Best Friend of Charleston

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Best Friend of Charleston
Power type Steam
Builder West Point Foundry
Configuration 0-4-0
Locale Charleston, South Carolina
Delivered October 1830
Disposition Boiler exploded June 17, 1831[1]; some parts reused to build Phoenix

The Best Friend of Charleston was a steam-powered railroad locomotive. It is widely acclaimed as the first locomotive to be built entirely within the United States. It also produced the first locomotive boiler explosion in the US.

[edit] History

The locomotive was built for the South Carolina Canal and Rail Road Company by the West Point Foundry of New York in 1830. Disassembled for shipment by boat to Charleston, SC, it arrived in October of that year and was unofficially named the Best Friend of Charleston.

After its inaugural run on Christmas Day, the Best Friend was used in regular passenger service along a six mile demonstration route in Charleston. For the time, this locomotive was considered one of the fastest modes of transport available, taking its passengers "on the wings of wind at the speed of fifteen to twenty-five miles per hour."[2] The only mode of travel that was any faster was by an experienced horse and rider.

On June 17, 1831, the Best Friend earned a rather grisly first — it became the first locomotive in the US to suffer a boiler explosion, seriously injuring the engine's crew. The explosion is said to have been caused by the fireman tying down the steam pressure release valve; he had tired of listening to it whistle, so to stop the noise he closed the valve permanently (another account has the fireman placing a stout piece of lumber on the safety valve and sitting on it). The blocked valve caused the pressure within the boiler to exceed its capacity, and it exploded.[1] The resulting blast was said to have hurled metal fragments over a wide area, as well as kill the fireman.

According to Centennial History of South Carolina Railroad, this wrote a new rule in the SCC&RR operating manual that engineers were to remain on station at all times, with the aid of newly hired conductors to manage cars, passengers and switches. Salvageable parts from the Best Friend were used to build the Phoenix which seems to have run up to the time of the War.

The Best Friend replica outside the New York Stock Exchange on December 12, 2005.
The Best Friend replica outside the New York Stock Exchange on December 12, 2005.

Today, an operable replica of this locomotive is on display in Charleston. Norfolk Southern (NS), the current operator of the line built by South Carolina Canal and Rail Road, brought the replica to New York City for display on December 12, 2005, outside the New York Stock Exchange while top NS executives participated in the Exchange's opening bell ceremonies. NS used the replica and ceremony to commemorate 175 years of American railroad history.[3][4][5]

The Best Friend engine and tender are loaded on a truck for transport to Norfolk Southern in Atlanta-August 6, 2007.
The Best Friend engine and tender are loaded on a truck for transport to Norfolk Southern in Atlanta-August 6, 2007.
The Best Friend coaches are loaded on a truck for transport to Norfolk Southern in Atlanta-August 6, 2007.
The Best Friend coaches are loaded on a truck for transport to Norfolk Southern in Atlanta-August 6, 2007.

On August 6, 2007, the Best Friend replica was loaned by the City of Charleston to the Norfolk Southern Corporation for five years. NS will display the replica in their Atlanta headquarters at 1200 Peachtree Street. The Best Friend, its tender and coaches were loaded on to trucks in Charleston for a trip to NS shops in Chattanooga for refurbishment. It will then be installed in the NS Atlanta building.

[edit] Timeline

  • October 1830: the Best Friend arrives in Charleston from West Point Foundry.
  • December 25, 1830: The Best Friend runs for the first time in Charleston.
  • 1831: The boiler explodes on the Best Friend

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Rivanna Chapter, National Railway Historical Society (2005), This Month in Railroad History - June. Retrieved June 13, 2005.
  2. ^ 206.74.162.2
  3. ^ Norfolk Southern Railroad (reprinted by Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen, December 13, 2005), Norfolk Southern's 'Best Friend' visits stock exchange for opening bell ceremony. Retrieved December 14, 2005.
  4. ^ Roanoke Times (reprinted by Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen, December 13, 2005), NS rings in 175th anniversary. Retrieved December 14, 2005.
  5. ^ Norfolk Southern Railroad, Norfolk Southern's "Best Friend" Visits Stock Exchange. Retrieved December 14, 2005.
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