Hi Articulus,
Sorry that I didn't respond sooner- my subscription lapsed and it was my wife who renewed it for me as a Christmas gift.
My premise for the Northern Pacific being in Everett, is the 1914 and 1955 Sanborn Fire Insurance maps that are free to view in the Everett Public Libraries on-line digital collection. The maps show both the NP and the CMSP&P line paralleling each other from Snohomish and crossing the Snohomish river into Everett on separate swing bridges. The GN is shown on the opposite side of the river (now BNSF). Within the city of Everett, several map pages show NP passenger and freight facilities.
On page 19, at Pacific and Walnut is a NP passenger/freight station, along with coal sheds. At Broadway and Everett Ave (page 34) is another NP freight station. Between Everett and Hewitt fronting Highland (page 11) are NP locomotive facilities including a 2 stall locomotive shed, car repair shed and sand dryer. Closer to California is the coaling bunker. It looks as though the NP turned their locomotives on a wye, while the GN and the CMSP&P had turntables.
So it looked like the NP had a good presence in Everett- but I haven't found any pictures to verify anything. It would be great if there were photos of the passenger, freight and locomotive facilities. Did NP use standardized plans for its structures or were they regionalized? If I found photos of a NP structure in Montana or ND, could I project such a structure accurately to a Pacific coast city like Everett?
This leads me to another question about facilities. Trains wrote in its 'roundhouse' special that locomotive roundhouses were usually spaced about 100 miles apart. Aside from the NP's round house in Auburn, did the NP have other roundhouse locations north of Seattle like Sedro Wooley, Bellingham or Arlington? Did the GN or Milwaukee Road have roundhouses north of Everett? I know that the GN had a roundhouse in Everett, but did the GN or CMSP&P have a roundhouse in Bellingham. Did the CMSP&P have any roundhouses on its Olympic peninsula operations?
Thanks,
Road Fan- happily back as a subscriber