Bio: Kenyon, Lester (Retired RR Worker - 1974)
Contact: Dolores (Mohr) Kenyon
E-mail:
dolores@wiclarkcountyhistory.org
Surnames: Kenyon, Staege
----Source: Tribune Record Gleaner (Loyal, Clark Co., WI) 8/29/1974
Kenyon Lester (Retired Railroad Worker - 1974)
Mingling with Mary (By Mary Woods)
During the Spencer Centennial held earlier this summer, Lester Kenyon,
(kneeling), spent a few moments with Jack Staege, Soo Line Agent, Freight
Service Center Manager at Marshfield. Staege is also from Spencer.
The hands of Lester Kenyon look a little rougher than the average man’s hands at
the age of 65, and his face shows signs of a man who has stood the heat of
summer, the cold of winter, the freshness of spring, and the drying of fall. But
after working on the Soo Railroad Line for 44 years, a man is almost destined to
show the age of time, and on June 27, Lester Kenyon finished that many years on
the Soo Line and in an interview, he reflects back.
Born and raised in Unity area, Kenyon began his life on the railroad at the age
of 17, when he began working on the section in Riplinger. He states that his day
consisted of working for 30 cents an hour for eight hours a day, with his main
responsibility being that of laying ties, and raising the track. After working
on the section for two years, and learning the trade, he was told that he was
too young to work on the railroad and sought employment elsewhere.
In 1930, after working in the Glenwood area as a barn whitewasher, he returned
to the Riplinger area, and worked on a farm. He recalls that at the end of the
winter the farmer gave him $50 for a “job well done,” and in the spring, after
adding a few years to his age, he was called back to the Soo Line, and began his
44 years of hard work and dedication.
“The times have changed the railroad to a completely different picture than it
was when I began,” states Kenyon, as he reflects on the changes that have
occurred. “It used to be that all the work was done by hand, and now everything
is done by machines. I can recall the days of driving spikes in by hand, and it
used to take me a half a minute to do one six-inch spike.
“The days of the old steam engine trains have long passed,” continued Kenyon,
“With diesel engines being the only trains in operation. The trains used to be
smaller than they are now with some of them having as many as 150 cars, compared
to many years ago when a long train was considered one having 40 or 50.”
Another interesting point noted by Kenyon, is the fact that six or seven
passenger trains used to stop at the Spencer Depot daily, and now the only
trains that are seen in the Spencer area are those carrying goods to different
parts of the state … and they don’t stop at Spencer.
Asked about the weather conditions that he either enjoyed or dreaded, Kenyon
states, “Many nights were spent working overtime due to the bad weather
conditions. I worked many hours shoveling the snow from the tracks in order for
the rains to go through. Many hours were spent in the cold, and likewise in the
heat, but after working on the railroad for a few years, you learn that the
weather stops for no one, and you don’t stop because of the weather.”
In reflecting on the days past, Kenyon also recalls the wrecks that delayed
trains, and meant a lot of overtime work. “I can recall wrecks, or derailments
that took hours to clean up, and one derailment that took over two days to get
the train rolling.”
“Forty-four years on the railroad as a section laborer has been an enjoyable
place to work. It has given me the opportunity to meet a lot of people, some who
you knew by their names, and then there were the conductors that just nodded
their hats as the old trains rolled past.” Yes, Lester Kenyon has given his time
to the past, and today his time is his own. He is now enjoying doing the things
he likes to do at the age of 64. He enjoys walking down the streets of the
Village of Spencer, and talking with the people, and no doubt some of them share
the experiences of the railroad that he knows about.
When one looks at Lester Kenyon, the times are noted in those hands, and the
face that stood the test of time, the cold winters, the hot summers, the
freshness of spring, and the drying of fall … but for Lester Kenyon the years
have been well worth the test of time.
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