Biography
His first published photograph appeared in the November 1951 issue of Trains, showing a Railway Club of Southern California excursion on the Apache Railroad pulled by a Fairbanks Morse H10-44 diesel and a 2-8-2. His first Trains byline came in April 1960 with “Loggers and Lokeys,” a profile of Rayonier logging operations in Washington.
Photography was also Kistler’s profession. He worked in graphics for 13 years at the Pasadena-based California Institute of Technology and later for the Grass Valley Group, a manufacturer of television and broadcast equipment that, for a time, was affiliated with Tektronix, maker of electronic testing and measurement devices.
Kistler continued to pursue railroad photography throughout his professional career, contributing frequently to a variety of rail enthusiast publications, as well as making appearances at railfan photography events such as the annual Winterail exposition, held for many years in Stockton, Calif., and now in Corvallis, Ore. In addition to the R&LHS photography award, Kistler was named to the Winterail Hall of Fame in 2000.
Kistler also created audio recordings and occasional 16mm films. Produced under his own S.K. Railroad Recordings label, he released several LPs in the late 1950s and early ’60s, among them “Whistles in the Woods,” an anthology of logging railroads such as West Side and Rayonier, and “Night Freight,” recorded in 1960 in the cab of a Nacionales de México 4-8-4.
Kistler also has his byline on two books. The first, Santa Fe: Steel Rails Through California, was co-authored with Don Duke and published by Duke’s Golden West Books in 1963. In 2009, the Santa Fe society published Stan Kistler’s Santa Fe in Black and White, a deluxe black-and-white showcase of some of Kistler’s best work. Other credits for Kistler include founding member in 1953 of the Southern California Chapter of the R&LHS, and later director of the R&LHS Pacific Coast Chapter.
Kistler’s enthusiasm for the railroad game was boundless, and he had a gift for depicting it in words. Consider this description of a 1948 fan trip behind a Santa Fe 4-8-4, taken from a story he wrote for the July 1981 issue of Trains, about California fan trip impresario John Markoe Ferris.
Wrote Kistler: “This was the end of a perfect day, heading back from Barstow into a setting sun, the huge 80-inch drivers of Baldwin 4-8-4 3780 biting into the 0.9-to-1.5 percent grades near Hesperia, siderods flashing in the dwindling light, the mountains outlined by haze, the smell of oil smoke and valve oil drifting back, the sounds of the perfectly timed exhaust from the stack (with each beat chopped evenly) and wheel clicks over rail joints . . .”
Kistler was married to his wife, Brenda Kay Kistler, for 56 years; she died on June 29, 2022, just three months before his passing. He was survived by two daughters, Rene Hardrath and Erinn Cooke, and two grandchildren.
Kistler Collection Overview
- Gift of Stan Kistler and Rene Hardath
- 3,000 black-and-white negatives of Santa Fe operations
- 9,000 Slides
- Collection also includes sound recordings and moving-image film
- Coverage of the United States, Mexico, and Canada with emphasis on the American West and Southern California
Reproduction Requests
- High resolution scans from the Gruber Collection are available for print and electronic reproduction
- To make requests, visit the collections page or send an email to info@railphoto-art.org