green and red stripes from his head to his foot,
And his overalls were all tarnished with cinders and soot.

A bundle of goods he had flung on his back,
and he looked like a paymaster happily opening his sack.

His eyes glowed like stars! His dimples were merry!
His cheeks were like ash-dusted roses, his nose like a dusty cherry!
His mouth was turned up in smile, and his snow-white beard looked a little shorter than a mile.

The smoke-stack looking pipe he held in his teeth, the billowing smoke circled his head like a wreath.

He had a broad face and a boiler shaped belly that shook when he laughed, like a bowl of jelly.

He spoke not a word but filled the hanging knapsacks with new tools then turned with a crack and next went up the stove pipe on his way back.

He sprang to his engine and pulled on the whistle and away the little freight rolled like a wind driven thistle.

But I heard him exclaim as they rolled out of sight

“Merry Christmas to all and To all good night!”


I couldn't have said it better myself. omscaler