Not much has been said about the April calendar picture. It's Denville with an RS leading two Boonton coaches. I have to say that the GMY paint really brought a sense of life, maybe youth, to the RS's. They looked almost brand new in that scheme. Here's a question regarding this: When William White began the repainting of EL engines, where was the work performed? I doubt it was in Hoboken. Another question about the RS's: EL or Erie blanked out the cab windows that straddled the hood. Why did they do that? One would think it would have brought more light to the cab, or was that the problem - Did it create glare? This is train 1062 heading east in mid-morning on a Sunday. When EL severed the Boonton Line and connected it to the Greenwood Lake Division they realigned the weekend train schedules. The old DL&W Sunday schedule was rather odd. It appeared to be trains that made some revenue carrying milk and a few others that, for some reason or another the railroad couldn't discontinue: A mid morning w/bound to Netcong followed by the Branchville milk train. Sunday evenings had two e/bounds, the milk train from Branchville and a later train originating at Dover. When the change to the Greenwood Lake was made 1062 was a mid-morning train to Hoboken. Later in the morning the Branchville milk train departed. In the evening the e/bounds were reduced to the Branchville train and an early evening w/bound to Dover. These trains made very few stops on the Greenwood Lake portion of the run. It looked like EL was trying to lure some Sunday riders who might have wanted to go into the city for the day. I don't think it worked. Most people didn't know the trains existed and Lakeland buses ran a faster more frequent schedule. Ed Montgomery The Erie Lackawanna Mailing List Sponsored by the ELH&TS http://www.elhts.org ------------------------------
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