Mid-Continent should have #1 done in a couple of years. 1385 is useless, and Polson Lumber (Saginaw Timber) #2 is being worked on by it's owner (No, MCRWY does not own it). There was a lot of legal BS that MCRWY got into when #2 broke down at the 1998 Snow Train. The agreement to run it said that MCRWY could not take it apart. What did they do? Take it apart. There is a suit open, and they will end up paying for the repairs made to the engine--something they can't afford.
What would make sense for Mid-Continent to get is the 175, which is up in Houghton/Hancock, MI, but that is another story. It has a good boiler, but bad firebox. The 1385 has a bad firebox and a decent (I say this because they want to replace the entire boiler) boiler.
The Wisconsin Great Northern does not directly haul freight. However, they own or operate the Mineral Range Railroad in the UP of Michigan under the name of Vreeland Rail. As of 4 years ago, a freight operation would make or break the railroad. But, the railroad has been pulling along good.
Phil
Matt from Anaheim, CA and Bayfield, COClick Here for my model train photo website
gtfan302 wrote:I believe the Great Smokey Mountian Railroad hauls some feed to a chicken farm or something like that.
Indeed it does. I got a cab ride in GSMR #711. We went to Sylva and picked up five hopper cars, and brought them back to the shops for new break shoes. The railroad mostly hauls feed, but occassionally transports other stuff. I also got a tour of the railroad shops. I have pics of 1702 & 722 in there current condition!
Take a Ride on the Scenic Line!
Add Whitewater Valley RR to the list (by accident, they didn't go looking for the business)
http://www.stb.dot.gov/FILINGS/all.nsf/f9333daaab92d9da852572f100045a90/a3e630de8f7f2776852570d00071eb4a/$FILE/215305.pdf
The SAM Shortline, which is the "only mobile state park in Georgia" allows freight to be hauled from a CSX connection in Cordele, Georgia, to Americus, Georgia. Not sure how much revenue goes into the SAM coffers, but freight is hauled on the line.
Erik
The SFS used to haul freight with their tourist excursions. Go to www.texaswesternmrc.org and enter the website. Then click "Club Activities: (at the top or to the left), then "SantaFe Southern/Cumbres-Toltec trip 2002". Our HO club visited there in 2002, on the way to the Cumbres & Toltec.
On the run down to the mainline at Lamy, we picked up a couple of empty boxcars from the local beer distributer for interchange.
Decapod DriverWebmaster, Texas Western Model Railroad ClubFt. Worth, Tx.
The Mount Hood RR in Oregon still serves freight customers, mainly fruit packing businesses, between Hood River and Odell. The old Dee Lumber Co. mill further south, which the railroad used to serve, burned down in the late 1990s.
Incidentally, MHRR now has an operating steam locomotive to add to their three diesels. They acquired a former Lake Superior & Ishpeming 2-8-0 off the Grand Canyon Railway earlier this year, and were supposed to have put it in service over the July 4 weekend.
In central Oregon, the City of Prineville RR, while not strictly a tourist road, does haul both freight and the Crooked River Dinner Train.
- Luke
Modeling the Southern Pacific in the 1960's-1980's
Jersey freight lines that have occasional excursions include the Morristown & Erie and the Susquehanna. Earlier mention was made of the Black River & Western and the Bev - Del River line. Down around Cape May there is freight and passenger operations but I forgot the name of the line.
Colorado and Southern RW entertains tourists at Leadville using their track toward Climax.
It seems that the Climax molybdenum mine seems to be preparing to reopen shortly (moly prices are said to be historically high).
Perhaps the railroad might refurbish and use their property for ore? None of the news articles I've seen encourages this hypothesis, but maybe?
John
San Luis & Rio Grande Railroad who operates Rio Grande Scenic
Mr_Ash wrote: San Luis & Rio Grande Railroad who operates Rio Grande Scenic
Jetrock wrote:Add the California State Railroad Museum's "Sacramento Southern" tourist line: they transfer cars of wood products between Union Pacific and Setzer Forest Products. They typically use an SW1 for the freight switching, rather than their 0-6-0 steamer.
Don"t they also have to throw down a temporary diamond across the UP to do so?
-Morgan
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