Trackside
Maryland. From Railyard to Main Line
James P. Gallagher
Hardbound
, 9.25" x 12.25", 224 pages
Black-and white illustrations
2004, Johns Hopkins University Press
Text by Jacques Kelly
Trackside Maryland presents
the magnificent black-and-white photography of James Gallagher
with the commentary of Baltimore Sunpapers columnist
Jacques Kelly to create a masterpiece of regional railroad history
caught in the vise between waning steam and the sleek diesel technology
of the 1950s.'-Courtney B. Wilson, Executive Director, B&O
Railroad Museum
In the 1950s, as railroads underwent
major changes, some marginal lines stood on the brink of extinction.
Steam locomotives grew scarcer by the month, as did rail passenger
connections. With a keen eye for location and composition, James
Gallagher in Trackside Maryland captures the drama and
majesty of steam transportation in Maryland in its waning days,
when passing trains left clouds of cinders and smoke behind them
and the sound of steam whistles still echoed across the landscape-all
these sights and sounds giving way to modern diesel locomotives.
Here Jacques Kelly's evocative prose accompanies Gallagher's ever
vigilant lens. We are transported back to the last years of steam
railroading. 'Each of Jim's photographs tells a story and conveys
mood, spirit, atmosphere, and character. The ground in his photographs
rumbles. Some of the antique trains he photographed look as if
they might rust and crumble before the end of their trip. Other
photos impart a feeling of majesty and romance. and you don't
have to be a train buff to appreciate them. Just step aboard and
savor the results of Jim Gallagher's skill, luck, and persistence.'
- Jacques Kelly, from the Introduction
About the Author
James P. Gallagher (1920-2002) was a Baltimore native and avid
photographer who worked as account executive at a Maryland securities
firm. During World War II, he enlisted in the Army Air Force and
served as a communications officer with the 49th Fighter Group
of the 5th Air Force in the southwest Pacific. With The Fifth
Army Air Force: Photos from the Pacific Theater, his photographs
and memories of this experience, was published in 2001 by Johns
Hopkins. His photographs of Maryland and West Virginia railroading
were published in the 1950s in the Sunday Sun Magazine, Trains
Magazine, and B&O Magazine. In 2000, he received
the Railway & Locomotive Historical Society's Lifetime Achievement
Award. Jacques Kelly is also a Baltimore native and historian
and writes a regular column for the Baltimore Sun.
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