Howard V. Shrader papers

Finding aid created by California State Railroad Museum Library and Archives staff using RecordEXPRESS
California State Railroad Museum Library and Archives
111 I Street
Sacramento, California 95814
(916) 323-8073
Library.CSRM@parks.ca.gov
http://csrmf.org/visit/library
2020


Descriptive Summary

Title: Howard V. Shrader papers
Dates: 1922-2000
Collection Number: MS 636
Creator/Collector: Shrader, Howard V.
Extent: 5 boxes
Repository: California State Railroad Museum Library and Archives
Sacramento, California 95814
Abstract: Papers documenting the life of Southern Pacific machinist and California State Railroad Museum benefactor Howard V. Shrader.
Language of Material: English

Access

This collection is open for research at our off-site storage facility with one week's notice. Contact Library & Archives staff to arrange for access.

Publication Rights

Copyright has not been assigned to the California State Railroad Museum. All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Capital District Collections Manager. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the CSRM as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained by the reader.

Preferred Citation

Howard V. Shrader papers. California State Railroad Museum Library and Archives

Acquisition Information

Gift of the Estate of Howard V. Shrader, 2000.

Biography/Administrative History

Howard V. Shrader was one of the California State Railroad Museum’s most generous benefactors. He was born in Jefferson, New York on March 11, 1902 and moved with his family to Sacramento, California at the end of 1905. As a child, Mr. Shrader attended the Highland Park grammar school, then Stanford High School in Oak Park. At age sixteen, he applied for work at Southern Pacific's Sacramento Shops. Initially, he worked in the south end of the Machine Shop or Locomotive Erecting Shop. After six months, Shrader became part of a repair gang working on gear cutting. He underwent a four-year apprenticeship with Southern Pacific as a machinist, attending the Southern Pacific school for technical training two hours a day and working in the Machine Shop the other six hours. Once he became a Journeyman Machinist, he did extensive machine shop work on engines for Southern Pacific's ferryboat fleet. From 1919 to 1930, Mr. Shrader used his Southern Pacific rail passes to take eighteen trips. On his first trip in 1919, he went back to his childhood home, Jefferson, New York, where he rekindled a relationship with childhood friend Madeline Danforth. They were married on September 8, 1925 in Hobart, New York. In July of 1922, Howard Shrader left Southern Pacific to take a cross-country trip on his Harley-Davidson motorcycle from Sacramento to Portland, Maine. He was rehired by Southern Pacific in October 1922. Shrader took other cross-country motorcycle trips in mid-1923 and in late 1924 and was rehired by SP both times. While working late on June 27, 1928 at the locomotive machine shop, a fire broke out which Mr. Shrader helped extinguish. His efforts earned him a letter of commendation from the SP's Superintendent of Shops. While working for Southern Pacific, Mr. Shrader joined Lodge 33 of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. After retiring in 1967, he was granted a lifetime membership in the union. During the Depression many Southern Pacific shops employees, including Howard Shrader, were laid off. Howard’s father Fred, who had worked at the Southern Pacific Sacramento Shops since 1905, had already left Southern Pacific and was working at Subway Sheet Metal Works (which later became Munz Pumps). In 1930, Howard began working with his father as a machinist and designer of propeller pumps, designing one pump that was ordered by both Disneyland and Disney World. In 1931, Howard and Madeline Shrader purchased their first home on Franklin Boulevard in Sacramento. Mr. Shrader lived there for 60 years. After the death of his wife Madeline in 1959 Mr. Shrader resumed traveling. He estimated he used thirty five different airlines and took three helicopter trips between 1960 and 1982. Making models of intricate machinery in his spare time was a life-long hobby. He built sixteen live steam engines, one fire engine, a model of a Congreve Clock, a miniature Liberty ship engine, and a steam boiler, which caught the attention of California State Railroad Museum Curator Stephen E. Drew, who arranged to display the models at the Museum. While a docent at the Museum in the late 1980s, Mr. Shrader donated his certificate of completion from his apprenticeship with Southern Pacific. He was an active member of the Museum, and visited often with Mr. Drew, telling stories about his employment at the Sacramento shops. He was interviewed on October 30, 1996 for CSRM's Southern Pacific Sacramento Shops oral history project. A transcript of his interview is available in the Howard V. Shrader Papers, Series 2. CSRM file [1:1], or in the Southern Pacific Railroad Company Collection, Series 21. Sacramento Shops Oral History Project, OH 18. Howard V. Shrader died on June 14, 1998 at the age of 96. He made the California State Railroad Museum the beneficiary of his estate. His bequest of $500,000 was the largest single cash gift the Museum had ever received.

Scope and Content of Collection

Howard V. Shrader's papers include photographs, postcards, correspondence, Christmas and birthday cards, clippings, membership cards, handwritten notes, a wedding invitation and a wedding book, a memory book, airline ticket receipts, promotional brochures, road maps, a letter of commendation from Southern Pacific, a certificate and a lifetime membership award to Shrader from the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. There is also a book about his mother's family, the Grants. Other papers include rental and sales agreements for property owned by the Shraders, a copy of the interview Harold V. Shrader gave Dick Denison for the California State Railroad Museum Southern Pacific Railroad Sacramento Shops oral history project. The property sale and purchase files include deeds, contracts, receipts, escrow instructions, grant of easements, offer letters, estimated closing statment, and escrow statements. The property tax subject file includes an inheritance tax release form, the death certificate of Madeline Shrader, correspondence, and a tax bill sent to Mr. Shrader in 1986 in error. Subjects include: information about Howard Shrader's birthplace, Jefferson, N.Y., his travel by air, train and motorcycle, his involvement with the California State Railroad Museum, his heroism in helping extinguish an after-hours fire at the SP shops on June 27, 1928, and his long membership in the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. Other files contain information about the purchase of Sacramento residence and sale 60 years later, his move to an assisted living facility, his involvement with the California State Railroad Museum, the fabrication of model steam engines, his interest in family genealogy, and his cemetery plot at the Odd Fellows Lawn Cemetery. Most correspondence is from the l980s and 1990s, consisting of letters and cards from old friends and relatives. There is a birthday card from President and Mrs. Clinton on Mr. Shrader's ninety-fifth birthday. Arranged alphabetically by subject or type of material.