Sixty-six year Akron Railroad Club member Gene Robert “Bob” Redmond, 91, of Kent, died on Monday (May 18, 2015) at his home.
He had the second longest tenure as an ARRC member, trailing current Vice President J. Gary Dillon by 13 months.
Mr. Redmond joined the ARRC on May 27, 1948. Over the years he presented numerous programs at club meetings, many of them focused on steam operations.
In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Mr. Redmond was often trackside documenting operations on the Baltimore & Ohio, Erie, Pennsylvania, Wheeling & Lake Erie, New York Central, and Akron, Canton & Youngstown railroads.
Although most of his work was focused on his hometown of Kent, he often got into Akron. He also traveled as far as Cleveland and vicinity, and in the region around Brewster, Ohio.
His photographs have appeared in various books, including Akron Railroads and Canton Area Railroads.
Some of his images are included on plaques along the Portage Hike and Bike Trail at the site of the former Erie Railroad yards and shops. The yard and shops are gone, but the trail passes through where they once sat.
Mr. Redmond was also an avid model railroader who modeled the region’s railroads in his basement. The layout was a reflection of his railroading interests. There was not a single diesel locomotive to be found.
Although much of his photography work occurred in Northeast Ohio, Mr. Redmond liked to travel and photograph railroading operations elsewhere.
One of his last ARRC programs featured images made on a trip through Virginia down to Florida. He showed colors slides made in Roanoke, Virginia, of Norfolk & Western steam locomotives on freight and passengers trains.
Although he has a passion for steam locomotives, many of his photographs included first generation diesels on the region’s railroads.
His photography became less frequent after the 1950s. He once explained that one year his photo taking was interrupted when he was building his home in Kent.
Even though he no longer was an active photographer after the end of the steam era, Mr. Redmond continued to go trackside to watch trains.
Until a few years ago, he was a regular at the ARRC’s longest day railfanning event, often showing up by late morning and leaving by mid-afternoon. He would drive by himself to such far-flung hot spots as Deshler and Marion.
Aside from the railroads of Northeast Ohio, Mr. Redmond also had an interest in the Chicago & North Western.
Born April 21, 1924, in Kent, he was the son of Harvey and Ida M. (Parmalee) Redmond.
After serving in the U.S. Army during World War II, Mr. Redmond worked as a draftwman for Lamson-Sessions. He later became an apprentice carpenter with Everett Johnson and a carpenter for Sommerville Builders.
Aside from the ARRC, Mr. Redmond was a member of the Cuyahoga Valley Model Railroad Club.
He participated in the ribbon cutting ceremony for the Harvey Redmond Bridge, which is named for his father, at Fred Fuller Park.
He is survived by three sons, Dave, Steven and Tom Redmond, all of Kent; and a daughter, Nancy Redmond, of Kent.
Mr. Redmond was preceded in death by his wife, June E. (Bancroft) Redmond. She died on July 14, 2013. They had married on May 27, 1950.
Services will be private. Bissler & Sons Funeral Home and Crematory handled the arrangements.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Kent Historical Society, the RMH Foundation-Hospice or the Animal Protective League.