What Does That Whistle Mean?

Q: I’m curious about why trains use a Morse code signal when approaching crossings.

A: For anyone confused by that question, next time you’re waiting at a railroad crossing listen to the train’s horn. It’s a long-long-short-long signal. That corresponds with the letter Q in Morse code. What’s the connection? Probably none, but that’s not interesting, is it?

The most common of several explanations (none of which I believe) is that back in the 1800s, whenever Queen Victoria rode in a steam ship, the captain would use a horn equivalent to the Morse code Q to warn other ships to yield the right-of-way to the queen. When trains started using whistles, they adopted the signal for Q when crossing roadways. Given that America was barely past half a century since rejecting England’s authority when Queen E took the throne, didn’t have a queen of their own (to state the obvious), and at least until 1915 used a different signal, I find this explanation highly suspect.

Most likely, it’s just a coincidence. Before radio communication, locomotive engineers used a dozen or so signals to communicate their intentions. With so many signals, all using short and long horn sounds, nearly all of them match up with some letters in Morse code.

But I’m not here just to talk about train whistle trivia. For nearly 200 years, train whistles have been a tool to warn folks to stay off the tracks. Engineers originally used a mouth-blown trumpet to warn people of the oncoming train. According to legend (and more trivia) after a farmer who didn’t hear the horn lost his horse, cart, 50 pounds of butter, and 80 dozen eggs, the railway commissioned an instrument maker to develop a better horn, originally called a steam trumpet.

 By 1938, the Association of American Railroads had adopted the long-long-short-long signal for rail crossings. But whatever the horn pattern, the goal is to warn people well in advance that a train is coming. In 2021, 236 people were killed at highway-rail grade crossings in the US. Without proper warnings the lives lost would likely be even greater. Back in the 1980s Florida passed a law that banned nighttime train whistles on some crossings that had flashing lights and gates. By 1990 increased fatalities at train crossings captured the Federal Railroad Administration’s (FHA) attention. Their analysis concluded that banning the whistle had resulted in nearly triple the crashes where the ban was enacted. The FHA promptly issued an emergency order requiring trains to sound their whistle.

To add a little more detail to the earlier statistics, in 2021 there were 2145 vehicle-train collisions at railroad crossings that resulted in those 236 fatalities. More than one in ten people involved in a collision with a train did not survive. Compare that to the 144,149 vehicle crashes in Washington in 2021, resulting in 670 deaths. Less than one in 200 people died in crashes that didn’t include trains. Every life is a tragic loss, and even one is too many, but the survivability of a crash improves greatly if a train is not involved.

It takes about a mile for a 100-car freight train traveling at 55 mph to come to a stop. By the time an engineer can see a car or pedestrian on the tracks it’s likely too late to respond. I’ve often said that we all share a responsibility for safety on the road. That’s still true but, when it comes to trains, the person operating the locomotive can only do so much. If you’re crossing the tracks, it’s up to you to do it safely.

One Reply to “What Does That Whistle Mean?”

  1. I really appreciate your explanation about trains and whistles, and about how whistles can save lives when cars try to cross train tracks! My father taught me Morse Code when I was six years old, and by the time I was eight, I was talking to people all over the world using Morse code on a “CW” (continuous wave) low-amp, home-built Heath-kit transceiver!
    Now, at the age of 69, I and my wife and kids are professional musicians, and when we perform songs like “Wabash Cannonball”, we use a mouth-blown train whistle and sound “Dah-Dah-Dit-Dah” (Q). Interestingly, when a Ham Radio operator searches for listeners, he or she repeatedly taps out “Dah-Dit-Dah-Dit” (C) “Dah-Dah-Dit-Dah” (Q). I guess it means “Calling all Queens”, eh?
    CW radio propagation and Morse code may be the only way to transmit messages by radio when the Earth’s atmosphere is severely disrupted by volcanic eruptions or solar flare-ups, or even worse, fools launching nuclear weapons. So, everyone should learn and teach their loved ones how to tap out on a horn or a Morse code “Key” the letters “CQ” and “SOS” in an emergency. Outdoor survival/camping stores sell such information on credit card-sized sheets , so you don’t have to memorize everything!
    Back to trains: the sound of a train whistle blowing at night is one of the best sounds I have ever heard: mysterious and haunting, yet uplifting and beckoning! The notes are often Eb, Gb, & Bb or A#, C#, D#, &G. Try them on your piano keyboard, or even better, on your harmonicas!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *