Safety Slogans

Safety Slogan - Protect Your Back Watch For Slack
“Protect Your Back Watch for Slack” safety slogan in the yard at St. Charles

Real railroaders are inundated every day by safety slogans. This focus on safety appears to have ramped up in earnest in the 1970s with slogans appearing on all sorts of company publications, in shops, and on rolling stock like cabooses. I thought it would be fun to bring some of these prototypical safety reminders to the layout.

Safety Slogan - Think Safety The Proceed
Safety slogan “Think Safety Then Proceed” occupying a corner at Mayflower

The first step was to determine what kind of safety slogans the Southern used. I found the best place to find them was just above the steps of a caboose, so I pored over hundreds of photos of Southern cabs, zooming in over the steps to see what slogans I could make out. I was able to capture more than a dozen slogans including the following:

  • “SOUTHERNERS THINK SAFETY”
  • “WATCH FOR SLACK”
  • “GET A GOOD GRIP FOR SAFETY”
  • “GET ON AND OFF AT SAFE SPEED”
  • “ON OR OFF CHECK FOOTING”
  • “THINK SAFETY THEN PROCEED”
  • “LIFE GOES YOUR WAY WITH SAFETY”
  • “SAFETY – GO FOR IT”
  • “DISMOUNT AT SAFE SPEED”
  • “PROTECT YOUR BACK WATCH FOR SLACK”
  • “THINK THROUGH EVERY MOVE”
  • “GET A GOOD HOLD ON SAFETY”
Safety Slogan - Southerners Think Safety
This safety slogan is the most unique to the Southern, so I placed it next to the Southern logo on the fascia

Armed with these slogans, I headed off to Hobby Lobby to pick up the closest lettering stencil I could find in the 3/4″ size range, a yellow paint marker, and a black paint marker – less than a $10 investment. I selected a few blank spots of fascia around the layout and used masking tape to provide a level reference line for the lettering. I just hand-held the stencil against the fascia, applied some yellow paint marker in the correct letter, and wiped the wet paint off the template. I carefully held a paper towel up to the freshly painted letter and dabbed it dry without smearing–this not only allowed me to move on to the next letter quickly, but it helped to created a worn and mottled look to the letters that I liked. Once the upper line was done, I measured and picked the middle point of the line, reset the masking tape for the lower line, and started with the middle letter for the lower line to keep things centered.

I decided to add the quotation marks as well. They appear on some of the slogans (not all), but I think it helps make it clear that these are pulled from somewhere instead of just being a random sign on the fascia. The template didn’t have the quote marks, so I used an X-Acto blade to make my own stencil in a blank spot on the plastic template. After things dried, I used a combination of the black paint marker and a sharpie to clean up around the edges. Finally, I used the Sharpie to draw in some extra stencil lines across the letters using pictures of actual Southern stenciling as a guide (for example, a line under the top part of the “T” and lines across the top and bottom of the “C” and “S”).

Ok, there’s one more project down that’s been rattling around in my brain and one less excuse to procrastinate on getting back to scenery…

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