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Pullman's Superb: Presidential Journeys
by Malcolm Campbell
President Warren G. Harding traveled west by rail out
of Washington, D. C. aboard the Pullman Private Car Superb in
June 1923, to revitalize both his health and his rapport with the
American people. He failed the first objective and briefly met the
second. Dying of a heart attack in August, he returned to Washington,
D.C., in a casket, and then onto Marion, Ohio, for burial, uniting the
country in grief.
Prior to the trip, Pullman outfitted the car with a public address
system for whistle stop speeches and a transmitter for broadcasting.
This was the first nation-wide broadcast of Presidential speeches and
the first time a car of this type was fitted with wireless equipment.
The Superb, which opened to the public in 1995, after an
18-month restoration project, is classified as a heavyweight.
Heavyweight cars are distinguished by a riveted carbon steel body,
six-wheel trucks, clerestory roof, a steel underframe shaped like a fish
belly, and a concrete floor. These cars were so durable that many were
in mainline service into the 1960s.
Built in 1911, the Superb is the second oldest heavyweight
private car in existence, and the oldest that is still as built by
Pullman.
Harding's 10-car Presidential special traveled to Tacoma, WA, with
intermediate stops at St. Louis, Denver, Salt Lake City, Butte, MT,
Spokane, WA, and other cities. After a side trip to Alaska by ship, the
President became ill and was rushed south to a San Francisco hospital
where he died August 2. The last photograph of Warren G. Harding was
taken as he left the Superb at Southern Pacific Station.
On August 3, slightly less than 24 hours after his death, Harding's
casket was placed back on board the Superb. The funeral train
left the station behind a Mogul locomotive with a clanging bell; the
growing crowds there were the first of an estimated 3,000,000 people who
lined the tracks eastward to pay their last respects.
Today, the Superb is the only existing railcar to have
carried the casket of a President during his term in office.
Prior to Harding's trip, President Woodrow Wilson used the car on
occasion. In 1926, it was painted red and temporarily re-named Pope
Pius XI for use in the "Cardinals Train" that carried
church officials from New York to Chicago for a Eucharistic Congress.
During World War II, it saw service as a supply and porter car in New
Jersey.
During most of the years between 1928 and its 1969 retirement, the Superb
operated as a business car for the Charleston & Western Carolina
Railroad. When successor railroad Seaboard Coast Line donated the car to
the museum, it carried only a number. With its name removed, the Superb
was lost to history for a time.
Time has done its damage in 87 years, but these heavyweights were
built to last. The restoration project moves forward as we focus on
those brief moments in 1923, when the Superb was the very
center of the nation's attention.
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