A Brief history of the
Ferdinand Magellan in Presidential Service.
(Or Life Before "Air
Force One")
The newly rebuilt Ferdinand
Magellan was presented to President Roosevelt on December
18, 1942, exactly 14 years from the day it rolled out of the Pullman
Company shops as a new unit. During World War II, for security
reason, only the word "Pullman" appeared on the outside of the car so
that from a distance, the rolling fortress looked like any other
private rail car. Whenever it was part of a train, however, the train
moved under the commodity code "POTUS" (the first letters of
President Of The United States.)
Every railroad official knew that "POTUS" had the right of way over
all other rail traffic. To lessen the chance of sabotage during the
war, the car did not have a permanent storage location in Washington,
D.C. It was moved around when not in use and stored on various
sidings at Washington's Union Station, the Potomac Railroad yards,
the Naval Gun Factory at the Navy Yard and in the sub-basement of the
Bureau of Printing and Engraving. At the Navy Yard, a special
elevator was installed on the observation platform at the rear of the
car to aid the president in boarding the car while in a wheel chair.
This elaborate device was removed from the railroad car after the
death of President Roosevelt, however, photos of it are on display in
the lounge.
On January 9, 1943, a five car train
was quietly assembled in Washington's "Ivy City" yard. The
president's Navy stewards were summoned from the presidential yacht
to perform the duties ordinarily handled by Pullman porters.
Officials preparing this special train were told not to issue any
special instructions that might cause suspicion. The train left
Washington, D.C. at 10:00 P.M. (22:00) with President Roosevelt
aboard the Ferdinand Magellan and headed north. The
train, however, only went as far as Fort Meade, Maryland. An hour
later, it was headed south, beginning President Roosevelt's journey
to the now famous Casablanca summit meeting. Before dawn, on January
11, the train arrived at southwest 27th avenue and south Dixie
Highway in Miami, Florida. The president was driven, by automobile to
Pan American Airways, Dinner Key terminal (now used as Miami's City
Hall) where he boarded a seaplane for the flight to Africa via South
America. This was the first time a seated, U.S. president ever flew
in an airplane outside U.S. borders. Reports and papers from this
trip are also displayed in the car.
Franklin D. Roosevelt traveled about
50,000 miles (81,500 km) in the Ferdinand Magellan
during his presidency. He preferred to travel at 35 miles per hour
(56 kph). On April 9, 1945, he left Washington, on the
Ferdinand Magellan for a trip to the summer
whitehouse at Warm Springs, Georgia, arriving there on April 10th. He
died the next afternoon of a stroke. On April 13, the funeral train
bearing the President's body left Warm Springs for Hyde Park, New
York. Mrs. Roosevelt was riding in the Ferdinand
Magellan, which was the second car from the rear for the
first time since it was placed in presidential service. The casket
containing the President's body, was placed aboard the
Conneaut another Pullman car, by removing a window
to make an opening, large enough to place the casket inside. This was
done since the bullet resistant windows of the Ferdinand
Magellan could not be removed. This car was then placed last
in the consist for the trip to New York. Reports and photographs of
this special train are on display in the car, including a photograph
of Southern Railways (now
Norfolk Southern
Corporation) steam engine number 1401, which pulled the train
part way. This engine is now on display in the
National
Museum of American History of the
Smithsonian
Institution.
President Harry S Truman used the car
more than any other president. Unlike Roosevelt, Truman preferred to
travel at speeds around 80 miles per hour (128 kph). According to a
letter to the Gold Coast Museum from then former president Truman
(which is on display), the very heavy car "gave nightmares to every
railroad engineer who had to pull it on the rear of his train".
During Truman's famous whistle stop campaign tour of 1948, he
traveled more than 28,000 miles (46,284 km) and made nearly 350
speeches from the rear platform of the Ferdinand
Magellan.
The third and last president to
utilize the Ferdinand Magellan while it was still
the property of the United States Government, was Dwight
David Eisenhower, who used the car very little. He would use
the car for occasional trips to his farm at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania,
one time on a trip to upstate New York and on a state visit to Canada
in November, 1953 to address the Canadian Parliament at Ottawa. The
last trip for the Ferdinand Magellan in government
service was in 1954 when Mrs. Eisenhower traveled in it from
Washington, D.C. to Groton, Connecticut to christen the world's first
nuclear powered submarine, the U.S.S. Nautilus.
After this trip, the car stood idle for four years. It was declared
government surplus in 1958 and was offered to the Smithsonian
Institution. The Smithsonian, however, did not take the necessary
steps to acquire the car. The Gold Coast Railroad Museum, then only
one year old, learned of the car's availability through a railroad
trade publication and, ultimately, acquired the car through a
complicated transaction involving several government agencies. The
Ferdinand Magellan arrived at the Gold Coast
Railroad Museum on January 15, 1959, where it has been on exhibit
with few movements. In 1978 the Ferdinand Magellan
was listed in the National Register of Historic Places and the next
year, the Museum received permission to place the Seal of the
President of the United States, back on the rear platform of the
car.
In September, 1984, the Gold Coast
Railroad Museum decided to take the Ferdinand
Magellan to Washington, D.C. to participate in a national
convention of railroad enthusiasts and for inspection by the National
Park Service to determine it's eligibility as a National Historic
Landmark. Since the car was going to be in Washington during
the presidential election campaign, the Museum asked the whitehouse
staff if President Ronald Reagan would like to make a speech
from the rear platform of the famous car. The whitehouse suggested
that the President use the car for a one day, whistle stop campaign
trip between Dayton and Toledo, Ohio.
The arrangements were made and the
trip took place on October 12, 1984, leaving Dayton at 9:00 A.M.
(09:00) and traveling 120 miles (197 km) to Toledo, making five stops
along the way. At each stop, President Reagan made a speech to a
large crowd gathered around the rear platform of the railcar. In each
speech, he made reference to the historical significance of the car
from which he was speaking. The trip was very complicated from a
security standpoint. It involved about 1,000 police and Secret
Service agents. An officer was stationed every .25 mile (400 m) in
the woods alongside the railroad right of way and heavy equipment
blocked every roadway grade crossing. President Reagan said that the
trip was the highlight of his campaign and that he would rather
travel by train than airplane any day. At the conclusion of the trip,
the President met with representatives of the Gold Coast Railroad
Museum and extended his thanks for the use of the car. The car then
returned to Miami and was placed back on public display.
In August, 1992, South Florida was
devastated by hurricane ANDREW. The Gold Coast Railroad Museum
was severely damaged by the fury of the storm. The train shed
collapsed on the museum cars stored inside. All were heavily damaged
and two were literally, snapped in two. Although massive steel
support beams crashed into the Ferdinand Magellan,
the car sustained relatively little structural damage. The roof was
dented and the paint was "sandblasted" from the sides, but the
massively heavy construction of the car protected it from
destruction. After a two and a half year restoration, the car was
placed back on public display during October, 1996.
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