Saturday, December 2, 2017

Keokuk, IA: Union Depot and Steamboats

Depot: (Satellite)
Steamboat: (Satellite)

When I went to Keokuk, it looked like the depot (on the right side of the picture below) was not very accessible to take pictures, and I was more interested in the dam, power plant, and railroad bridge. The green across the top is the bottom of a steel beam of the US-136 Bridge across the Mississippi. Note the preserved steamboat on the left side of the photo.
20140613 0042c
In 1890, five railroads serving Keokuk joined forces to form the Keokuk Union Depot Company:
In 1901, CB&Q acquired Keokuk & Western and St. Louis, Keokuk & Northwestern and then owned 2/5ths of the depot. 
[History]
The Wabash entered town on the TP&W tracks and the Rock Island came up from the south on CB&Q tracks. The TP&W route and the Rock Island industrial spurs are now owned by the Keokuk Junction Railway.

John Stell posted
Keokuk Union Depot in January 1974. Had N&W agent, Rock Island agent, and BN train order operator. BN agent was down town and TP&W agent was in TP&W depot. John Stell slide.

John Stell posted a similar view
 
Erin Bristow posted
This was the scene in May 1963 when the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad ran locomotive 4960 through Keokuk in a steam-powered railfan excursion. (Photo by Alan Brotherton) No. 4960 is now owned by the Grand Canyon Railway and has been rebuilt to burn waste cooking oil instead of coal. Believe that to be Wabash diesel locomotive as well.
William Ankrom: Yep thats a Wabash gp7

Keokuk, Iowa Historians posted
Keokuk, Iowa, The Way We Were
October, 1961, Monday, June 28, 2021
Photo captures The Keokuk Riverfront between Main at photo right & Bank Street at photo left. Looking Northwesterly from over the Mississippi River

Andrew Horras shared
Keokuk Iowa riverfront in 1961. TP&W Alco and caboose by the office.
David Jordan: It looks like the TP&W unit is switching its team track.
John Stell: Team track is where No 123 tied up. Only track in Keokuk TP&W owned.
[The track closest to the river has an Alco on the left, a caboose to the right of the steamship and and office building to the left of the steamship, so that must be the TP&W team track.]
Duncan Cameron: The cars in the background on the right are likely for the General Mills plant (which is behind them). Some are on the plant's own spur (back row of cars), and the others (including the airslide) are in front of them on the team track which was either CB&Q or Union Depot.

In march 2011, the 1891 depot was transferred to the city. [History] Robert E. Meyer posted three photos of the roof restoration.
1

2

3
No wonder it took a long time before they started restoration. That roof restoration would be expensive. The crane alone would require some big bucks. In fact, $1m was needed for the roof restoration. They now need more money to fix some other problems that they have discovered during restoration. [KeokukUnionDepot]

KeokukUnionDepot
This postcard from 1923 depicts the Depot from the south (down-river) side, with the baggage carts that were in use when passenger trains served Keokuk.
[I wonder what the industry was that is in the background. Even though 1923 is well into the 20th century, the artist is still in the habit of showing black smoke coming out of the smokestack. ]
The tower was 64-feet high and the second floor housed offices. By the 1950s, the tower had been truncated and the tiled roof was shingled. [History]

Weekly Constitution-Democrat, May 7, 1890

How five Keokuk railroads were reduced to two

Keokuk, Iowa Historians posted
Keokuk, Iowa Historians Photo Archive
Friday, January 22, 2021
CIRCA 1917 VIEW OF THE KEOKUK RIVERFRONT
Originally shared by Keokuk Union Depot Facebook Page on December 22, 2020
Early 1900s view of the Keokuk riverfront by Herman Anschutz, we see the Depot on the left with passenger and baggage cars on one of the Union Depot Co. tracks. To the right is the ramp that brought trolley cars down the bluff from Exchange Street to railroad level. To the right of that are boxcars on the siding at the Purity Oats plant (now site of the Presbyterian church). The small building on the right, near the tracks, may be a shanty for yardmen who operated the track switches. (The photo, shot from the upper deck of the Mississippi River bridge, has been "colorized" for this posting.)

Dale A. Fox shared

John Stell posted
Keokuk Union depot yard. Barriger picture, I think. John Stell collection.
Harold J. Krewer: That looks like the inspection train in many of his photos: Two office cars back-to-back. Like the RI 2-8-0 sitting there on spot.

John Stell posted
Keokuk Union Depot. Depot served TP&W-RI-CB&Q-Wabash. John Stell collection.

Jeff Riddle posted four photos with the comment: "Keokuk Iowa."
Mike Friedman: Wow. That's a beautiful building. Daniel Burnham was one of the most famous architects in the US in that period. He designed the White city in Chicago for the 1893 World's Fair, then the Field Museum in Chicago and the Flatiron Building in New York.
1

2

3

4
Robert Hafliger commented on Jeff's post
A photo of the last steam engine used by the Wabash getting serviced with a CB&Q Geep in the background. Its a photo of a photo on the wall inside the depot.

History of the Heartland posted
Old #573, shown in 1953 at Keokuk, Iowa, was one of the last Wabash steam engines still in service. Although it was an older obsolescent design, it was the last working Wabash steam engine because it was light enough to cross the old bridge over the Illinois River at Meredosia, on the Wabash Keokuk Branch, which would not then support the weight of a modern diesel (or of the newer steam locomotives). As a result, #573 survived to be donated in 1955 to The National Museum of Transportation near St. Louis, where you can still see it today.
A 2-6-0 "Mogul" type, it was built for the Wabash in 1899 by the Rhode Island Locomotive Works.
Photo: Don Hofsommer, Classic Trains
Leonard Perlmutter shared

Dave Durham posted
Mississippi River at Keokuk, Iowa, 1907, F.J. Bandholts photo.

Aug 10, 2022: Andrew Elges commented on Dave's post
The depot has been nicely restored and is now an event venue.

Andrew Elges commented on Dave's post

Andrew Elges commented on Dave's post

Scott Miller posted
Keokuk Union Depot, a full moon and a planet over the Mississippi River , I can't remember which, Saturn or Jupiter.
Keokuk , Iowa , USA :

Scott Miller posted
Keokuk Union Depot, Keokuk, Iowa, June 2023:

Oct 2023: Keokuk Union Depot posted three photos with the comment: "The sandstone caps on the water table are now mostly in place on the upriver end of the building. Masonry work is temporarily halted this week, possibly due to delays in delivery of materials (though there is a stockpile of sandstone pieces, as in the photo). Meanwhile, the local Depot volunteers stay busy.  On Wednesday, October 25, Leon Erlandsen was painting molding strips for a reconditioned express room door, and Mike Bliven was refurbishing the Depot's KEOKUK sign."
Railroad Station Historical Society shared
1

2

3
.

Steamboats


Riverboat museum:
Street View, Jun 2023

John Miller posted
Keokuk being the halfway point between St. Louis & St. Paul was a hub center during the great steamboat era with the Des Moines Rapids, but it was also where the Rock Island District Corps of Engineers began back in 1866.  Here we have a photo showing the towboat Grace, one of the "Female" boats designed by Montgomery Meigs and built at Keokuk in 1904.  The Grace is posed by the Government Dry Dock, which was built just off of the middle canal lock and was located off of Price's Creek and where the Keokuk Yacht Club is today.  The Grace was 92.5 x 17 x 3 and remained under the U.S. Engineers until May 29, 1931, when they had her up for sale and was bought by Moline Consumers of Moline, IL, for $1,500.  In dry dock is the towboat Sachem, built at Dubuque, Iowa in 1899 on a hull 171.5 x 36 x 5.5 feet with engines 22's-8 ft stroke built for the Mississippi River Commission, she was sister to the Choctaw, Nokomis, Wynoka & Leota all built by the Iowa Iron Works as well.  Next is the US Engineer Dredge, Kappa and above the Kappa is the towboat, Gen John Coffee, the Gen John Coffee was built in 1918 as the Patton and built at Paducah, KY., on a hull 132.9 x 29.7 x 4.9 feet, and was renamed to Gen. John Coffee when bought by the US Engineers in January of 1920.  In the fall of 1925, she was bought by the Barrett Line and was renamed Dorothy Barrett in June of 1926.

Edwardsport, IN: Duke Energy 2013 618mw IGCC Plant

(Satellite)
IGCC = Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle

I discovered this Duke Energy Power Plant while researching the Indiana Southern Railroad's branch south of their Beehunter junction with Canadian Pacific. This branch was on a former Pennsy route, and it is shared with CP. The ISRR map indicated the branch went south of Sanborn to a spur that went northwest to the Hawthorne Mine. The spur no longer goes across a farmer's field, BUT the PC abandoned RoW south of the former spur has track with fresh white ballast. There is not only new track, there are new bridges. This new track ended in a new yard next to a new power plant. (Given the size of the property, I'm surprised that they built a yard rather than loop tracks around the property.)

DukeEnergy
Satellite
Parts of the power plant looks more like a chemical plant --- lots of big pipes. That is because they don't burn the coal, they turn it into gas. This allows them to use Indiana coal instead of Wyoming coal because it keeps the sulfur out of the atmosphere. It also reduces the amount of CO2 released into the atmosphere. The plant also uses an activated carbon bed to absorb mercury. Releasing mercury into the local rivers and lakes had been one of the pollution issues concerning coal-fired power plants.

The synthetic gas is then used to generate electricity in a manner similar to the use of natural gas --- burned in a gas turbine and then using the exhaust to make steam to drive a steam turbine. A gas turbine is basically a big jet engine. This allows the plant to achieve efficiencies comparable to a modern coal-fired boiler plant.
Chris Nicholson posted
Edwardsport Indiana
Integrated coal gasification combined cycle 618 MW “clean coal” power plant. Home away from home for me.
Timothy Brumfield: I had the privilege of being on the crew that welded what they called “The Golden Joint” at the top of those gasifiers. It was a hell on an experience.
Chris Nicholson: Timothy Brumfield top flange for the feed injector
Timothy Brumfield: It was actually the dome of the gasifier where it welded to the main body. 3 1/2” thick double bevel heliarc root on the inside with only a half inch of bevel inside and 3 inches to weld on the outside. We tested for weeks to make that weld, even inside a simulator that mocked up the inside with a 30” long weld coupon inside the window of the vessel. They wanted absolutely zero grinding on the inside. Preheated to 400 degrees. We went inside for 15 minutes at a time with fresh air hoods and vests.
Jeff Guziec: New York proposed it but pulled the plug on it.
Chris Nicholson: Jeff Guziec they built one in Alabama using different technology and gave up trying to get the gasifiers to run.




Savanna, IL: Milwaukee Depot and 1911 Flood

(Satellite)

Notes on the railyard and roundhouse

William Brown posted
From the "I grew up in Savanna" Facebook Page.
Andy Zukowski posted with a better exposure
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Depot in Savanna, Illinois. 1911
Richard Fiedler shared
Stephen N. Brannon: Looks like the Mississippi is in flood!

Excerpt from a map on the Milwuakee Yard posting, I doubled the size.
Fortunately, I could read the street name "Murray" because it looks like the depot was just north of where Murray ended.
 
Andy Zukowski posted
Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad Depot and Hotel in Savanna, Illinois. 1908.
Richard Fiedler shared
Jim Kelling shared

It looks like the depot got replaced.
William Brown posted
"An eBay purchase from of all places Australia of the Milwaukee Road Depot/Dispatcher Office in Savanna, Illinois.  The front left shows the Coaches Tracks for adding and cutting Sleepers and other Cars.  The Steam Lines and Toolbox with Air Hoses and a connection to Yard Air.  The striped awnings facing south.  A Heavyweight Passenger Train.  Tankcars spotted between the Depot and Freight House.  This might be the Diesel Fueling in the 1930s.  Two blocks from the house, I grew up in."

This confirms that it got replaced.
Trent Briggs posted
Richard Fiedler shared

Note the stagecoach on the left side. 
Jim Arvites posted
View of the old Chicago Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad passenger station at Savanna,
Illinois circa 1900.
Richard Fiedler shared

Mark Llanuza posted
Its July 1984 Milwaukee roads Savanna IL train station and crew change point still a busy place with a big switching yard and round house only few years away before the SOO LINE takes over.
[Note that a Coaches Track is holding a boxcar.]

William Brown posted
From the Savanna Historical Society Collection. A view of Savanna's CB&Q and Milwaukee Road Rail Yards during the 1965. The CB&Q Yard is on the right and dry. The Aurora Sub is slightly flooded. The Milwaukee's Nitrin Line is crossing the CB&Q at the bottom of the picture on five diamonds. This line had one turn five days per week. The boxcars in the bottom right of the picture are on the former Intrchange Tracks between the Milwaukee and CB&Q. These were active before the Aurora Sub was built. This is early in the flood as at it's peak the White Building(Milwaukee Road Depot) was completely surrounded by flood water.

Jim Arvites also posted
Aerial view of the CB&Q yard on right and the Milwaukee Road yard on left during the 1965 Mississippi River flood at Savanna, Illinois. Note the Milwaukee Road passenger depot, white building, in far left center of the picture.
(Savanna Historical Society)

Savanna Milwaukee Road History updated
Brian Voss Did the tower also control the interlocking at the bottom of this photo? Most of this was long gone by the time I worked here during IMRL days (1997-98).
Gary Scott Law Brian Voss it didn’t in 1978 when I worked the tower. I’d guess it was always manual with authority to cross the CB&Q mains coming from their Savanna Yard Yardmaster because the mains were inside Yard Limit authority.

William Brown shared
A great photo of Savanna, Illinois in the 30s or 40s. The Mississippi River is doing its thing like every Spring. The five diamonds the CB&Q installed to cross the Milwaukee Roads's Line to East Moline are evident. The Roundhouse Lead, two Yard Leads and the East and West Mains. To the right out of the picture ar the four Diamonds where the CB&Q and Milwaukee Road Main Lines crossed. The former Interchange Track from the orginal CB&Q Line from Fulton, Illinois are filled with Milwaukee Road 40' Ice Reefers. The CB&Q Roundhouse is at the top of the pictures betwwen the Milwaukee Road and CB&Q Yards. The Savanna assigned Wrecker Bunk Cars are across from the CB&Q Roundhouse.
Warren Caudle Was this a CB&Q or Milwaukee Yard? Also, looking South?
William Brown Warren Caudle CB&Q on the right and Milwaukee Road on the left. Looking East towards Chicago.
Warren Caudle William Brown OK, 2 separate yards. Are both still in working order?
William Brown Warren Caudle The Milwaukee Yard on the left has two main tracks and a siding left. The CB&Q Yard has two mains, a siding, two storage tracks and a LOW Track.
Clifford Nickerson Every spring?
William Brown Clifford Nickerson Most every and if there are big thunderstorms maybe during the Summer.


William Brown posted
The Milwaukee Road's Yard in Savanna, Illinois on August 11th of 1911. I would expect at least five inches of rain pushed the Plum River over it's banks. Growing up in the era of Bay Window Cabooses on the Milwaukee Road, these centered Cupola Cabooses are a surprise.


Flood of 2019:
Dale Brown posted some photos with the comment: "Milwaukee road equipment under water again 30 + years later......in savanna il today."
Dennis DeBruler Passenger car: https://www.google.com/.../@42.0906063,-90.../data=!3m1!1e3
Caboose: https://www.google.com/.../@42.0901103,-90.../data=!3m1!1e3
Raising the tracks just a few inches makes a big difference.



1

2

3


Rockford, IL: CP/ICE/Milw and IR/CB&Q Railyards

Milwaukee Roundhouse: (Satellite, it is now a clump of trees)
CB&Q Roundhouse: (Satellite, the pin marks the turntable, the building was to the East next to the viaduct.)


Milwaukee Railyard


Martin O'Connor posted
CMStP&P 4-stall Roundhouse, Rockford, Illinois.
Not sure if this was originally CM&G near Harrison St, or a different Milwaukee Road engine house.
https://www.lakestatesarchive.org/FR-Ritzman-Collection/CMStPP-Structures/i-4wJF6BH
Tyson Park: That's the former MILW engine house located between Cedar and Short Elm and alongside the north fork of Kent Creek in Rockford. You can see the Short Elm bridge over Kent Creek in the background on the right. It is still there. CP recently installed a runaround track in this area.
Martin O'Connor: It was in the Upper West Milwaukee Road Yard, so I don't think CM&G ever reached that location.
https://www.loc.gov/resource/g4104rm.g02127195101/
Paul Krueger: Martin is correct. The CM&G didn’t cross the Rock River. I think they had a two track shed in the middle of the wye near Harrison Street.

Satellite
While researching the bridge across the Kishwaukee River, I followed the IR+ICE route north into Rockford. The route continues into Rockford past Gunite Corporation, which it evidently still serves, and then joins CN/IC to get to this yard in Rockford. IR terminates here, but ICE continues north into Wisconsin.

This joint branch used to cross the IC and go north to its own bridge across the Rock River and then past its own CB&Q+Milwaukee depot between Main and Winnebago Streets to access this yard.

Tyson Park posted some comments:
IR was busy in Rockford today. A crew shuffled around cars at the former CB&Q yard off Main Street, then headed over to Behr with both engines. After working Behr the train went south and dropped off all of its cars on the siding at Camp Grant. The two engines then ran light all the way through Davis Junction headed south toward Flagg Center. I was surprised they did not work Ring Container as they were carrying covered hoppers with them that they dropped off at Camp Grant. Was ex-UP 2525 or 3500 due for service? Interesting to see IR using the line from DJ to Flagg Center after Omnitrax filed to abandon it in 2019. Also was one of the fans in a white Chevy pickup track off Main Street watching the action earlier today?
You really have to watch where you are in Rockford. A high crime area for sure. Then you have the homeless camps along Kent Creek and under Winnebago Street by the tracks that CP and IR use. I've gotten approached by strange people in Rockford while waiting to get pictures including today by a strange man on a bicycle with wooden boxes attached to it. He stopped me at Airport Road and the tracks while I was waiting, asking if I was lost. I said no, I am waiting for a train to get pictures. He wanted to talk about how he randomly finds tools. He seemed hard of hearing and I didn't know what his intention was but fortunately he left on his own. Another man followed me one time to where I was waiting at Kilbuck Creek to get a picture of a CP train crossing the bridge and kept chatting me up. He kept following me so I walked quickly to my car and left.

Jeff Kehoe posted
Since so much of our CM&G involves Rockford, here's what the town looked like in 1891, before the Gary was built. The yards of the Chicago Milwaukee & St.Paul are where the * is located.
John Mann The MILW and CB&Q station was in the ground floor of the Emerson Talcott building which was right where the star is. ET moved farther West and built a new plant that became JI Case.
Paul Krueger That was the lower yard, where the freight house was located. The upper yard was to the right, out of the picture. The roundhouse was there.
Paul Krueger Note the covered bridge that the Burlington (and MILW) used to cross the Rock River
.lll

CB&Q Railyard


American-Rails.com posted
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy's weed-choked yard in Rockford, Illinois is seen here in August, 1965. Pictured is 2-8-2 #4960 which pulled many excursions at this time. Roger Puta photo.
Bill Molony shared
Marty Bernard posted
CB&Q Mikado 4960 in Rockford, IL Yards, August 1965. Roger Puta photo.
Sam Sandoval: C.B.& Q. No. 4960 New Home Grand Canyon Scenic RR .
[Note the Winnebago Street Viaduct in the background.]
 
Brian Keith Landis posted
Rockford Illinois . C.B.& Q.R.R Doodlebug  on  the C.B.Q.R.R turn table in the South Main Street Railyard the picture was taken on 8/10/1947. Brian Landis. Collection
 
Dennis DeBruler commented on Brian's post
The CB&Q roundhouse was just west of the Winnebago Street Viaduct, and the Milwaukee roundhouse was south of Elm Street between their tracks and North Fork Kent Creek. 1939 aerial photo

(new window) A railfan video of Illinois Railway action south of town. 


Friday, December 1, 2017

Buda, IL: Buda Tower: BNSF/CB&Q mainline vs. UP/C&NW, CB&Q Depot & Railyard

Junction: (Satellite)
Depot: (Satellite)
Turntable: (Satellite)

Buda is now considered by some to be a "living ghost town." [15:10 video]

Chicago & North Western Historical Society posted
This is a fine composition by William F. Armstrong taken on September 30, 1908. The site is said to be the "Buda Tower" where the C&NW crossed the CB&Q. I am the only railfan in the world who does not know where the Buda tower was once located. Please clue me in.
Larry Kuhn note the utility poles in the right of the shot likely running along the road.

The C&NW crossed the CB&Q mainline southwest of Buda and crossed a CB&Q branch further south. That branch started in Buda and went south to Elmwood. The treeline for the start of the branch is quite pronounced.
1941 Aerial Photo from ILHAP
The mainline crossing of the C&NW was elevated by 1941. Would the CB&Q mainline still be single track in 1908?
1941 Aerial Photo
from ILHAP
Because of the "road poles" and the 90-degree angle, the photo looks like a crossing with the mainline instead of the branch.
Bradlee VanderSchaaf posted
Buda Jct MP 1.65 on the CB&Q and MP 35.7 on the C&NW South Pekin Subdivision.

Larry Foht posted
Here's One for you History Buffs
This photo is of Buda Illinois and it's not marked
Is it 
CB&Q 
Larry Foht collection:
Thank you all for your input, comments on this photo.
Chris Goepel: CB&Q. And that’s the earlier wood frame depot, too. It was replaced by a stucco depot later, which was demolished in recent years, sadly.
Bryan Howell: On the Q looking RR westbound from Main Street.
Robert Sullivan: Buda was/is on the Burlington main between Princeton and Kewanee. The Northwestern line south from Nelson passed thru very few towns before the freight yard in Peoria. It bypassed Springfield on the way to Macoupin County coal mines.

I didn't notice the water towers in the background of the above photo until I saw them in this one.
Andy Zukowski posted
CB&Q Railroad Depot and Yard in Buda, Illinois. C.1910

1941 Aerial Photo from ILHAP

Steven J. Brown posted
Amtrak California Zephyr #6 crossing the Chicago & North Western at Buda, Illinois - May 27, 1992.
Todd Taylor: Along with the Pioneer and the Desert Wind in tow.
Kazuo Tateishi: A Geep 40!
Devin Carthen: Kazuo Tateishi F40 PH
Roger Riblett shared

Steven commented on Kazuo's comment
654 being Amtrakified at Cleburne, TX 1991

Peg Norton Foster posted
A glimpse into Buda’s past. At one time Buda was a bustling railroad and farming town.

David Sebben commented on Peg's post
Remains of the roundhouse/turntable

Peg Norton Foster posted
Here is one of the old locomotives that used to stop in Buda. This is an old postcard I have at the Mason Memorial Library in Buda. Notice it was sold at Boal’s Drugstore which is no longer standing 😢

Trent Briggs posted four photos with the comment: "Buda, Illinois."
Trent Briggs also posted
Richard Fiedler shared
1

2

3

4