
Kenneth Burbach
Approximately 2,000 color slides taken between the 1960s and the 1990s of railroad infrastructure and trains, primarily in the Upper Midwest. Coverage focuses on Wisconsin and Illinois, with railroads including the Chicago & North Western, Milwaukee Road, and Soo Line.
Biography
Ken Burbach has seldom left the house without a camera since he was a boy. He was born in Richland Center in southwest Wisconsin in 1937, a town served only by a branch line of the Milwaukee Road, now abandoned. About 1939, the family moved some fifty miles southwest to Lancaster, served by the Chicago & North Western, and very near the end of the C&NW line from Madison to the east. Trains were not especially frequent, but it helped Ken that the Burbach house was only a block or two from the tracks and a three-stall roundhouse. It also helped that World War II was underway and that the postwar boom occurred when Ken was a boy so Lancaster train traffic was at its peak. The station agent befriended Ken, and he got to know crew members as well. He would ride his bicycle to the station, and the crew often treated him with rides.
Besides the daily attraction of local freights and passenger trains, Ken occasionally was treated to long-distance passenger trips to Southern California, where his mother had relatives. She ran a dress shop in Lancaster, and when business was good, or about every two years, the family enjoyed a trip on the Santa Fe’s Super Chief. In off years, they traveled on the less-expensive El Capitan. The combination or personal travel and local exposure hooked Ken.
In 1949 the family moved a hundred miles northeast to Portage, Wisconsin, a Milwaukee Road town on the main line with lots of activity compared to Lancaster. Friends of Burbach’s father worked for the railroad, and fostered Ken’s interests.
Burbach’s high school graduation occurred during the Korean War, and he served three years in the Army there, after which he attended Carroll College (now University) in Waukesha, Wisconsin, just west of Milwaukee. Then he taught history at the high school in New Berlin, Wisconsin, a Milwaukee suburb that puts the accent in Berlin on the first syllable. He ended his professional career working in the Madison area for a private publishing firm, the Bureau of National Affairs with headquarters in Washington, D.C., as one of its fifteen-hundred employees.
All along, his camera was at his side. His wife, he admits, was “not a big railfan” but enjoys the occasional long-distance train trip. Together, they have ridden the Canadian across Canada, the Orient Express to Istanbul, and the Blue Train of South Africa.
Burbach’s railroad photography covers consists largely, he says, of “old stuff.” He means roundhouses, wooden bridges, “something unique.” Burbach donated some two thousand color slides to the Center, and as he suggests, their strength can be found in infrastructure as well as equipment, covering the 1960s to the 1990s.
–Jack Holzhueter



About the collection
Title
Kenneth Burbach photographs
Dates
Span: 1960s to 1990s
Creator
Burbach, Kenneth
Geographic coverage
Upper Midwest, especially Wisconsin and Illinois
Railroad coverage
Railroads include the Chicago & North Western, Milwaukee Road, and Soo Line.
Provenance
Gift of the photographer, Kenneth Burbach.
Copyright status
© Center for Railroad Photography & Art
Access & restrictions
We provide images free-of-charge for small press and self-published works, personal use, as well as educational and non-profit efforts. All other users, please see our usage fee schedule for rates.
Kenneth Burbach Collection index

Extent
2,000 colors slides
Availability
Data is unavailable for this collection as it still needs additional processing.
