Friday, November 22, 2019
More Abandonment Coming
With a lifetime of interest in New York State railroads, a model of the New York Ontario & Western became the one that I wanted to build. The pictures on the wall show the actual bridge that crossed the valley approaching Sidney Center. Maywood was the railroad name for this bustling town to avoid shipping confusion with nearby Sidney. Fourteen towers were needed to support the rails high above the valley floor. My model had room for only seven towers. This was the first part of the layout completed. Even the dust of moving coal is part of this train.
This picture is included here because of the photograph of the actual Hawk Mountain tunnel. Construction of the four lane route 17 obliterated all traces of this tunnel. When I drive the highway the nearby bridge abutments used to cross the Delaware River can still be seen and the end of the short trestle that approached the tunnel are in view. That is all that remains of this structure.
This model of the Hawk Mountain tunnel was the second section on the model to be completed. No information can be found to identify which end of the tunnel was photographed making finding the precise location of the real tunnel more impossible.
The real fieldstone foundation near the box car is all that remains of a freight house. There is also actual stone in two places at the tunnel entrance. The other stone and the tunnel portal are castings although the keystone above the arch was carved by hand. The trees were built using Autumn Joy sedum flowers grown on site.
The Lehigh Valley Railroad figured prominently in my youth. A tale repeated many times describes my first exposure to railroads. On the trip home from the hospital following my birth, we were stopped at a railroad crossing. My Father held me up so that I could see my first train. In later years memories of my Father driving out of the usual way home so that he could race the Black Diamond to Newfield Station are easily remembered.
The caboose pictured is the best of the train cars that I built from scratch. Plans taken from the prototype were drawn as the first step in building the model. Milled basswood shapes and sheathing were custom cut to build the model. Wire was bent to form handrails and bracing. Tiny bolt heads secured the diagonal braces at each end. Most of this stuff is being boxed and inventoried for the coming auction but this piece will stay with me after the rest is sold or trashed.
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1 comment:
I love model railroads. One of the first companies I interviewed with was Kalmbach Publishing near Milwaukee, which publishes Model Railroader, among other magazines. I ended up working for the grocers association, but Kalmbach would have been awesome, too. You have quite the set-up there!
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