Login
or
Register
Subscriber & Member Login
Login, or register today to interact in our online community, comment on articles, receive our newsletter, manage your account online and more!
Login
Register
Home
»
Model Railroader
»
Forums
»
Prototype information for the modeler
»
Limestone quarry questions and great prototype info web sight
Edit topic
Updated your discussion topic below.
Subject
Enter a subject for your topic. Maximum 150 characters.
Post Body
Enter your post below.
Hello, <br /> I want to say thanks for the information I recieved about 1900 era modeling. I have decided to post-date my layout to the 1910-1920 era. By this time my prototype was connected to other lines to the east and a full loop would be acceptable. This will add more interest for my children as they watch the through trains instead of constantly swiching on a point to point. I will have 4 main spurs. A coal mine with battery coke ovens "Bradford", A limestone quarry and camptown "Compton" , A lime plant "Cheney Lime" and a open pit iron ore mine "Champion Mines. <br /> My first question cocerns the limestone quarry of Compton. Several hundred workers worked at this sight in the early 1900s. Ive been to this place, all woods now, and seen massive piles of rock between the cliff face and the old railraod bed. The rocks in the piles are about the size of riff-raff that you would find under a modern highway bridge. No pictures exist to my knowlege and my atempts to find information about early quarries has been unsuccessful. Please correct me if I'm wrong. I assume the rock was blasted from the sides of the quarry after holes were drilled for charges. This rock was being quarried for the steel industry so I assume it was not processed completly into lime. What size lime rock was commonly shipped by rail from a quarry like this? The larger pieces, were they blasted again on the quarry floor? Were they hammered by workers? The smaller pieces were loaded into horse drawn wagons or trucks and moved either to a ramp were it was dumped into the gondolas or did it go first to a crusher to be reduced to a more uniform size?Was it common to process it all the down into lime? Would an opperation of this size 900 workers and of this era 1915 have a "dinky" narrow gauge engine to assist in the opperation like the open pit iron mine of Champion which I have Photographs. <br /> The Bradford Coal mines have a long battery of coke ovens. These were loaded from the top. After the coal was cooked into coke. The side doors were opened and the coke was pulled out by hand with long hook like tools and then shoveled into waiting rail cars below the platform. A photo from another mine shows a " dinky" locomotive being used to charge the ovens from the top. Would horse drawn carts be used for the same purpose? <br /> Check out www.bhamrails.info for some great information and vintage photos.
Tags (Optional)
Tags are keywords that get attached to your post. They are used to categorize your submission and make it easier to search for. To add tags to your post type a tag into the box below and click the "Add Tag" button.
Add Tag
E-mail Subscribe
Check the box below if you want to receive e-mail notifications when replies are made to this thread.
Receive notifications
Update Discussion Topic
Subscriber & Member Login
Login, or register today to interact in our online community, comment on articles, receive our newsletter, manage your account online and more!
Login
Register
Users Online
There are no community member online
Search the Community
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Model Railroader Newsletter
See all
Sign up for our FREE e-newsletter
and get model railroad news in your inbox!
Sign up