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Before the original bridge was torn down operating at full steam

digimark wrote:This is fascinating stuff, thanks Russ. I love trains and history but I'm addicted to infrastructure and have a fascination for the Pennsylvania Turnpike, at least that section between Breezewood and New Stanton because that's the way my family would travel to and from the DC area to Columbus to visit our relatives. The Alleghany tunnel was a significant milestone in the trip. We mostly travel I-68 through Western Maryland now, but I still take the Turnpike occasionally to relive the thrill.
What Russ is doing is just like the recent efforts to explore and document abandoned city subway stations, old military missile silos and civil defense bunkers. It connects us to our predecessors and I hope your work gets published. Maybe the turnpike authority will publish it.
southpennrailroad wrote:
Here is another great piece of their work. Never used still wasting away. Look at the floor of the culvert. It is lined (with cut stone) like a kitchen floor. One of my next goals is to find out where they got this supply of stone. I suspect to the south as I did find two semi large blocks just sitting to the south end of this culvert as seen in the next shot below.
This site was still not completed as about four feet of dirt still needed to be placed above this culvert and a missing mantle stone still needed to be cut and placed when work was stopped. Look just behind the tree in the foreground to see the spot where quit possibly a stone seen in the foreground was being prepared for that spot.
A lot of locals surprisingly help me by providing photos of old. This is of a local now long gone standing in front of the same culvert about 75 years ago or more.
I put these side by side. You compare! See but wait I just NOW spotted something strange as a stone is on that same spot that is now missing.![]()
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southpennrailroad wrote:Hotrod
That's beautiful. I love this kind of work. I am amazed how we tear down our football stadiums after just 30 years (Pittsburgh Steeler's) and these works from the 1800's still stand. Can't put this work down.
southpennrailroad wrote:You know what that means though don't you? 213 miles of exploring it again and that is just the trunk line. .![]()
hotrod wrote:southpennrailroad wrote:Hotrod
That's beautiful. I love this kind of work. I am amazed how we tear down our football stadiums after just 30 years (Pittsburgh Steeler's) and these works from the 1800's still stand. Can't put this work down.
yea, I know the feeling... that culvert dates from about 1871.
there are a few of them still in use and in nice condition..BUT you gotta know where to look or you will never find them! lolol
This ones history started as the northern pacific railway (now bnsf) then was once under minnesota constitutional route #2 then U.S.10N, now since about 1934 has been just a county road.. much history but overlooked.. several culverts like this still exist on the main rail line east of here that was not bypassed, still in use, still as nice as the day they were built..you dont see work like this anymore.. im suspecting our rock came from the twin cities area..
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