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friscomike
05-27-2001, 11:08 PM
Edited by Douglas J. Hughes



Farrington, S. Kip, "Railroading the modern Way." This was from the 1950's and was the first one I ever read about the Frisco. It had two chapters telling how Clark Hungerford brought the road out of bankruptcy in the late 40's.
Bain, William F., "Frisco Folks." Tales from employees - old book that Alan Schmitt of the Frisco Museum reprinted a few years ago. Folksy.
Miner, H. Craig, "The St Louis-San Francisco Transcontinental Railroad, The Thirty-fifth Parallel Project, 1853-1890", University of Kansas Press, 1972. very dry doctoral dissertation mostly about financing the road. It stops at the 1890 depression and take over by the ATSF.;
Bryant, H. Stafford Jr., "The Georgian Locomotive", Weathervane Books, New York, 1962. Some great steam locomotive photos.
Stagner, Lloyd E., "Steam Locomotives of the Frisco Line", Pruett Publishing Co., Boulder, CO, 1976. My favorite!
McCall, John, and Schultz, Frank A. III, "Frisco Southwest, A Late Steam-Early Diesel Pictorial", Kachina Press, 1025 Elm St., Dallas, TX 75202, 1982. A great soft-bound photo book full of modeling ideas.
Banwart, Donald, D., "Rails, Rivalry, and Romance", Sekan Printing Co., 2210 S. Main, Fort Scott, KS 66701, 1982. Everything you ever wanted to know about Ft. Scott. 75% of the photos are of trains - the author is a train fan and modeler. He also published the book. You'll need this one if you want to do period Frisco modeling.
Collias, Joe G., "Frisco Power - Locomotives and Trains of the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway 1903-1953", MM Books, P.O. Box 29318, Crestwood, MO 63126. Good author who is a model railroader, big, lots of photos, several mistakes, good modeling reference. Joe's address is 9114 Pennant Lane, Crestwood, MO 63126.
"The Quanah Route," was written by Don L. Hofsommer and printed by the Texas A&M University Press.
Marre, Louis A., and ? Harper, "Frisco Diesel Power". I didn't buy it, but I've looked through it. Looks great!
Dubin, Arthur F., "More Classic Trains". This expensive book has a chapter on the Frisco & Katy passenger varnish. A work colleague has a copy.
The magazine PASSENGER TRAIN JOURNAL featured Frisco in their February and December 1984 issues with lots of passenger train photos.
The steam locomotive roster was published by Bob Lorenz, 1939 Whittaker Drive, Fremont, OH 43420 many years ago as taken from the 1903 and 1917 ICC rosters. I have used the same sources to put the roster into a spread sheet. Send me a floppy and return postage and I'll copy it for you.
The classic steam photographers also covered the steam roster very well. Almost any engine you want to model was photographed.
The railroad was photographed extensively during the 1940-50-60's by deceased bachelor Art Johnson. His brother owns the collection and sometimes lets copies be made. Check with Alan at the Frisco Museum .
The railroad was color slide photographed extensively during the 1960's by Dr. Mike Condren, P.O. Box 12102, Memphis, TN 38112 (901) 276-4667. Mike's slides have been sold, stolen, given improper credit in magazines, etc. Call him to see if he will still sell copies.
Charlie Dischinger also has an extensive slide collection. 3452 S. Parkmont Court, Springfield, MO 65807-3888 (417) 887-0747.
Several of the smaller roads that later merged with the Frisco have also been the subject of books. I think Hoffstetter did one on the QAP. Two I've read are Dew's on the Jonesboro, Lake City & Eastern (NE Arkansas - source of 2-8-0's 76 &77) and Mahlon Weill White's "The Leaky Roof" about the Kansas City, Clinton & Springfield reprinted in 1970 by The Printery, Clinton, MO

john
05-28-2001, 12:28 AM
More Frisco photos and info are in:
"Locomotive Quarterly" Vols.XVIII, 1987 No.3 (spring)
and No. 4 (summer).
"Baldwin Locomotives" "The St.Louis-San Francisco Railway
and It's Motive Power" January and April 1929.
"Railroad Magazine" "Locomotive of the Frisco"
July 1948
"Railroad Magazine" "The Frisco" January 1953 This is a
very interesting article by William R.Draper and has
lots of photos of older engines

douglas
02-11-2003, 09:35 AM
E. S. Dellinger Fiction. This fellow worked for the Frisco & MoPac during the First World War and later became a teacher and prolific railroad fiction writer. I used his THE BALLAST SCORCHER as background for designing my layout featuring the Eastern Division between Springfield and Newburg.

The library at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque has a collection of Dellinger's work. It's described at: http://elibrary.unm.edu/oanm/NmU/nmu1%23mss550bc/

Can someone check it out for us and report back on other fictional works of his with a Frisco feel?

Thanks,
Doug Hughes, Annapolis, CEO
The Dixon, Jerome & Hancock Railway

jbloch
03-18-2007, 01:23 PM
I found this thread in my search for books. I notice "Frisco in Color" is not listed. Any thoughts on this book, re: quality, detail(i.e., number/variety of locos, etc.)? I have no book on Frisco yet, and am interested in as comprehensive a text as might be possible(combination of motive power, freight and passenger cars, etc.). From reading Frisco Mike's list from a couple of years ago, appears a single text might not cover all of this.

Thanks,

Jim

tomd6
03-18-2007, 06:47 PM
Another resource is “Midwest Railroader Remembers-The Frisco and Steam” published in 1982. It includes the Chicago & Eastern Illinois as that line was once owned by the Frisco circa 1911. It contains history and specs of each engine -21,000 facts according to the cover.