The title says “ahead” but in fact I’m going to take you back a few years, well within living memory, to the epoch when you traveled by train and the train traveled by coal. I mean steam.
Venice’s fascinating past isn’t limited to Carnival and Casanova; there are plenty of people (Lino, for example) who still vividly remember when the mighty steam locomotives ruled the rails, and the Santa Lucia terminal was at work, day and night, with the coming and going of these behemoths. (Spoiler alert: Lino’s father was a macchinista, or train driver, so I am relying on Lino for some information.)
My curiosity awoke some time ago, when we were passing through Castelfranco Veneto on the train and Lino casually pointed out this rusty derelict beside the station tracks.
Let’s say trains don’t interest you much. But you might be surprised to see how many traces remain around the area of the station, if you know what you’re looking at.
First, a bit of background.
So much for setting the scene. Back to the trains themselves.
Let’s imagine we’re in the Venice station on any ordinary day back in the first half of the 20th century. It was full of colossi like these. In fact, for several generations there wasn’t anything else.
So where did all this maneuvering of the rolling stock take place? As close to the station as the water allowed.
Let’s shift our attention to the tracks that carried the freight trains to and from the waterfront at the Marittima area (Santa Marta and San Basilio).
Wondeful recherche on the the Days of Steam. I’m old enough to have travelled more than once by train from Milan to Venice (where my grandparents lived) in the 50’s. I remember those locomotives were ENORMOUS (well, I was tiny then), and ALIVE — they would hiss and let off steam all by themselves, while standing in the station.
In 1974 I was in bootcamp in Casale Monferrato, and we had a steam locomotive drag us to Albenga for shooting range practice. Eight hours’ on the sooty thing, but it was still magic. That was the last time I saw a steam locomotive at work.
Thanks for writing — it’s great to hear that you have first-hand experience of these spectacular creatures. Let’s see… it’s 165 km from Casale Monferrato to Albenga … eight hours … you were traveling at 20 kmh? That’s conceivable. Or else you were going faster but stopping often. Or not often, but for longish periods. I’ve traveled twice behind steam engines, and all I can say is keep the dang windows closed! Those cinders aim straight for your eyes and don’t let go!
Love the picture of Lino’s father’s watch, and the old photographs.
What a fascinating glimpse of an immense and largely forgotten infrastructure and the labor to make it all work.
Last time I was through Santa Lucia terminus, the broad lobby was clotted with kiosks. I have a vague recollection that the lobby was a broad open space on my first visit fifty years ago; is that possible? Perhaps Lino (or you, or other readers) would know if my memory is correct, or I’m merely losing it.
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Wondeful recherche on the the Days of Steam. I’m old enough to have travelled more than once by train from Milan to Venice (where my grandparents lived) in the 50’s. I remember those locomotives were ENORMOUS (well, I was tiny then), and ALIVE — they would hiss and let off steam all by themselves, while standing in the station.
In 1974 I was in bootcamp in Casale Monferrato, and we had a steam locomotive drag us to Albenga for shooting range practice. Eight hours’ on the sooty thing, but it was still magic. That was the last time I saw a steam locomotive at work.
Thanks for writing — it’s great to hear that you have first-hand experience of these spectacular creatures. Let’s see… it’s 165 km from Casale Monferrato to Albenga … eight hours … you were traveling at 20 kmh? That’s conceivable. Or else you were going faster but stopping often. Or not often, but for longish periods. I’ve traveled twice behind steam engines, and all I can say is keep the dang windows closed! Those cinders aim straight for your eyes and don’t let go!
Thank you for the fascinating information on the steam engines. What massive creatures they are.
Absolutely fascinating, Erla(and Lino)! It must have been incredibly noisy up there, day and night.
Love the picture of Lino’s father’s watch, and the old photographs.
What a fascinating glimpse of an immense and largely forgotten infrastructure and the labor to make it all work.
Last time I was through Santa Lucia terminus, the broad lobby was clotted with kiosks. I have a vague recollection that the lobby was a broad open space on my first visit fifty years ago; is that possible? Perhaps Lino (or you, or other readers) would know if my memory is correct, or I’m merely losing it.