The Big Fill: Emigh's Gap
Luther Gette's love for railroads and for his home town bring life and joy to this great story| Host: | |
| Type: | |
| Network: | Global |
| Date: | Wednesday, October 14, 2009 |
| Time: | 7:00pm - 9:00pm |
| Location: | Centre Furnace Mansion |
| Street: | 1001 E. College Ave. |
| City/Town: | State College, PA |
Description
Please join us on Wednesday, October 14 at 7:00 p.m. at the Centre Furnace Mansion for a special presentation by Luther Gette.
No, The Big Fill is not a mass grave. It is Centre County's own huge Horseshoe Curve up the escarpment of the Allegheny Front to Emigh's Gap, opening the coal plateau to commerce. Built up wheelbarrow by wheelbarrow, the Fill carried rails around a curve so tight that trains had to be pushed downhill around it. Based as much on wish as on science, the curve was an 80-year-long headache to the coal train engineers and brakemen linking Philipsburg with Tyrone and the world.
Using a power point presentation that includes numerous photos, Luther Gette will tell the story of the many wrecks that occurred on or near the Big Fill, including the famous circus train wreck of May 30, 1893. There will also be a short photographic tour of the T&C from Tyrone to Grampian. A song about the Irish laborers on the T&C and a poem about the Big Fill itself will round out Luther's talk.
Luther Gette, born in 1938, grew up along the Tyrone & Clearfield in Philipsburg, just in time to be smitten by Pennsylvania Railroad steam power in its last days of glory. Osceola, Tyrone, and the Bald Eagle Valley were his favorite haunts as PA locomotives ran their last miles. Luther holds degrees in French literature from Penn State and the University of Wisconsin, and is now retired and living in Madison, WI. He spent the best part of his life riding freight trains across the U.S.A., and in 1995 was elected King of the Hobos at the National Hobo Convention in Britt, Iowa.
No, The Big Fill is not a mass grave. It is Centre County's own huge Horseshoe Curve up the escarpment of the Allegheny Front to Emigh's Gap, opening the coal plateau to commerce. Built up wheelbarrow by wheelbarrow, the Fill carried rails around a curve so tight that trains had to be pushed downhill around it. Based as much on wish as on science, the curve was an 80-year-long headache to the coal train engineers and brakemen linking Philipsburg with Tyrone and the world.
Using a power point presentation that includes numerous photos, Luther Gette will tell the story of the many wrecks that occurred on or near the Big Fill, including the famous circus train wreck of May 30, 1893. There will also be a short photographic tour of the T&C from Tyrone to Grampian. A song about the Irish laborers on the T&C and a poem about the Big Fill itself will round out Luther's talk.
Luther Gette, born in 1938, grew up along the Tyrone & Clearfield in Philipsburg, just in time to be smitten by Pennsylvania Railroad steam power in its last days of glory. Osceola, Tyrone, and the Bald Eagle Valley were his favorite haunts as PA locomotives ran their last miles. Luther holds degrees in French literature from Penn State and the University of Wisconsin, and is now retired and living in Madison, WI. He spent the best part of his life riding freight trains across the U.S.A., and in 1995 was elected King of the Hobos at the National Hobo Convention in Britt, Iowa.

Other Information
- Guests are allowed to bring friends to this event.
Event Type
This is an open event. Anyone can join and invite others to join.
Admins
- Centre County Historical Society (creator)
