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EVOLUTION OF LONG ISLAND RAIL ROAD
CAP BADGES
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The Long Island Railroad Company Regulations Governing the Uniforming of Employes Effective April 1, 1929
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![]() Inside the front cover is a ticket office dater die stamp from September, 1929 at the old Elmhurst station. (Booklet courtesy of Art Huneke, Dave Keller archive)
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Pre-1870s (?)
Note:
This badge does NOT have provenance via period photography. Positions Issued: Watchman, (Others ?) |
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c. 1870s – c. 1880s (?) Note: This badge does NOT have provenance via period photography. Positions Issued: Brakeman, (Others ?) |
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c. 1880s-1890s (?) Note: This badge was worn by a veteran LIRR engineer in the late 19th century, but may have been custom-made. Positions Issued: Engineer, Fireman, (Others ?) |
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c. 1880s thru c. 1908
All positions are brass. Worn with the black uniform. Positions Issued: Asst. Station Agent, Conductor, Ticket Collector, Trainman, Station Agent, (Others ?) |
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c. 1908
thru c. 1923 All positions are nickel. of the LIRR). Worn with the blue uniform. “Station Agent” is only one I’ve seen identified by full railroad name. |
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All others have only the position named on the badge: Positions Issued: Agent, Asst. Baggage Master, Asst. Station Baggage Agent, Asst. Station Master, Assistant Steward, Attendant, Baggage Agent, Baggageman, Baggage Master, Brakeman, Bridgeman (ferry service), Captain (tugboat service), Collector, Conductor, Deckhand, Engineer, Engineman, Fireman, Flagman, Guard, Hostler, Laborer, Mail Clerk, Messenger, Motorman, Parcel Porter, Porter, Station Agent, Station Baggage Agent, Station Master, Station Porter, Steward, Ticket Clerk, Ticket Examiner, Trackman, Trainman, Usher, Watchman (Others?) |
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Used in LIRR and PRR tug boat service (Badge is nickel-plated. Scan looks like brass but it is not.) |
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c. 1923 thru 12/1949 “Conductor” and “Station Master” are brass, all other positions remain nickel. Worn with the blue uniform. (Same positions as indicated above: c. 1908 – c. 1923. Many of the named, uniformed positions disappeared in the 1930s with only the "mainstays" surviving i.e. "Brakeman, Conductor, Collector, Station Master, Trainman and Usher.)
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c. 1942 thru 12/1949 Woven Weave Style (Also a by men with above scalloped style during those years. Only style worn by the women who replaced the train crews serving in the armed forces during WW II. Worn with the blue uniform. Positions Issued: Asst. Station Master, Conductor, Trainman, Usher, (others ?) |
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12/1949 thru 1959 All
positions are brass. Worn with the blue uniform. |
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“Conductor”
lettering has serifs |
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In
use after the creation of the Long Island Rail Road’s “Special
Services” Department in 1957. Designed to be worn by attendants
in full uniform. Discontinued “official” use in the 1960s.
Worn “unofficially” in the early 1970s by only two people:
Dave Keller and an old, ex-Pullman Porter attendant, Bill
"Jitterbug" Johnson. |
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1959 thru 1971 All
positions silver-toned. |
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1971 thru
c. 1982 All positions silver-toned. Some
lettering black, some lettering light blue, some lettering dark blue
Worn |
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LIRR Ushers, in addition to their “Usher” Badges, sometimes wore these when out on the platform making announcements for special programs, etc. The badges were possibly also worn by LIRR tour guides from the Group Sales Department. |
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c. 1982 thru Positions Issued: Assistant Conductor, Collector, Conductor |
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Variation:
Reportedly issued to exemplary employees to monitor bogus
complaints from customers who would report the employee’s “ID”
number (Scan courtesy of |
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1983-1984 “Asst.
Conductor” is silver-toned |
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Members
ordered by United Transportation generally and were only worn by special duty teams, nicknamed the “Mod Squad”- entry level management positions used to monitor ticket servicing. Dressed as train crews, they relieved crews from collecting tickets when monitoring certain trains, while the train crew operated the doors and kept the train on time. They were the only ones who wore these badges, and did so in a LIRR poster campaign during the early 1980s (Information courtesy of an anonymous LIRR employee.) |
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Same style badge produced with a 4-digit
“Uniform” number |
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Positions Issued: Assistant Conductor; Conductor; Usher |
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Revised 08/28/2012