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THE 1947 - 1949 FREEDOM
TRAIN
THE EPILOGUE Part
3 – The Legacy and a Second Freedom Train for America’s Bicentennial
The 1975-76 American
Freedom Train has its own unique history and colorful story. These
are summarized on dedicated pages on this website. Still, it is
certain that the Bicentennial train would not have been realized
without the inspiration and successful operation of the "first"
Freedom Train of 1947-49.
Managers of business,
industry and government in the 1970's included many people who had
experienced the first Freedom Train as children. Their numbers also
included museum officials and private collectors of important historical
materials. Often, railroad and other corporate executives remembered
the magical day when their whole school went to see the Declaration
of Independence, and experienced the excitement and anticipation
of waiting in line alongside the gleaming white train. They remembered
the sharply-dressed Marines in dress blue uniform who made sure
they saw everything and knew what they were seeing, and they felt
once more the profound, perhaps intangible, impact of the Freedom
Train and its contents upon their youthful sensibilities of three
decades earlier.
They, too, had shared
the disillusionments of their time: the 1950's McCarthy era witch
hunts, the 1960's assassinations of national leaders, the bloody
quagmire of Vietnam, the confusing struggles for racial, ethnic
and gender equality that reached into the 1970's, and many of them
had encountered the arrogance of power, with its circumvention of
law and, ultimately, of the electoral process in Watergate.
The distant memories
of a gleaming white train and its message of renewal and National
Rededication to the American dream beckoned as an idea worth supporting
and repeating.
Perhaps the memory offered
a salve for the national conscience at the eve of its Bicentennial
– an event that appeared destined to pass without notable celebration
or recognition.
Perhaps it was simple
nostalgia, a chance for remembrance, or perhaps it offered a catharsis
in a more complex age.
But the fact that a Freedom
Train had come once before encouraged a renewal in another time,
one that desperately needed its message of the worth and dignity
of human rights, of freedom of choice and thought, of expression
and association, of intellect and innovation, of respect for differences
and for the American creed of safeguarding the same rights for others.
So the message of that
"original" Freedom Train goes beyond the streamlined white flash
of an ALCO PA speeding across America. The train endures through
its message of renewal and opportunity, in reminding all of us of
the importance of each person's potential and place in history by
simply receiving the gift of being born in a free society.
It was revisited to a
more skeptical, more cynical America of the 1970's in an unlikely
resurrection as a second Freedom Train. The message, the gift, and
the legacy of the first Freedom Train - and most of all, its message
of renewal, was resurrected for the generation of the Cold War and
Watergate aboard the American Freedom Train.
Following the struggles,
the sacrifices and the horrors of World War II, the 1947 Freedom
Train magnified the historic documents it carried. The words and
the hopes of the distant founders of the American Experiment inspired
America’s greatest generation to build the modern world. The Freedom
Train endures as a message from the past to guide and inspire the
future, perpetuating timeless ideals of opportunity, equality, and
democracy in a government of laws and not of men. The train’s message
sought to infuse these ideals with a sense of meaning and importance
for its own time. It was also the hope of the train's founders that
the younger generations it inspired would not be called upon to
repeat the sacrifices that motivated the train, but that everyone
would understand and honor those sacrifices.
That hope abides as an
embodiment and living essence of both the 1947 Freedom Train and
the 1976 American Freedom Train, and it remains a compass for the
American Dream.
Text by Mr. Larry Wines.
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