HOUSTON – When the curtain parted in College Station, Texas, revealing a two-toned blue locomotive standing nearly 16 feet tall and bearing the number 4141 in his honor, former President George H.W. Bush looked around excitedly, his face breaking into a smile.
One word left his lips: "Wow."
Thirteen years later, that same Union Pacific locomotive will escort the 41st president to his final resting place in College Station on Thursday after funeral ceremonies in Washington and Houston.
The train carrying his remains will leave a Union Pacific Railroad yard in Spring, a town north of Houston, and travel the 70 miles to College Station. Bush will be buried there, alongside his wife, Barbara, and daughter Robin on the site of his presidential library at Texas A&M University.
The locomotive, painted the same blue colors that adorned Air Force One during Bush's presidency, was unveiled by the company in October 2005. At the time, Bush was fascinated by the train's mechanics and asked whether he could take it for a spin, according to Mike Iden, a retired Union Pacific general director of car and locomotive engineering.
After some brief training and under the supervision of an engineer, "the former president operated the locomotive for about 2 miles," Iden said.
An Associated Press article at the time said the unveiling stirred memories in Bush of his childhood travels with his family. "We just rode on the railroads all the time, and I've never forgotten it," Bush said.
Presidential funeral trains
During previous centuries, trains carried numerous presidents to their funerals. Abraham Lincoln's body — with that of his son, Willie, who had died three years earlier — was carried by train more than 1,600 miles from Washington to Springfield, Ill. The slain leader's portrait was affixed to the front of the engine for the entirety of the trip.