Distinctly Montana Magazine

2025 // Fall

Distinctly Montana Magazine

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46 D I S T I N C T LY M O N TA N A M A G A Z I N E • FA L L 2 0 2 5 A LL ACROSS THE UNITED STATES, THERE ARE HUNDREDS OF OLD STEAM LOCOMOTIVES ON DISPLAY AT MUSEUMS, HISTORICAL SITES, AND CITY PARKS. To most people, these relics look like a boiler atop big wheels covered in an intricate web of pipes, rods, domes, and more. While they are interesting to look at, it can be hard to see these masses as anything more than cold, hard, lifeless steel. But for people like Larry Ingold, a steam locomotive is a living, breathing machine—the closest thing humans have ever made to a machine that actually feels alive. That's why he's spent his en- tire career working with them and why he's excited to lead a small group of volunteers breathing new life into an old steam locomo- tive on display at the Historical Museum at Fort Missoula. The steam locomotive dates back to 19th-century England, and the way it works is relatively simple: Using fire, the locomotive boils water to produce pressurized steam in a boiler, which is pumped into cylinders and used to push rods. These rods then turn large wheels, propelling the locomotive (and usually the Full Steam Ahead by JUSTIN FRANZ A SMALL GROUP OF VOLUNTEERS WORKS TO RESTORE A VINTAGE STEAM LOCOMOTIVE IN MISSOULA THAT ONCE WORKED IN LOGGING CAMPS AND EVEN STARRED IN A HOLLYWOOD FILM

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