HISTORY OF THE "DUMMY"
Submitted by Ivy Skeen Carver
Between 1897 and 1910
one could buy a round-trip ticket from Ogden to Hot Springs for 30˘ on a train
called "The Dummy". It left Washington Blvd. and 19th Street to Hot
Springs via North Ogden.
This "Dummy"
train line was extended to Plain City via Harrisville, in 1909. There was quite
a celebration; Royal Carver remembers his uncle, Jim Carver, standing on the
platform around the engine, pulling the whistle and ringing the bell. One of
the engineers was William Clark,the conductor was "Moonie" Holmes,
and other engineers were Charles Tracy of Wilson Lane, Charles Lunt and others.
The "Dummy"
would start grass fires along the line, with its twice a day trips. One fire
was started in the grass on Charles Taylors home on the 4th of July, 1915,
which burned his barn, sheds, pigpens the old sow and her brood. This disrupted
the celebration in Plain City center as the ball team and other men went to
Poplar Lane to fight the fire and save the house. The railroad was held
negligent and they paid Charles Taylor $1500. After the fire in 1915, and
before 1918, they electrified the "dummy" as a precaution to prevent
other fires. One amusing tale of the Taylor fire was the Milkman, George Moyes,
coming from the dairy with some of his cans full of sour milk and his using
this milk along with water from the slough to pour on the fire. Along the Railroad line from Harrisville to
Plain City there were several wooden platforms for loading and unloading
freight. There were two newspapers, Morning and Evening, which the
"dummy" brought out to be delivered by boys on horses such as Royal
Carver, Vern Palmer, Edward Kerr and Charles (Chuck) Skeen and others. The
train was so slow that kids would outrun the train on their farm horses and
even on foot, running until they gave out. The "Dummy" worked as a freight
engine. The roadbed was laid and rails set by residents along the line. They
were paid by Script, which was good for a ride on the train.
More History of the "Dummy"
Submitted by Irene Skeen
In 1909 John Maw,
Lyman Skeen and Mr. Eccles, then head of Utah-Idaho Railroad company, negotiated
for a railroad to Plain City. On Nov. 15, 1909, the first railroad was built
into Plain City.
A big celebration was
held in the adobe school, on the north east corner of the town square.
The tracks came along
the side of the road through Harrisville and down Plain City to the cemetery,
then north to the square. This railroad was used for produce, beet hauling,
lumber, coal and transportation. It was known as the "Dummy" by everybody
in Plain City. It was one car pulled with the engine. The inside had a coal
stove and kerosene lamps. The car was divided by a partition; one end for the
men and the other for ladies. However, it was not restricted as such. A foggy morning, in 1915, as they were on
their way to Ogden and traveling on the old Harrisville road, the
"Dummy" ran head on into an engine pulling railroad cars full of
coal. Naturally, everyone was thrown from their seats and some were injured,
however, not seriously.
There were two houses
nearby where the people went to keep warm. The ladies at the homes bandaged the
cuts, where needed, and the people were returned to their~homes in bobsleighs. Most of the passengers were students going to
Weber Academy or to Ogden High School. The "Dummy" stopped at the
depot located about one-half block west of the Post Office on 24th Street and
the passengers walked to their destinations or to Washington Blvd and caught a
city streetcar.
ENGLAND’S STORE
Merlin Englands
grandfather, his mothers father, had a store in Logan. Mrs Ellen England
persuaded her husband to go into the business in Plain City. The store was
located west of the England home. Mr. England left for a L.D.S. Mission early
in 1896, and left the store, coal-yard and farm for Mrs. England to supervise.
Merlin England was 3 months at that time.