San Antonio Express-News

Train honoring Bush returns to library at A&M for exhibit

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COLLEGE STATION — The locomotive painted to resemble Air Force One that carried the flag-draped body of former President George H.W. Bush to his burial has returned to his presidenti­al library in College Station, where it will become a permanent exhibit.

Union Pacific No. 4141, named in honor of the 41st president, was pulled into College Station on Sunday behind “The Spirit,” which honors U.S. military veterans.

After Bush died in 2018 at the age of 94, flag-waving crowds lined the railroad tracks as his body was taken from Houston to the family plot on the grounds of his presidenti­al library at Texas A&M University.

The George & Barbara Bush Foundation plans to build a pavilion around the locomotive and a restaurant next to it, according to the group’s CEO, Max Angerholze­r. The foundation also wants to display a Marine One helicopter that Bush flew in as president.

Angerholze­r said the project will be complete in time for a 2024 celebratio­n marking Bush’s 100th birthday.

Union Pacific originally commission­ed the locomotive for the opening of an exhibit on trains at the presidenti­al library. During the locomotive’s 2005 unveiling in College Station, Bush talked about his fondness for trains, recalling sleeping on them as a child during trips with his family.

He quipped at the time that if No. 4141 had been around during his presidency, “I might have left Air Force One behind.”

A year after Bush’s death, Union Pacific announced it would donate the locomotive to his presidenti­al library. After that announceme­nt, it was stored and prepared at a locomotive shop in Arkansas, Union Pacific spokeswoma­n Kristen South said.

 ?? Jason Fochtman / Staff file photo ?? A Union Pacific locomotive, now on exhibit in College Station, carries the body of former President George H.W. Bush through Magnolia on Dec. 6, 2018.
Jason Fochtman / Staff file photo A Union Pacific locomotive, now on exhibit in College Station, carries the body of former President George H.W. Bush through Magnolia on Dec. 6, 2018.

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