Quentin
QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar Russ, what process did they use there at the State Achives to copy the large map {in your photo}, images over to a CD....? There seems to be reems and reems of it....Just how is it recorded. I wonder how the surveyors had enough time to survey and map the surrounding terrain and even record the locations of buildings, etc...Remember these surveyors would most likely have been on horse back for their travel mode.....! And of course there were no roads for the most part, where they were traveling. Really wild stuff....! Each time we travel east to home in Pennsylvania {and will be doing so in a few weeks}, again....as we near Somerset {where our Hampton Inn is}, at the appropriate mile marker I never fail to peek over at the ex tunnel entrances there at Quemahoming Tunnel just a few miles from my exit at the Somerset interchange. From that tunnel down to about a mile or so west of Somerset the SP ROW and the Turnpike {I believe}, are just about on top of each other....At the tunnel entrance {east side}, it looks to me like the RR ROW was about 20 ft. or so lower than the existing grade of the Turnpike. Item: I have an original from the opening of the Pennsy Turnpike...a string of post cards all together of views of various locations on the pike such as tunnel entrances, interchanges, services station/restaurant plazas, etc....Probably now a real collector item at the right location. For anyone interested, all the {original}, stations were Standard Oil...{Esso}, and all restaurants were Howard Johnson's...
Tracking the William Henry Vanderbilt South Pennsylvania Railroad right of way along the Historic Pennsylvania Turnpike.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar Dave....I too am thinking maybe we should not be posting so much on a RR project that's different from your original subject....Say the word and I'll back away....I must confess the SP RR is a fascinating subject to me.
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Originally posted by dwil89 I mentioned yesterday that it was fine to add this information to the thread....
QUOTE: Originally posted by dwil89 A couple of us decided to hike up to a scenic overlook of the NS Rockville Bridge on Easter Sunday. The result is shown here: http://www.railpictures.net/viewphoto.php?id=141429
QUOTE: Originally posted by dwil89 QUOTE: Originally posted by southpennrailroad http://i33.photobucket.com/albums/d64/spennrr18811885/panharrisburg.jpg Here is a panaramic view of Harrisburg Circa 1906 and shows everythng from the Rockville bridge (left side of photo) to the Reading Bridge to the right. Look close at the base of the Reading for all the piers that are gone today. The ones still standing in the river today are not in this photo, they are outside the photo. You describe the Rockville Bridge as being the one of the left in the pic....yet the pic appears to be in downtown Harrisburg....The Rockville Bridge should be further North, away from downtown I would think...
QUOTE: Originally posted by southpennrailroad http://i33.photobucket.com/albums/d64/spennrr18811885/panharrisburg.jpg Here is a panaramic view of Harrisburg Circa 1906 and shows everythng from the Rockville bridge (left side of photo) to the Reading Bridge to the right. Look close at the base of the Reading for all the piers that are gone today. The ones still standing in the river today are not in this photo, they are outside the photo.
QUOTE: Originally posted by dsktc You are describing Harrisburg not Marysville. Looking north in this photo, you see the ex-Reading RR bridge, then the Cumberland Valley RR bridge, the piers of the Market Street bridge, and finally the piers of the Walnut Street bridge. http://www.railpictures.net/viewphoto.php?id=140218 The South Penn RR bridge was between the much later ex-Reading bridge and the CV RR bridge. Looking east from Lemoyne, you see here the capped stone on one of the surviving piers of the South Penn RR bridge. http://www.railpictures.net/viewphoto.php?id=138889 Dave QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar ...A photo in a book I have has a view of the SP RR pylons appearing to be constructed of large shaped stone and capped with a large concrete top. In the background {on the left}, is a stone arch bridge all the way across the Susquehanna River and a city or town is visible on the other side of the river. Photo by William M. Metzger and in my "South Pennsylvania Railroad" book by Walter F. Walton. I don't know if that is a pic of the Rockville bridge or not....There is an island near the center of that bridge. Also don't know which side of the river the photo was taken.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar ...A photo in a book I have has a view of the SP RR pylons appearing to be constructed of large shaped stone and capped with a large concrete top. In the background {on the left}, is a stone arch bridge all the way across the Susquehanna River and a city or town is visible on the other side of the river. Photo by William M. Metzger and in my "South Pennsylvania Railroad" book by Walter F. Walton. I don't know if that is a pic of the Rockville bridge or not....There is an island near the center of that bridge. Also don't know which side of the river the photo was taken.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar Yes, picture does come up when clicked but is not much larger.....
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