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Topics in History
A Ride on the Train
by Kenneth A. Dupuy
Let's take an imagined trip on one of the
first train rides from Abbeville to New Iberia. Whether the person was young or
old, sophisticated or naive, the experience must have been exciting. For one
thing, the train provided a speed that few Abbevillians had ever experienced.
There was much less dust and fewer bumps than going by stagecoach, buggy, wagon
or by horseback. Also, the view of the passing scenery was from a somewhat
higher vantage point than before. On the trip, there was the rhythmic ticky-tac
sound made as the steel wheels passed over the spaces between the individual
sections of rails. We mustn't forget the authoritarian barker-like voice of the
conductor announcing the train departure—"All Aboard!"—at each station at
which the train took on passengers. The locomotive's long, high-pitched whistle
and general mechanical grumblings flew into the open windows, along with the
soot and smoke whenever the wind was blowing in the wrong direction. After
awhile the distinctive voice of the conductor would be heard commanding,
"Tickets, please," as he entered each passenger car. Then the snip, snip, snip
sound would be heard as he punched each passenger's ticket.
And what sights! The bystanders and friends and relatives of the passengers were
able to see the train as it reluctantly departed. The train struggled slowly and
laboriously to overcome inertia. Steam and smoke spewed out like labored breathe
on a frosty morning. The smoke and steam also seemed to express visually the
train's difficulties in getting started. Once the train was on its way, there
were wonderful sights for the passengers and crew. The cotton fields, appearing
like snowed-on crops, the pickers bowed down, as though paying homage to these
plants. The pickers would be wearing long-sleeved shirts to protect themselves
from the prickling parts of the plants.
There would be serpentine levees undulating across the rice fields—I'm
uncertain when such levees were first used in this part of the world. Also,
travelers were privy to seeing long-necked, white herons periscoping through the
green seas of young rice plants. Also, we mustn't forget the flocks of
blackbirds moving about like swirling mists.
In crossing through the towns along the way, passengers would spy boys with
beaming, curious faces waving at those on board, or testing their mettle as they
raced with the passing train. Most of these boys were probably dreaming of the
day when they would take their first rides on "the train," and into the future.
That trains helped Abbeville grow and prosper, there is no doubt. They helped to
move it along through the decades into the 1890s' future and into our present.
The railroad also assisted in the development of the western part of Vermilion
Parish. Those first proponents of rail service for Abbeville seemed to have had
grand foresight.

[Read also the reports from the Abbeville Meridional
about the long struggle to bring the railroad to Abbeville, and Ken Dupuy's
description of the celebration upon the
completion of the railroad.]

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