
By Allen
Brougham (reprinted by permission from "The
Bullsheet" April
1992)
Here are some
of the members of the JD Family - past and present - who
through the years significantly contributed to the tower's
legacy. Much is based upon the personal accounts of such
noted retired operators as John Sim and Donald Breakiron,
who themselves are included herewith, and from whatever
other sources became available. Regrettably, many members of
the JD family from the earliest days of the office, who
properly should have been included, are not. History does
have a way of becoming lost. Time, however, will never dim
the glory of their deeds. The legacy of the place belongs to
all who have served here... all of them.
- - - -
Otho Byron
Sigafoose

If any one operator at JD Tower is to be most remembered,
Mr. Sigafoose would likely be the one. Known by the name of
'Siggy,' he worked first-trick at JD Tower for nearly 30
years. He began his career as an operator in Baltimore in
December of 1898. At that time operators worked, if
required, on both the old Baltimore and Cumberland
divisions. His first regular job was at Tuscarora, Maryland.
He came to JD in the early 1930s from KG Tower at Point of
Rocks, Maryland. Retired operator Donald Breakiron recalls
posting (training) with Siggy at JD in 1951. He was a good
railroader but not a railfan, according to Donald. Donald
recalls an incident when he was handing up orders under
Siggy's direction, and the orders got caught on the
engineer's neck. The engineer stopped the train and ran back
to the tower to vent his anger. But Siggy took up for
Donald. It seems that the fireman had been in position to
properly get the orders, but the engineer got in front of
the fireman at the last second. According to a retirement
item in the B&O Magazine of October 1959, Siggy remembered
'snapper' engines, a locomotive with its cab over the boiler
similar to camel-back engines. He retired on July 31, 1959 -
about three months before his 80th birthday - completing a
career of 60 years, seven months and 17 days. He died
several years later.
Robert McNeil
He came to the B&O in 1936 and took the daylight job in
1959 after the retirement of Otho Sigafoose. He had earlier
worked on the Seaboard and the New Haven. While on the B&O
he moonlighted doing television repair work, and he is
described as being a good Morse man. He retired on a
disability in 1969 and died at the age of 73.
Glen Nutter
He came to the Baltimore Division from Ohio in 1942 and
to JD Tower several years later. A small man of about 120
pounds, it was he who taught John Sim his Morse code. Mr.
Nutter is described as an excellent teacher and a practical
railroader. He left the tower in the mid-1950s and went to
work as a B&O agent.
Donat Terrien
He came to JD from Canada in the late 1940s having been
what is known as a 'boomer,' a railroader who drifts from
one company to another without spending much time at any one
place. He left and then returned again in the mid-1950s. He
is remembered as an operator who would never stick around
upon transfer time, and he enjoyed going to race tracks in
his spare time.
Ellis Charvoz
Born in Kansas about 1890, his parents were originally
from Switzerland. He had worked previously for the
Pittsburgh & Lake Erie, Santa Fe and Southern Pacific. He
knew shorthand, and had also been a newspaper reporter and
an employee for a law firm. He came to the B&O in 1944
working on the extra list, taking the relief job at JD in
the mid-1950s after Donat Terrien retired. Mr. Charvoz, who
is described as having not very legible handwriting, retired
about 1960. He died at the age of 92.
Lester Lynn
He went by Les and he came to JD from nearby F Tower in
1951 having been on the railroad since 1943. He had
previously worked on the Southern and the Washington & Old
Dominion. He was also a meat cutter. He worked the
third-trick job at JD until he retired in the early 1960s,
and contact with him after that time was lost.
Tom Swearman
As an operator at JD in 1940, Tom, now retired, is the
only living operator to trace his tenure at JD so far back
in time. Third-trick at JD was his first regular job. His
career also included duty in Philadelphia, a number of jobs
in Baltimore, and on the Old Main Line at Gaither and Mount
Airy Junction. He was one of the first operators to work at
PA Tower at Fort Meade Junction, Maryland, a job that was
established before the tower itself was even built. For a
number of years beginning in the 1960s until shortly before
he retired, Tom was the first-trick operator at HX Tower at
Halethorpe, Maryland, which for much of that period was JD's
next tower to the east. He retired in 1982. He is originally
from Meyersdale, Pennsylvania. His father, the late Fred
Swearman, was an operator for 47 years working mostly the
towers at Sand Patch and Manila, Pennsylvania. Tom and his
wife now live near Queenstown on Maryland's Eastern Shore.

Tom Swearman
(left) in 1990 photo at HX Remembrance Day, and John Sim in
1987 photo at his retirement party
John Sim
Originally from Troy, New York, he moved to Hyattsville
in 1941. Much of what he learned of JD Tower was through
railfan visits to the place, and, later, from visits of a
more official capacity while working an after-school job as
a mail helper at the nearby Hyattsville station. He began
his official railroading career in 1945 on the extra list at
Shepherd Junction, and the following year he took the
regular third-trick job at JD. In 1951 he went to PA Tower,
in 1952 to QN, in 1960 back to JD, then back to QN in 1962,
and finally back to JD in 1970 where he was its first-trick
operator until he took early retirement in 1987. John, a
railfan, kept in his collection copies of both his first and
last train orders. He and his wife seasonally live in both
Florida and College Park, Maryland.
Donald Breakiron
He went to work with the Railway Express Agency following
duty in the second World War, and started with the B&O in
1951. While on the extra list he variously worked a number
of locations including JD, and he eventually saw duty as an
operator at Gaither, Carroll, Lee Street, RG Tower, Aberdeen
and QN Tower, and as an agent at Takoma Park, Hyattsville
and Georgetown. In the 1960s he had regular jobs at JD on
all three tricks until 1970 when he went to QN. In 1981 he
came back to JD on second-trick, remaining there until his
retirement in 1983. Donald has kept very much in touch with
his former coworkers through attendance at railroad
veterans' functions and by frequent revisits to QN and JD
towers. He has written a number of articles for the Bull
Sheet, and he was a participant in the ceremony that was
conducted at JD when it closed.
Hoy Clodfelter
He goes by the name of Sonny, and for many years he had a
roving relief job that included five different towers in a
five-day week. Known also sometimes as a 'rabbit' job,
because it hops from place to place, it covered each tower's
'wild' day which, at JD, was first-trick on Monday. Other
locations on the circuit included QN Tower in Washington,
and Riverside, Brooklyn and Bay View in Baltimore. Of these,
only QN now remains open, and Sonny's roving relief job, as
such, was abolished several years ago. He is now a CSX
ticket agent at the MARC station at Odenton, Maryland, but
he maintained qualification in the towers and was often
called upon to work weekend vacancies at JD when needed. He
has hosted a number of parties for retiring employees at his
home in Pasadena, Maryland, and he is looked upon as an
elder statesman within the ranks of contemporary operators.

Photos (left
to right): Donald Breakiron, Hoy Clodfelter and Bonnie
Torney
Bonnie Torney
Of the four regular operators who were assigned to JD
when it closed, it was she - with a tenure of more than nine
years - who had been at the tower continuously the longest.
She started on the railroad in 1979 after having been a
legal secretary, and she took the regular third-trick job at
JD in February of 1983. Her father, Al Torney, is a retired
division superintendent. Asked to write some thoughts about
JD, Bonnie offered the following: "Many have come and gone
during my nine-year tenure at JD, all of whom I've been glad
to have known. Some will remain my friends for life. My job
at JD has taught me a lot. For the most part, I had a lot of
fun. The closing of JD is very sad for me. I'll have to find
another 'home' and another 'family,' but I am glad I had the
opportunity to be here until her demise."
Duane Holt
He came back to JD for several months in late 1989 taking
the regular first-trick job, but during that brief tenure he
implemented a number of pleasant changes that enhanced the
appearance of the place. These included the installation of
formica table tops fabricated from spare material donated by
then-extra operator Steve Owens - a bulletin board for
'pictures and things of JD Tower,' a pair of roll-up bamboo
blinds, and carpeting that covered most of the tower's
floor. He was featured in an article in the Bull Sheet of
November 1989 describing his ingenuity. His nickname of 'Froggie'
was bestowed upon him in the mid-1970s because of his deep
voice, and fellow workers now know him by that name almost
exclusively on the job. He is now a yardmaster in Baltimore.
George Lacock
He was the relief-turn operator at JD at the time of its
closing. He came to JD on a mostly regular basis in 1985
following the closing of HX Tower at Halethorpe, Maryland.
He is especially remembered for his dog Crystal, which
accompanied George to the tower on many occasions. Crystal,
a samoyed, was very friendly, and liked to howl when enticed
to do so by anyone making a similar sound. Crystal died in
1990. George started on the railroad in 1974 and he worked
as a crew caller and as a yard clerk before becoming an
operator at Bay View in 1976. He subsequently worked all of
the towers in the Baltimore Terminal before coming to JD. He
is also an extra Baltimore Terminal train dispatcher at
Halethorpe.
Mike Maser
The regular first-trick operator at JD at the time of its
closing, he joined the B&O in 1974 following a brief stint
as a clerk on the RF&P. Prior to that he worked for brief
periods as an order-puller in the U.S. Government Printing
Office, as an airport luggage inspector, as a brakeman on
the Seaboard Coast Line, and as a radio station announcer.
He is a first cousin of singer Rosemary Clooney. Mike was
coined the nickname 'Saucerman' a number of years ago owing
to an incident explained elsewhere in this issue. He also
frequently works ticket agent jobs to fill vacation
vacancies. Asked to write some thoughts about JD, Mike
offered the following: "On January 22, 1974, I drove up to
JD at 6:45 A.M. and entered a world I had only dreamt about.
It has been a distinct pleasure to be a part of a small but
vital function of the railroad. A lot of operators have
passed through the doorway. A lot of friendships have been
made. A lot of trains operated. The people have been a
pleasure to work with. I will carry with me always the many
memories of JD Tower."

Photos (left
to right): George Lacock, Mike Maser and Allen Brougham
Allen Brougham
OK, I suppose I ought to include something about
myself... assuming anyone would ever want to read it... I
joined the railroad in 1970 following four years in the
Navy, one year with Westinghouse, and over five years with
my family's business. I was on the Baltimore operators'
extra list for five years, then went to Brooklyn (BX)
briefly as my first regular job and then to Halethorpe (HX)
serving there for over 10 years until 1985 when it closed. I
was also an extra train dispatcher briefly in the late
1970s. I took the second-trick job at JD in 1985, and I was
there to close it.
- - - -

Photos (left
to right): Jim Carpenter Sr., operator; Melvin Hite,
operator; Jerry Welborn, operator; Frances Carthern,
operator; and Chuck Potter, signal maintainer.
- - - -

Photos (left
to right): Steve Reed, operator; Dale Rockwell, operator;
Mike Smith, operator; Debbie Falkenhan, operator; and Tom
Tebbs, signal maintainer.
- - - -

Photos (left
to right): Cindy Derrick, operator; Suzy Keefover, operator;
Rich Lanham, operator; Duane Holt, operator, and Greg
Sotheron, signal maintainer.
- - - -

Photos (left
to right): Steve Owens, operator; Tom Johnson, track
inspector; Joe Andrzewski, track foreman; Jennifer Anderson,
operator; and Lou Fell, track foreman.
- - - -

Photos (left
to right): Jim Carpenter Jr., operator; Ray Young, track
foreman; Brian Jaeger, operator; John McLemore, operator;
and Herbert Mason, neighbor.
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