Last additions - Locations |
CB&Q fan trip with 2-8-2 #4960 - 1962247 viewsNorthbound CB&Q Mikado sits in front of the MFA elevator in Elsberry.Jan 02, 2016
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CB&Q #4951 2-8-2225 viewsMikado #4952 sits at Hannibal, MO. After some discussion, Archie and I don't think this is in the yard, but it could be at the Atlas-Portland cement plant in Ilasco. (photo caption was Hannibal)Jan 02, 2016
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CB&Q #1235 2-6-0253 viewsOn the scrap line in Hannibal.Jan 02, 2016
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CB&Q #564 0-6-0225 viewsSwitcher #564 loads at the coaling chute in HannibalJan 02, 2016
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CB&Q #541 0-8-0208 viewsSwitcher #541 works the yard in Hannibal, MOJan 02, 2016
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BN yards in N St Louis208 views1975 view of the BN yard.Jan 02, 2016
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BN #3038 crosses the Missouri River196 viewsGP40 pulls a local across the Missouri river at Fort Bellefontaine, heading south. Note the old highway bridge being torn down. The railroad bridge was built in 1894.Jan 02, 2016
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Burlington Northern Bicentennial SD40-2 #1976 in N. St. Louis yard237 viewsJan 02, 2016
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KCS swing bridge174 viewsOriginally built by the Chicago & Alton in 1873 as one of the first 15 bridges across the Mississippi. It was rebuilt in 1898 on the 1873 piers.Jan 02, 2016
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KCS swing bridge181 viewsWhen it was built, the 444 ft swing span was the largest in the nation.Jan 02, 2016
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KCS swing bridge176 viewsThe Chicago & Alton Railroad built the original bridge in 1873, and sold it to the B&O Railroad in 1929. B&O sold it to the Gulf, Mobile, and Ohio in 1945. GM&O became Illinois Central Gulf in 1972, and then acquired by the Chicago, Missouri, and Western in 1987...which became the Gateway Western (1990), and now Kansas City Southern (2001).Jan 02, 2016
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BNSF & KCS diamond, looking SE190 viewsThis view of the diamond shows the BNSF tracks heading south to the Bunge feeds elevator, while the KCS heads east over the swing bridge.Jan 02, 2016
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Old swing bridge gear mechanism 189 viewsIn 2012 the KCS replaced the swing bridge gear mechanism, here are the old gears lying next to Hwy 79. Jan 02, 2016
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Holcim Cement180 viewsThis plant originally started as Dundee cement in 1967. At the time it was the world's largest cement kiln, which measured 760 feet long and 25 feet in diameter and could accommodate 1.4 million tons of clinker a year. Dundee was a direct predecessor to Holnam (later to become Holcim), but the plant was closed in 2009.Jan 02, 2016
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Looking South towards Annada, MO151 viewsK-line looking south. According to Clarence Cannon's history of Elsberry, when the Clarksville & Western Railway began setting out trackage south, a marker was driven in the ground every 3 miles and that was where a station was built, and then a town usually grew up around the station. Some survived, some did not, some barely hang by a thread.Jan 02, 2016
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