Saturday, May 23, 2026

Toadvine, AL: Peabody Shoal Creek Mine west of Birmingham, AL

Prep Plant: (Satellite)
Mine: (Satellite)
Warrior Met #7 West Portal: (Satellite, is this a different company? Yes, I found more of their stuff in the area.)

This is one of those wilderness areas in the Appalachians where there are nearby churches, but no nearby towns. Where do the workers at the preparation plant live?

The overhead conveyor is going to an auxiliary storage pile.
Street View, Sep 2025

They ship by barge. The barge dock is on the west side. That dock is on the Bankhead Reservoir on the Black Warrior River.
Satellite

Mining #Shorts posted
Shoal Creek is one of Peabody’s most important U.S. metallurgical coal assets, tucked into Alabama’s Warrior Coal Basin across Jefferson, Tuscaloosa and Walker counties.
This isn’t a power-station coal story. Shoal Creek produces high-volatile A hard coking coal, a steelmaking product shipped into seaborne markets through Mobile.
Peabody bought the operation from Drummond in December 2018 for $387 million, adding an underground longwall mine, preparation plant and river logistics system to its portfolio.
The mine sits about 35 miles west of Birmingham and works the Mary Lee and Blue Creek seams at depths of roughly 1,000 to 1,300 feet. Coal moves by barge along the Black Warrior River, then heads to the McDuffie Terminal at the Port of Mobile.
Peabody lists 2025 output at 1.8 million tons, with 13 million tons of proven and probable reserves and about 400 employees tied to the site.
Shoal Creek has also had its share of trouble. In 2023, Peabody sealed two longwall panels after a fire involving void fill material in the J panel area. The company later shifted development toward the L panel area, where it expected better mining conditions.
Shoal Creek remains a serious Alabama coal operation: deep, technical, export-focused and directly linked to global steelmaking rather than domestic electricity generation.
-
Photo: Peabody Energy

Since they mine coal to produce coke, I added the label "metalIron" to these notes.

The map label for the mine is a maintenance facility. Around it is a lot of evidence of past strip mining even though they have done a decent job of land reclamation. I finally found active mining which is in the upper-right corner of this excerpt. But I could not find any mining equipment! Draglines and/or shovels and haul trucks are big enough to show up on a satellite image. The prep plant is near the bottom of this excerpt.
Satellite

I did find some miscellaneous equipment parked up on the north side of the mining activity.
Satellite

When I saw that the mine was north of Bankhead Lake, but the prep plant was south of the lake, I wondered how they got the coal from the mine to the plant. I quickly found this conveyor belt coming out of the ground in the prep plant.
Satellite

One reason why I spent some time looking for an active mining area was to see if I could find the other end of the conveyor. I think I did:
Satellite

Is the prep plant recent? I don't see it in the lower-right corner where it should be on this map.
1978/78 Tutwiler School Quad @ 24,000

Elberton, GA: 1910 SAL Depot, Southern Caboose & Freight House and Granite Museum

Depot: (Satellite)
Southern Freight House: (Satellite)
Southern Turntable: (Satellite)
Museum: (Satellite)

SAL Depot


I tried different views, but I could not read what was on the marker in any of the views.
Street View, Nov 2022

Street View, Jul 2023

Tom Weber posted two photos with the comment:
Seaboard Air Line Railway Depot in Elberton is an historic depot built in 1910.  
The passenger station served the Seaboard Air Line’s “Silver Comet” which was finally discontinued in 1969.
The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.
Southern Railway X622 is a short-body bay-window caboose currently on display in Elberton, Georgia next to the historic Elberton depot along an active CSX line.
Davis Paul: Does anyone know if Southern ever served Elberton .. maybe off the Lula branch?
1

2

Dennis DeBruler commented on Davis' comment
A topo map shows that Southern went along the north side of SAL to a turntable just west of Oliver Street. 1958 Elberton Quad @ 62,500.

Gary Miller commented on Tom's post
The sister station is located in Richland, GA !

Southern Freight House


Street View, May 2023

Dennis DeBruler commented on Davis' comment
 In fact, the extant freight house that is north of Railroad Street, https://maps.app.goo.gl/AmFXLLEqqjXBV2T18, was probably for Southern.

Granite Museum


Note the spire next to the building to the right of the power pole.
Street View, May 2026

Leon Demond, Nov 2024

M, Jan 2019

M, Jan 2019

Jordan Baer, Oct 2023

Fall Hiker, Jul 2021

I not only saw blocks of granite in storage lots around town, but I also saw this one on the move.
Street View, Nov 2022

Dixie Granite sells wholesale granite for monuments.
DixieGranite

There are a lot of granite-oriented businesses in this town. Keystone Granite Interiors sells countertops.
Sarah Pullen, Sep 2025

KeystoneGraniteInteriors

New Haven, CT: Enstructure Northeast receives SENNEGOEN 895

(Satellite)

I came across this video in my Facebook feed:
Facebook Reel

This raised the question of what kind of equipment has crawler tracks that big? The answer is a dock-side material handler. Since this is the second one that is being delivered to this dock, I found a video of the construction of the first handler.
3:57 video via sennebogen @ 3:31, cropped
Sennebogen 895 E Hybrid - Assembly and Operation
The 895 E is the largest Material Handler in the world - The specific machine is the largest 895 E built to date, weighing in at just under 1 million lbs. 
Visit us at: www.TylerEquipment.com for more details.
Machine Info:
Groundbreaking dimensions - extreme power: The SENNEBOGEN 895 E Hybrid impresses with an operating weight of around 420 t and a reach of up to 40 m. It is the giant of the port handling machines with an impressive amount of handling power when it comes to moving scrap and coal. The double Green Hybrid system makes the largest material handler in the world more efficient during operation.

An earlier view showed that the barge crane is the WEEKS 533.  I've seen WEEKS cranes help build the Cuomo Bridge and salvage the Francis Scott Key wreckage.
@ 1:48

They built the upper body assembly that we see in the above view on the barge before they lifted it and attached it to the gantry base on the dock. The largest component of that assembly was the boom.
Facebook Reel

The pan attachment is used to load material into a ship.
@ 3:07

Friday, May 22, 2026

Hancock, MI: 1846-1945 Quincy Copper Mine and Incline (Funicular)

Head House: (Satellite)
Incline: (Satellite)

Street View, Sep 2024

Craig C posted three photos with the comment: 
Super impressive mechanical machine from 1918. That's the largest steam powered hoist dru - for a 9000'+ incline. 1000000+ lbs put together in pieces after the building was up due to delivery delays because of steel rations in WWI.
Terrifying man skip too!
1

2

3

This appears to be next to the drum in Photo 3 above.
Lisha Dong, Sep 2024

QuincyMine
"Quincy Mine is nestled in the quiet town of Hancock, Michigan. The Quincy Mining Company was one of the largest producers of copper within this area’s world renowned mining district. Operating underground from 1846 to 1945, the Quincy Mine produced nearly one billion pounds of copper that fueled the industrialization of our nation."

Quincy Mine posted
The Shaft House is lighted tonight and for the entire month of May for Neurofibromatosis (NF) Awareness Month, to bring awareness for a genetic disorder that causes tumors to grow on nerves throughout the body. NF affects one in 2,000 people in all populations. There is no cure, yet. Visit the Children’s Tumor Foundation www.ctf.org or Neurofibromatosis Michigan www.nfmich.org for more information.

Quincy Mine posted
Looking for something to do on a rainy day? How about a trip back into history with a  tour at Quincy Mine! Our early tours are already booked, but we'd be glad to do a tour at 1:30 pm today (Friday) if enough folks are interested. And to make it even more enticing, this is an "Everyone's a Student!" weekend in celebration of MTU commencement. Show up with a student and everyone gets in for the student price! (half off for adults!). Book online at www.quincymine.com or call the Gift Shop at 906-482-3101 for more information.

Richard Wilde, Jan 2026

Lester Brubaker, Aug 2025

Lisha Dong, Sep 2024

West Olive, MI: 1960s+1980 1.5gw J.H. Campbell Power Plant

(Satellite)

Street View, Jun 2024

Street View, Jun 2024

I'm surprised Unit 3 was not supercritical since Unit 2 was. Maybe supercritical in 1967 was bleeding edge and they had enough problems that they were chicken to try it again.
gem
By Nov 2025, it had cost $113m to keep the plant running past its planned May 2025 retirement. 

Detroit News posted
Energy regulators as far away as South Dakota are resisting having to pay to keep a coal-burning power plant in Michigan operating. 
Full story: bit.ly/3PNyPvf [paywall, but I was able to get the name of the plant.]
📸 Brett Farmer, Special to the Detroit News
Mike Himmel: The real story DETnews and other mainstream media won't share with You is 1) Midwest is already at high risk of blackouts according the the experts MISO (Midcontinent Independent System Operator). 2) Data centers are going to put a massive spike on demand with just 1 of the 14 planned (Saline) by itself is going to increase DTE's demand by 25% or the equivelent of a million customers. 3) Whitmers appointed minions at the MPSC are approving the fast tracked applications quickly even as Nessel calls for more hearings and transparency 3) Michigan has had renewable mandates for the last 17 years and its still less than 10% of our total supply and like anything they take the lowest handing fruit first (meaning the projects with the best output for the assets deployed) 4) combine this with Michigans -0- carbon mandate and we are headed to a self created energy crisis. We are going to need not just that coal power plant but in reality another large nuke plant that will take a decade to build. We are literally putting the cart before the horse. The big question is why are the same people that pretended they cared about the climate now suddenly ignoring the will of the people, putting our energy and water supplies at risk? DETNEWS is derelect in their duties as a main news source for Michigan to not even ask the most basic question, but here DETNEWS prestends coal power cost more than renewables. Where is all the electricity going to come from? And don't accept lame answers like windmills and batteries. DETNEWS step up Your game!

mlive, first of 82 photos
This article about Trump forcing the plant to stay open is not behind a paywall.

Mining #Shorts posted
The fight over Michigan’s J.H. Campbell coal plant has turned into a bigger legal test over who controls America’s power grid.
Consumers Energy planned to shut the Ottawa County plant on May 31, 2025. Days before that retirement date, U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright ordered it to keep running for 90 days under Section 202(c) of the Federal Power Act.
Three extensions followed. Nearly a year later, the plant is still being kept alive, and the backlash is growing.
The Department of Energy argues the order was justified by a national energy emergency and the risk of electricity shortages. Michigan, Illinois, Minnesota and environmental groups see something very different: an abuse of emergency powers.
Their case is straightforward. A planned coal retirement isn’t the same as an immediate grid crisis, and power reliability already has state, regional and federal planning channels.
Then there’s the cost.
Consumers previously said closing Campbell would save customers $600 million by 2040. Keeping it open reportedly costs $615,000 a day [wow. why?], with at least $135 million tied to operations after its scheduled retirement.
Consumers isn’t fighting the order directly. It wants assurance it can recover the cost from the wider MISO grid.
That’s why everyone is watching this case.
A ruling against the federal order could limit Washington’s ability to keep aging coal plants running. A ruling in favor could turn emergency authority into a powerful new tool for delaying coal retirements across the U.S.

Buffalo, NY: Kellogg Elevator

(Satellite)

Michael J. McCord posted
I was watching a Doc on the Battle Creek Kelloggs, and wanted to dig deeper. I grew up at the Michaels Estate in Derby where my Grandfather was the caretaker. The Kellogg's lived next door and I always believed they were the cereal family ! Well I just found out they are not related ! They were the Spencer Kellogg family, linseed oil and shipping. I found this pic and thought I'd share. 1905
Brian R. Wroblewski: That original elevator was replaced by a more modern one & part of it is still used by St. Mary's cement.

Michael J. McCord commented on Brian's comment
389 Ganson St

The silos on the left are what is now used by St. Mary's Cement. The silos to the left of the Michigan Avenue Bridge is the main part of the Kellogg Elevator. The building to the right fo the the bridge is part of General Mills Plant.
Street View, Jun 2025