Hi fellow modelers!
Through the collective knowledge represented in this forum: Have somebody here any knowledge and/or pictures of how firewood for woodburning steamtrains was stored? I am familiar with coaltowers but my layout depicts an earlier era and I havent found its wood equivalent.
I would think that this firewood was stored close to the railroad in some sort of covered sheed?
Perstuen,
Norway
Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running BearSpace Mouse for president!15 year veteran fire fighterCollector of Apple //e'sRunning Bear EnterprisesHistory Channel Club life member.beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam
Thank you for valuable information. It seem to me that there is plenty of opportunities and variatons and room for improvisation (seems likely back in the early days of steam that not everything was standardized).
P.
perstuen wrote: (seems likely back in the early days of steam that not everything was standardized).P.
(seems likely back in the early days of steam that not everything was standardized).
Ray Breyer
Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943
Moving ahead in Fast Forward to today's railroading, I have a video of the Durango & Silverton narrow gauge tourist railroad in Colorado that shows them stopping and cutting firewood with a chainsaw as they needed it.
The line's regular engines all burn coal, and the wood burner was there for a special weekend showing. If it was a regular on their line, they would probably build something more permanent for it.
I recall being told that local farmers with wood lots would have one of those raised, open-sided lean-tos alongside the tracks where the right-of-way abutted their property. Whether the railroad would collect the wood and move it to a more central location, or whether an individual loco would stop and load a cord or two, deponent sayeth not.
I also recall seeing an early photo of an engine terminal with a woodpile about half the size of the roundhouse.
Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964 - including wood burning steam)
I have seen quite a few covered and uncovered wood ricks in railroad books I have. Some areas had huge piles of wood in the open. Books by George Abdill are a good source of photos. What I found interesting is a "rick" is a half a cord of wood, 2 feet wide, 4 feet high, 8 feet long. That could probably start an argument. I have no idea when the word "rick" was first used.
rich
If you ever fall over in public, pick yourself up and say “sorry it’s been a while since I inhabited a body.” And just walk away.
Around 1900, my grandfather cut and hauled wood for the Santa Fe here in central Texas. My mother has a picture of him standing in his wagon hooked to 4 pair of oxen in front of the wood pile at Milano, Texas. The wood pile was 100' plus in length and higher than Grandpa's head. All out in the open -- no shed, no cover. At that time, the Santa Fe was using 4 foot long wood. Then for a while Grandpa woked as a fireman on the Santa Fe.
So it would seem you could do pretty much what ever you wanted in terms of modeling, keeping in mind the local of your railroad.
John T. in the cold cow pasture
jawnt wrote: Around 1900, my grandfather cut and hauled wood for the Santa Fe here in central Texas. My mother has a picture of him standing in his wagon hooked to 4 pair of oxen in front of the wood pile at Milano, Texas. The wood pile was 100' plus in length and higher than Grandpa's head. All out in the open -- no shed, no cover. At that time, the Santa Fe was using 4 foot long wood. Then for a while Grandpa woked as a fireman on the Santa Fe.So it would seem you could do pretty much what ever you wanted in terms of modeling, keeping in mind the local of your railroad.John T. in the cold cow pasture
From the far, far reaches of the wild, wild west I am: rtpoteet
That is: quote from the gentleman above that supplied the link.
"Try this link http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Civil_War_RRs/ it is a group that follows US Civil War RR's. You have to join , but it is free. they have many photos in their archive of models and the real thing, including "wood ricks", the term for the storage sheds for fire wood." border="0" width="15" height="15" /> "
I didnt want to post the picture in case of copyright issues. But it shows a pole structure with floor a bit above ground level and a shingle roof. No walls.
Hi Perstuen,
From what I have seen in photos it just seemed to be stacked on the ground or on a couple of timbers laid on the ground close to where it was going to be loaded. Each piece appears to be triangular in shape (split in sections from a round log) with each side about 4-6 inches or round logs about 6-8 inches in diameter all about 2 - 2 1/2 feet long.
All of it was cut, split, stacked and then loaded by hand.
Darren