Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Originally posted by fuzzybroken Actually, here's a good question to go along with this. I've always understood that CMC Heartland (aka CMC Heartless) was the surviving "corporate parent" of the Milwaukee Road (railroad). Yet a recent newspaper article mentions that they "took over" the real estate operations of the bankrupt railroad. Being a newspaper article, I'm inclined to think that they're full of ... , but I'm always up for learning something new. BTW, the article mentioned that CMC sold the last of its land in the Milwaukee area in December...
QUOTE: Originally posted by jimrice4449 The shot of the Milw wide vision caboose is interesting in as much as Milw only owned two. They were tacked onto a BN order to serve as part of Milw's contribution to a joint coal unit train. Odly enough i worked on one of them from Missoula to Spokane, but after the Milw shut down and I was working for the BN. It still had Milw paint but I don't recall if it had been numbered into the BN series.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol Colstrip to Big Stone Power Plant. BN originated the train at Colstrip, and Milwaukee took the train at Miles City, one of the Eleven Western Gateways under the BN merger. Each company supplied half the power for a run-through operation. It generated about $2.5 million a year for Milwaukee. Bechtel Corp. designed the car covers for Milwaukee and I believe the covers were part of the order for the coal cars.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding QUOTE: Originally posted by jimrice4449 The shot of the Milw wide vision caboose is interesting in as much as Milw only owned two. They were tacked onto a BN order to serve as part of Milw's contribution to a joint coal unit train. Odly enough i worked on one of them from Missoula to Spokane, but after the Milw shut down and I was working for the BN. It still had Milw paint but I don't recall if it had been numbered into the BN series. MWK and BN ran a joint coal unit train? Where at?
An "expensive model collector"
QUOTE: Originally posted by cnwrwyman Murphy Siding: The Faith and Isabel lines lasted until near the end. When the Oahe dam was built around the early 1970's parts of the lines were raised to get them above water level. The bridge you see in the picture above is the new bridge that was built at the same time. We started running coal trains between Gascoyne and Big Stone about 1973. We extended several siding then to accomodate the longer coal trains. Larry
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