Angela Pusztai-Pasternak, Production Editor, Trains Magazine
QUOTE: Originally posted by oskar I don't have a favorite but I have seen one in Farmercity,IL that has some big weeds dose anyone know which line that is kevin
Remember: In South Carolina, North is southeast of Due West... HIOAg /Bill
QUOTE: Originally posted by gabe The only abandonment of a railroad that hasn't left me sad is the abandonment of the underground railway due to the abolition of slavery. But, to answer the question, IC's Springfield - St. Louis abandonment has to be the one that hit the hardest for me. Gabe P.S. Kudos on the map of the month. I enjoyed it (an IC/GM&O one like that would be really cool).
QUOTE: Originally posted by Randy Stahl QUOTE: Originally posted by gabe The only abandonment of a railroad that hasn't left me sad is the abandonment of the underground railway due to the abolition of slavery. But, to answer the question, IC's Springfield - St. Louis abandonment has to be the one that hit the hardest for me. Gabe P.S. Kudos on the map of the month. I enjoyed it (an IC/GM&O one like that would be really cool). How bout the nearby Illinois terminal RR ? Randy
Jock Ellis Cumming, GA US of A Georgia Association of Railroad Passengers
"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics
QUOTE: Originally posted by jeaton My answer is No. My favorites are doing fairly well. However one of my favorite abandoned lines actually has over 50 miles of an eight foot wide strip of black top. The long abandoned PRR line that follows the little Miami river in Ohio has to be one of the better ROW trails in the country. Jay
QUOTE: Originally posted by jabrown1971 IT-the railroad just down the street-literally. What I remember is trains running mostly on trackage rights, but on the old T & E line they still ran their own, long, slow trains through Edwardsville. Some would then go north on the CNW to Monterey Mine-those were neat trains, BN locomotives one one end, IT loco on the other-no caboose. I assume it was cut off at Federal Yard in Alton. I wish I cold have seen the IT on the belt around Edwardsville, along US 66 in Hamel and through the streets of Worden, Mt Olive and Staunton. Must have been a sight to behold.I miss the freight hauling IT, and only wish I could have seen the passenger hauling version.
QUOTE: Originally posted by gabe QUOTE: Originally posted by jabrown1971 IT-the railroad just down the street-literally. What I remember is trains running mostly on trackage rights, but on the old T & E line they still ran their own, long, slow trains through Edwardsville. Some would then go north on the CNW to Monterey Mine-those were neat trains, BN locomotives one one end, IT loco on the other-no caboose. I assume it was cut off at Federal Yard in Alton. I wish I cold have seen the IT on the belt around Edwardsville, along US 66 in Hamel and through the streets of Worden, Mt Olive and Staunton. Must have been a sight to behold.I miss the freight hauling IT, and only wish I could have seen the passenger hauling version. Mt. Olive! Someone knows of my home town. I would have never guessed. I am also impressed that you know that IT went through it, as it was abandon in the 30s or something like that. Gabe
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