Saturday, December 2, 2023

Le Roy, IL: Lost/IC/Rantoul Railroad (Pumpkin Vine) Depot

(Satellite)

This town was the western terminus of the IC Branch of Havana, Rantoul and Eastern Railroad (HR&E), which was abandoned in 1943.

Andy Zukowski posted
Illinois Central Depot in Leroy, Illinois. 1972
Thomas Dyrek: Old Havana, Rantoul & Eastern (narrow gauge) depot - destroyed by a fire in 1986.
Paul Jones: This was where the railroad museum at Monticello was first looking to run trains back in 1966.
Steve Dean: End of the line for the Pumpkin Vine.
J.D. Cooke: When the IC pulled up the tracks to Leroy they were still able to do business in town when they got haulage/trackage rights on the P&E from Farmers City to Leroy.
David Jordan: The ILLINOIS RAIL PLAN UPDATE 1977 says Illinois Central Gulf filed for abandonment on November 1, 1976. The segment between Fisher and LeRoy generated 162 carloads in 1975. Alan R. Lind's THE ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD STORY gives an effective abandonment date for the westernmost 17.5 miles (Lotus to LeRoy) as April 15, 1980. The ICC had issued the order on January 31 that year. Lind states that the depot was still standing in 1978 when it was 100 years old!
Paul Jones: Turntable and engine house were long gone by the time this photo was taken.

Jeremy Harris commented on Andy's post

Dennis DeBruler commented on Jeremy's comment
The RoW started curving south just east of White Street. That is significant because the depot was along the angled part. 1951 Le Roy Quad @ 62,500

Dennis DeBruler commented on Andy's post
The diagonal corner of the fence at White and Oak still reflects the RoW curving south away from Oak Street.
https://maps.app.goo.gl/3VHfq19AatRm5ip79

Dennis DeBruler commented on Andy's post
The intersection of White and Oak Streets is at the top middle of this excerpt. As was typical of Illinois towns, there was an old grain elevator near the depot. 1940 aerial
  https://clearinghouse.isgs.illinois.edu/webdocs/ilhap/county/data/mclean/flight15/000x5a112.jpg

Jeremy commented on Dennis' comment with the topo map.
I’m guessing something like this? The fence is at an angle, there’s no reason for this that I can see, so I’m guessing this is where it was?
Dennis DeBruler: Jeremy Harris That was my guess as well.

Dennis DeBruler commented on Andy's post
The IC went through town on the south side of Oak Street.
https://maps.app.goo.gl/zw4nZBWiUFhKkdeM9, Jun 2018

Dennis DeBruler commented on Paul's comment
Where was the turntable? I could not find it in this 1940 aerial.
  https://clearinghouse.isgs.illinois.edu/webdocs/ilhap/county/data/mclean/flight15/000x5a112.jpg
Paul Jones: Dennis DeBruler it was a 60ft'er if I remember correctly it and engine house was west of the depot, Oak street is the route thru town,you can see where it paralleled the street.

Dennis DeBruler commented on Paul's 60ft'er comment
Thanks. I grabbed the adjacent aerial photo. This one has some contrast between the white turntable and the brown pit so it is more visible. Given that both photos were taken by the same equipment just a few seconds apart during an airplane flight, it is interesting how this "114" photo is definitely better than the "112" photo.
https://clearinghouse.isgs.illinois.edu/webdocs/ilhap/county/data/mclean/flight15/000x5a114.jpg

Note the grain elevator near the left side in the above street view of Oak Street. When I looked for it on a satellite map, I could not find it! Then I determined that it has been torn down. Google Maps indicates that it is "temporarily closed." I think it is going to be closed a lot longer.
Satellite

Since it existed in Jun 2018, I fired up Google Earth. I included the town circle to help position this Aug 2019 excerpt. It was gone in the next image, Oct 2022.
Google Earth, Aug 2019

The town does have a grain elevator on the west side of town. Looking at the photos on Google Maps, they added some big bins to the elevator in the summer of 2022. But they don't yet appear on a satellite image.
Satellite




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