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For all the technical demands he made of himself, Link regarded people as the lifeblood of his pictures—he disparaged solitary train photographs as "hardware shots"—and the fierce pride of the railroad families came through in his pictures. "They were prime examples of an old-fashioned belief in God and the American way," says Tim Hensley, a Norfolk and Western historian and author who knew Link. What's more, Link worked as well with people as he did with equipment. "His enthusiasm was infectious," Hensley says. "He had that aura about him where people immediately trusted him."
And so, on the night of August 2, 1956, Link went searching for a couple to complete a scene he had set up at the Iaeger drive-in. He was polite—the "type of guy you like"—recalls Allen, now 74 and living near Nashville. "The man said, you all come over here and sit in the car," says the former Dorothy Christian, now 65 and living in Jolo, West Virginia, about 25 miles from Iaeger (she's been Dorothy Riffe since 1957, when she married miner Willard Riffe).
Link had already timed the Norfolk and Western Freight No. 78, whose locomotive was "the most beautiful engine ever built," in his book. He had set up 42 flashbulbs throughout the scene (plus one to highlight his car). After he talked Allen and Christian into indulging him, Link climbed a ladder to his tripod-mounted 4 x 5 and waited.
His timing was perfect—he wrote of being able to see only the locomotive's distant headlight coming down the tracks—but it wasn't enough. The explosion of light washed out what was on the movie screen at the moment; he had to print the image of the plane from a negative he'd made separately of that night's showing. The film, Battle Taxi, has been forgotten. But Link's picture holds up as a one-frame narrative of 20th-century transportation.
Today, most of the Norfolk and Western towns are mere vestiges of a more prosperous time; Iaeger, about 1,500 people in 1956, has dwindled to about 320. But Link did, in fact, capture a way of life before it faded. "I was one man, and I tackled a big railroad," he once said. "I did the best I could."


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