Boxcar
PRR #30962
40' Youngstown Door Boxcar, the typical post-World War II boxcar was
40 feet in length with a 6-foot door opening on each side. These cars
roamed the country in general service hauling such things as eastern
merchandise, north western lumber, furniture, paper, auto parts and
grain. The shipper made sure his freight fit into the 40-foot general
service boxcar if it couldn’t be hauled in tank, hopper or gondola car.
Confronted by increasing competition from trucking companies for
Less than Carload (LCL) freight during the late 1940s, railroads aggressively
marketed expedited LCL services, advertising them on boxcars with colorful
paint schemes. The Pennsy introduced "Merchandise Service" banners to many
cars assigned to LCL service between September 1947 and November 1957. August
1947 -- "Merchandise Service" paint scheme number one ("MS1") introduced. Applied
to 100 X40B, 300 X41B, an unknown number of X29B, and possibly three X26C. Featured
a 23-1/4" wide aluminum band with two 4-1/4" white edges. Background for keystone
monogram Toluidine Red versus Freight Car Color. "Merchandise Service" letters
Toluidine Red with narrow white accent shadows.