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(Source of image: Florida Collection, Main Public Library, Jacksonville)
You'd think that the rear window looked out into a Florida yard. Actually, it's a just a clever wall picture in the Sun Lounge, "a delightful patio-like club car on Seaboard Railroad's Silver Meteor, between New York and Florida." The Sun Lounge photo & description came from a postcard that dates from about the Fifties.
James Bond himself once caught a ride on the Silver Meteor. Imagine Agent 007 in the Sun Lounge ordering a martini, "shaken, not stirred." Along with a tarot card-reading sexpot named Solitaire, Bond snuck off of a train that had arrived in Jacksonville from New York, and he then boarded the Silver Meteor to St. Petersburg. This action occurred in the novel Live and Let Die, penned by Bond creator Ian Fleming. Taking research notes for his writing, Fleming rode the Silver Meteor through Jacksonville in 1953.
It's a bad pun, but many rail passengers used to made tracks through Jax. In Live and Let Die, Fleming noted "the great Florida junction," Jacksonville Terminal. This former railroad station is today's Prime Osborn Convention Center. Modeled after New York's Pennsylvania Station, Jacksonville Terminal actually ranked as the South's largest station when completed in 1919. The facility hummed with activity during the Florida Land Boom of the Twenties, and it once handled as many as 142 trains and 20,000 passengers a day. The switch engines kept busy, dropping, adding, or trading various diners, coaches, and sleeping cars. Part of a passenger train might continue in one direction, while its other sections went elsewhere. Such legends as the Orange Blossom Special made regular stops in Jax. On January 3, 1974, however, the last passenger train finally rolled out of the venerable old station. SEE BELOW FOR MORE JAX TRAIN TRAVEL!
CLICK HERE for railroad dining
CLICK HERE to visit the kitchen
CLICK HERE to relax in a passenger coach
CLICK HERE for more coaches
CLICK HERE for kids enjoying a ride
CLICK HERE for a train's final run
CLICK HERE to catch a doodlebug
AN OLD
WAY TO GO -- Before the rise of interstates and airlines, a favorite way to travel was by railroad.
And one of the most popular passenger trains rolled through Jacksonville.
The Silver Meteor first streaked along the Atlantic coast
in 1939. This Seaboard Railroad train linked New York with St. Petersburg, Florida.
In December 1941, however,
Seaboard trumpeted
how these streamliners would give the ultimate in comfort and safety.
The coaches combined stainless steel exteriors with fluorescent-lit, pastel aluminum interiors that boasted spacious, glare-proof windows. The seats
were individual and could be inclined or rotated to four positions, and they
also came equipped with
adjustable foot rests. Air conditioners would cool the cars, and fans
would completely change the air every 30 seconds. For their listening
pleasure, passengers could take advantage of radios that could be cut into the
public address system, thus offering everything from the "Moonlight Sonata" to
the last call for dinner.
Most of the railroad passenger service in America is now handled by Amtrak, a semi-public corporation created by Congress in 1970. Relatively few passenger trains run today, since Amtrak concentrates on the most potentially profitable routes. Nevertheless, the organization's grave financial woes have given real cause for concern, further clouding the future of rail travel.
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FOR VISITING THE JACKSONVILLE STORY, YOUR TIME MACHINE TO THE PAST |
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