The goal to be home for Christmas was almost just a dream for the more than a thousand drivers and passengers caught in Cozad, Nebraska in a crippling Christmastime blizzard in 1968. The small southcentral Nebraska town of Cozad lived up to the reputation for midwestern friendliness, and pitched in to help the stranded travelers of all ages from all parts of the country. Though nothing about the unplanned overnight with kind strangers was planned or expected, some of the stranded travelers got extra-unusual accommodations on the night of December 22, 1968. They climbed aboard an RBS (Radar Bomb Scoring) Express train, a train that was sent across the country for a decade under the 1st Combat Evaluation Group at Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana to train bomb crews for the Strategic Air Command (SAC).
The Strategic Air Command was established in 1946 to deter nuclear warfare by making the threat of U.S. retaliation believable and ever-present. SAC was the US Air Force’s plan to show a rival superpower, chiefly the rapidly expanding Soviet Union, that the U.S. was in a perpetual state of readiness to launch a major counterattack (within a mere 15 minutes) in the event of a missile attack. The goal was to a create a détente, or state of preserving the peace despite continued hostilities.
For measurable practice conducting targeted missile drops, SAC had radar bomb scoring (RBS) sites at set locations around the country. Under General Curtis LeMay, SAC bomber crews trained constantly. It didn’t take long before the fixed targets became comfortably familiar to the crews, making training sessions less challenging with each go. RBS units on modified trains were the answer to keeping these vital training sessions fresh.
The three “RBS Express” trains were under the command of the 1st Combat Evaluation Group at Louisiana’s Barksdale Air Force Base beginning in 1961. These trains could move RBS training sites to anywhere with a siding, a short section of track that allows a train to pull off the main line. The trains could stay in one location for up to 6 months and carried a crew of 60 Air Force personnel. They were comprised of 4 radar cars, which were flat cars with vans and training equipment such as ground radar, computers, and electronics, plus 17 support cars. These included a generator car, two box cars for maintenance, a dining car, two day-room cars, supply cars, an administration car and 4 Pullman-style sleeper cars. The sleeper cars contained 4x7 foot ‘rooms’ with a fold-up bunk that doubled as a table, a closet, and a large picture window, with darkening curtains for those who worked the night shift. In the center of the Pullman cars were toilets, showers, and a laundry area.
On the night of December 22, 1968, as reported in the January 3, 1969 Observer, a Bossier City-based newspaper for Barksdale Air Force Base, a blizzard raged through south and central Nebraska (and other parts of the Great Plains) that tied up holiday road traffic for miles in all directions. The local police requested help from Lt. Col. Fred Davidson, commander of the RBS Express that had located just west of Cozad, Nebraska on US Highway 30 (which ran parallel and not far from interstate 80). Davidson welcomed 33 stranded passengers aboard the train. The youngest was a 2-month old baby.
The civilian guests came aboard the RBS train at dinnertime, so they were fed a meal from the train’s galley, shown the movie Dr. Zhivago, and given a presentation on the mission and operations of the RBS Express. This latter activity, at least, was common for the train’s crew, which frequently hosted tours to both top military brass and local students. Since the day was a Sunday and Protestant Chaplain from Nebraska’s Offutt AFB, Major J.E. Davis, happened to be on board, there was a church service for crew and visitors alike. Overnight, the guests were given sleeping accommodations in the train’s sleeping cars.
Space was ample (by railroad standards, anyway) since most of the RBS Express crew was also traveling for the holiday. The next morning, the weather had cleared enough that the guests were able to continue their travels.
An article in the newspaper The Cozad Local on Wednesday, January 1, 1969, reported that one of the RBS Express train guests, Tom Lyon of Colorado Springs, Colorado had already returned to Cozad “to see what it was like without a blizzard in progress.” More pressing, perhaps, was that he stopped by the newspaper’s office to both express his appreciation for the “impressive” hospitality shown him on the train, and to pick up the Local’s blizzard issue, since no one back home believed his story about having to spend the night on a USAF Strategic Air Command train!
From the staff of the Bossier Parish Libraries History Center, we wish you all the best this Christmas and holiday season. If you have any information, stories, or photos about Christmas and other holiday traditions in Bossier Parish, we would love to add them (or scanned copies) to our History Center’s research collection. We are located at 7204 Hutchison Drive (formerly called 850 City Hall Drive) just across Beckett Street from the old Central Library and History Center in Bossier City, LA. All Bossier Parish Libraries locations will be closed Tuesday and Wednesday, 12/24 and 12/25. Normal operating hours for Bossier Central Library and History Center are M-Th 9-8, Fri 9-6, and Sat 9-5. Our phone number is (318) 746-7717 and our email is history-center@bossierlibrary.org
For other local history facts, photos, and videos, be sure to follow us @BPLHistoryCenter on FB, @bplhistorycenter on TikTok, and check out our blog http://bpl-hc.blogspot.com/.
Images:
- RBS Train 1962, Barksdale AFB. Photo courtesy of the Don Ross of Don's Depot Rail photos.
- Emblem of the 1st Combat Evaluation Group of the Force USAF, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
- Omaha World-Herald photo showing a five-car smashup on Interstate 80 east of Waco, NE, as seen in the US Dept. of Commerce ESSA Weather Bureau Central Region Technical Attachment, The Snow, the Cold, and the Flood Potential, Upper Midwest, Winter and Spring 1968-1969