NEWS: James and Patrick DORAN, 1899, natives of Cambria County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by JRB Copyright 2008 All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/cambria/ _________________________________________ Morning Tribune Altoona, Pa. Monday, July 31, 1899 THE TWO RAILROAD DROMIOS.* Some Reminiscences of James and Patrick Doran. A writer in the Johnstown Tribune, in speaking of the veteran Pennsylvania railroad engineer, Henry Hudson, says: "Mr. Hudson 'graduated' many firemen in his day, but none in whom he retains a livelier interest than in James and Patrick Doran, better known as 'Jim' and 'Pat' the famous and irrepressible twins. There were five of the Doran brothers, born of Irish parents on a farm near Wilmore, this county. John and Michael are also railroaders, and Jim and Pat and Jack and Mike all fired for Mr. Hudson in the beginning of their careers. John was run down by a train and killed in the Altoona yard several years ago, but the three others are still very much alive and doing splendid work to this day. But it was around Jim and Pat that interest always centered. They were not twins merely - they were in appearance and disposition so very much alike that their most intimate friends were often puzzled to tell them apart. And the startling resemblance continues, though they are now over 60 years of age. They are not tall, but are broad-shouldered and heavily set, with laughing faces. Still full of fun and still inclined to play pranks on each other. "Jim and Pat have both been connected with the Pennsylvania railroad as fireman or engineer about 41 years. From the tank or 'tender' they graduated to freight engines, but for 30 years or more both have been running 'first-class passenger' on the Pittsburg division, which extends eastward to Altoona. They have always had the best trains and have hauled presidential or other distinguished parties almost without number. Skillful, clear-headed and brave, they were always selected when extra good work was wanted, and never once did they fail in their duty. Neither has ever been seriously hurt, though both have been in pure accidents in which they have had narrow escapes. Twenty-five or thirty years ago Pat ran square into the rear end of a freight train that was standing on a short curve near New Florence, but came out of the wreck little the worse for the encounter. No lives were lost. About twelve years ago Jim's train was wrecked on the eastern slope of the mountain, up from Altoona. He was coming west and was passing a coal train, when it broke and several of its cars left their track and swung across and wrecked several cars of the passenger train. In this accident seven passengers were killed and many more injured, but the locomotive and several cars had got safely by and Jim escaped. "Pat and Jim now live in pleasant homes near together in Wilkinsburg. In fact they are never far apart except when on their runs. They still dress in the same fashion, wear their mustaches or their beards of one cut and are gray and getting pretty bald alike. Indeed they are the same two Dromios that they were many years ago when, one evening, Jim called on Pat's girl at Hillside, in Westmoreland county, and had a very pleasant time, the young lady being none the wiser until the real Pat came the next day. But Pat got even by calling on Jim's girl and returning the compliment." Dromio (The Brothers), two brothers, twins, so much alike that even their nearest friends and masters knew not one from the other. - Shakespeare: Comedy of Errors (1593). - Bibliomania.com