Posts tagged: Railroad

May 18 2012

Burlington Railroad 1950′s September

Burlington Railroad 1950's -

2-8-2 steam locomotive performing switching on the Burlington (Fort Worth and Denver) Railroad in Texas.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Rip Curl Commissions | Baby Boomers Setting The Newest Ludlow VT Actual Estate Trends | Murrieta Chapter 7 Bankruptcy AttorneyThe bankruptcy Trap – Don’t do it alone! | Memorial Day’s year end used cars tent sales event. Automobile loans start at 2.99% | Personal Finance Advice That Is Easy To Follow | Locksmith Historical past – Quick Evolution Of The Locksmith Trade | folios | Dallas Heating And Air Condition | Personal Injury Solicitors: However Trivial The Accident You Should Get In Touch. | castironhostingreview.com/webhostinghub-review.html | Pool Gate Tampa | Teeth Whitening Reviews – Best Teeth Whitening Bleaching Systems | Mughda | Acquiring On-line Automobile Insurance policy | The New Trend In Home Appliances – LED Circular Light Fixtures | Hersteller von deutschen Spielautomaten | Top 5 Executive Holiday Gifts for a President Or CEO | Elder Hawk Wisdom | What exactly is Vitel Wireless? | Spirits Are In all places!

May 17 2012

Get A Railroad Job Can

Get A Railroad Job- Can This Book Help You Know What To Expect When You Apply For The Railroad?

Many careers are not that adventurous and that causes employees to get bored of their jobs very fast. We were not made to sit in a cubicle and type all day and keep to ourselves. How would you feel if you could get paid to travel around and go to new places every month? Many people would love a variety of change and it would help keep them interested in their career. The career that could be of great interest to many people if they knew how to get hired is having a railroad job.

I have an uncle that has been working with the railroad for over twenty years and he is very content with his job and what he does every day. He tells me stories of how he gets to travel to different states and gets to see different scenery all the time. With him going to new places he gets to meet new people and swap stories and stay entertained.

I thought that would be awesome for any single guy so I asked him about how hard it would be to get my friend a job. He told me about the steps but suggested to take a look at the Get A Railroad Job guide. I told my friend about it and he applied. Out of 50 people he was selected as the first pick and onlyhad to submit his background check and drug test. He was hired within a month of applying and is really falling in love with his career.

I am happy for him since he gets paid well over 70k per year and the work really is not hard labor. He told me if it was not for the Get A Railroad Job book he would have never knew what to expect before going into his interview. I am happy that he has a respectable job and gets paid well for it.

Torri Andrews has been an internet shopper for many years. She does all of her shopping online and enjoys writing reviews about products and services and purchases.

A safety film produced by the Pennsylvania Railroad in 1955 that discusses fighting fires on locomotives and teaches railroad employees about the type of fires they are likely to face and the equipment that is available to fight the fires. PRR diesel & electric locomotives feature throughout the film including some interesting trackside and in cab film of trains on fire. Many different locomotives of the PRR are seen including GG1′s. The Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) was an American Class I railroad, founded in 1846. Commonly referred to as the “Pennsy”, the PRR was headquartered in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The PRR was the largest railroad by traffic and revenue in the US throughout the first two-thirds of the twentieth century and was at one time the largest publicly traded corporation in the world. At its peak, it controlled about 10000 miles (16000 km) of rail line; in the 1920s it carried about three times the traffic (measured by ton-miles of freight) as other railroads of comparable length, such as Union Pacific or Santa Fe. The only rival was New York Central, which carried around three-quarters of PRR’s ton-miles.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Echoposted | Cabarete | Vb7500 | Chem/fert | Warehouse/customer | Vermont Residing and Relocation Guide | Downsview | How You Can Plumb Your Own Home | cannabis seeds | Great Web Design For The Beginning Webmaster | How To Get The Perfect Auto Insurance Plan | Asset Based Finance | Insurance Sucks | Cheapest Flights to Australia – When to Look For One | structural steel | Polaris Ranger, RZR and RZRS years end oem parts blow out sales event. | web developers st louis

May 15 2012

The Railroad Roots Of

The Railroad Roots of Altoona, Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Railroad:

No city is more synonymous with the Pennsylvania Railroad than Altoona. Located at the base of Brush Mountain, in Logan and Pleasant valleys, it is the state?s tenth most-populous one after Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Allentown, Erie, Reading, Scranton, Bethlehem, Lancaster, and Harrisburg. But it was that very mountain which first inhibited, and then sparked, its growth.

Blanketed by hard-wood forests and traversed by the spine of the Appalachian Mountain range?which stretches from Newfoundland to Alabama and serves as the Eastern Continental Divide?Pennsylvania posed an obstacle to both westward population expansion and trade with its own Allegheny ridge section of them thrust as high as 4,000 feet toward the sky. Trans-state travel, by rudimentary tracks and trails left by wild animals and Native Americans, over the imposing peaks, required three weeks to complete?under the best of conditions.

British colonists, etching out a few clearings for farms in the 18thcentury, constituted the area?s first modern settlers, while early industrialists harnessed its minerals through coal and iron furnaces. Yet their products could only be transported by wagons to Pittsburgh, considered the gateway to the west, over these crude trails.

The first remedial effort to ease this transportation barrier was made in 1823 when John Stevens was granted a state charter to construct a dual-section railroad, the first from Philadelphia to Columbia and the second from Columbia to Pittsburgh. But the idealized, east-west rail link evaporated with its promised capital.

New impetus for the connection, however, occurred when trade, hitherto brisk in Philadelphia, was siphoned off to the Erie Canal route, completed in 1825, and legislature, attempting to reverse its effects, authorized construction of a state-owned Main Line Canal linking Philadelphia with Pittsburgh for the first time by means of the Allegheny Portage Railroad. Opening on March 18, 1834, it employed an inter-modal system in which canal boats would ply waterways to the Hollidaysburg Canal Basin in the east before being transferred on to flatbed rail cars and then transported across the 36.65-mile Allegheny Ridge section, pulled by cables and stationary steam engines. Refloated in the Johnstown Canal Basin in the west, they would then complete their journey to Pittsburgh via water.

Although it reduced the trans-Pennsylvania trip to four days over the rudimentary, trail-plied Conestoga wagon method, the system was still less-than-optimal, arduous to negotiate, and subjected to the occasional mishap. What was needed was a single-mode, continuous-track link, the obstacle to which, of course, was the mountainous terrain.

Its spark, once again, was lit by competition. Indeed, destined already for Pittsburgh, at least in construction form, was track to be used by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, stretching 178 miles from Cumberland, Maryland, and approaching it from the southeast.

Fearing a second loss to its lucrative trade with the west, Philadelphia advocated a Pennsylvania-indigenous lifeline across the state in the form of a rapid, efficient, single-mode rail link. Surprisingly, the Pennsylvania State Assembly, concurring with the need, authorized both the extension of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad?s track to Pittsburgh and the charter of a state-reflective line named the ?Pennsylvania Railroad,? which was to construct a 249-mile extension of the existing Philadelphia-Harrisburg track, consequently competing with the Main Line Canal and Allegheny Portage Railroad interchange system.

First movement of the indigenous, intra-state line, no further than an inch, was the one imprinted on paper in the form of Governor Francis R. Skunk?s signature on April 13, 1846, changing vision into law, and such overwhelming support had been received for the new railroad, that the Baltimore and Ohio charter was revoked the following year.

Following election of the first board of directors, comprised of President Samuel Vaughn Merrick and Chief Engineer John Edgar Thomson, on March 30, 1847, surveys revealed three potential routes, the most feasible of which was the westerly one from Harrisburg through Logan?s Narrows to Sugar Gap Run and then to Robinson?s Summit (which would later be named ?Altoona?), following the Susquehanna and Juniata rivers before gaining 800 feet of elevation over the Allegheny Mountains and terminating in Pittsburgh.

But the Allegheny Portage Railroad could only surmount the imposing peaks by means of its ten inclined planes. How, then, could the Pennsylvania Railroad do so without them? And, while both were seen as competitors, in reality, they initially complemented one another.

The Pennsylvania Railroad?s eastern section, consisting of 173 miles of track from Lancaster to Duncansville, opened in September of 1850, connecting the following month with the Allegheny Portage system, while the western section, from Pittsburgh to Johnstown, was completed on December 10, 1852. The Allegheny Portage, having already walked in the Pennsylvania?s shoes with its intermediate, and laboriously-slow, mountain vaulting water-and-rail interchange, only temporarily served as its link, since it attempted to design an all-track route.

The problem lay, literally, in laying track, which would have to climb the mountain?s rock face to surmount its 1,216-foot summit through a tunnel with existing locomotive capability, yet avoid the stationary engine-inclined plane system. The required grade would have been prohibitive.

The solution was a long, double loop of track, which assumed a more gradual, locomotive-capable elevation gain, reducing a ten-percent grade (or a rise of ten feet for every 100 feet of distance) to a more docile 1.8 percent.

Touted along the north side of the valley, the line arced to the left, over a manmade embankment, to Kittanning Point, where it formed, after necessary rock wall chiseling, the now-famous, half-mile-long Horseshoe Curve, its gradual rise indicated by its west side elevation, which is 122 feet higher than its east.

Declared operational on February 15, 1854, it reduced the four-day journey between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh by the Allegheny Portage Railroad to only 15 hours by its Pennsylvania counterpart, and caused a rapid passenger and freight loss to it, forcing the dual-mode interchange system to concede defeat. Although it had employed hybrid technology of infantile development, it nevertheless succeeded in surmounting the topographical obstacle and served as one of the necessary steps in man?s technological climb.

More importantly, the Horseshoe Curve, symbolic of the triumph of the state?s very Allegheny Mountains to east-west travel, sparked a secondary rise?from the virgin land?of the city needed to maintain it and the railroad which had given birth to it. That city was Altoona.

Altoona Shop Complex:

Located at the foot of the Alleghenies, Altoona sprouted from the 224-acre David Robinson farm whose strategic location, 235 miles west of Philadelphia and 116 miles east of Pittsburgh, was optimal from which to dispatch additional locomotive power to aid the climb over the increasing grade. In conjunction with these train reconfigurations was the need for both engine and unpowered rolling stock maintenance and repair.

The deed of transfer, signed on April 24, 1849 after the $ 10,000 purchase price had been paid, provided the necessary land for the first railroad shops. As the heart of the Allegheny Mountains, nourished by the area?s coal, iron, lumber, and water resources, the town pumped life into the area.

Based upon the original plans devised in 1849, the Pennsylvania Railroad?s Altoona Complex included a machine shop, an engine house, and an erecting shop, to which were added an eight-stall and ?track roundhouse and a long structure housing a locomotive repair shop, a foundry, a blacksmith, a machine shop, a woodwork shop, and a painting shop, enabling it to maintain its first, single-track connection with Pittsburgh by means of sections of the New Portage Railroad in 1850. Progressive capability enabled it to perform the three primary functions of car production, locomotive part manufacture, and repair.

But insatiable demand required ever-increasing capacity. By 1855, its existing facilities had been expanded and a 26-stall engine house had been built.

The city?s own growth paralleled that of the railroad complex?s, increasing from 2,000 in 1854 to 3,591 in 860 and eclipsing the 10,000-level a decade later, at which time a full ten percent of its population had been employed by the railroad shops. They had intermittently burgeoned into a mini-metropolis of their own, with a car shop, a tin shop, a carpenter shop, a car repair shop, a boiler shop, a roundhouse, an engine repair shop, a paint shop, and an iron and brass foundry. Administrative offices were located throughout the city.

Acquisition of the Main Line of Public Works in 1857 and the closure of the New Portage Railroad only served to increase rail transport demand, requiring commensurate capacity increases in the Altoona Complex.

Civil War-necessitated demand of rail cars to transport Union Force munitions and soldiers further rendered the Pennsylvania Railroad?s facilities integral to the effort, sparking yet another series of expansions in 1862.

But the unending demand, exerting its effects against the boundaries of its original, 1850 Altoona Machine Shops Complex, coupled with the increasing size of locomotives, prompted it to consider a secondary engine production and repair location. The engines themselves, hitherto weighing under 30 tons and built up of smaller sections, could be manually moved and assembled with the aid of basic blocks, jacks, and swing cranes, but their increasing capability, reflected by their sheer size, required greater clearances and power cranes to move, neither of which could be accommodated within the original compound.

The Consolidation engine, for instance, weighed 48 tons, but was succeeded by the 57.3-ton Class R type of 1885.

The new site, in the eastern section of the city, was reflected by the facility?s very name?the Juniata Shops?which were constructed between September of 1888 and 1890, and offered a full array of functions: a blacksmith shop; a paint shop; a boiler shop; electric, hydraulic, and gas houses; a paint structure; storerooms; a hydraulic transfer table, and an office. A longitudinal assembly line, in a boiler-blacksmith-machine-erecting shop configuration, facilitated increased locomotive production, which standardly began with the flanging, punching, construction, and riveting of its boiler in its appropriate shop before being moved, in completed form, to the erecting location. Frames and forgings, having been transferred from the blacksmith to the machine shop, were now united with the cylinders and castings, positioned at the center of the building, while the boiler was joined with its matching parts in the erecting shop.

Final assembly, progressing from individual parts at the building?s west end to a completed unit at its east, usually required a week.

Like its Altoona counterpart, the Juniata Complex expanded in response to the demand exerted on it. Enlarged erecting, blacksmith, machine, and boiler shops, for example, were built between 1902 and 1903, and a second blacksmith shop and altogether new storehouse were subsequently added.

At the end of World War I, a second machine shop took its place within the sprawling facility and it was initially used for locomotive tender construction and repair.

By 1926, the Juniata Locomotive Shop consisted of two blacksmith shops, a boiler shop, two machine shops, a tank shop, and an erecting and machine shop, enabling it to repair four locomotives per day and produce 12 altogether new ones per month. A fire, occurring on December 27, 1931 and incapacitating the original Altoona Complex, resulted in the transfer of all locomotive work to Juniata seven years later.

Two historical events increased activity to a fever pitch: during World War I, tanks let out an unceasing plea for armor plat strengthening, while the complex?s transition from the traditional steam engine to the more advanced diesel-electric type necessitated internal reconfigurations. Because of its increased reliability, however, it also signaled the reduction of personnel by 1957, since it required fewer repairs and overhauls.

The Altoona Works, peeking with 122 buildings and 218 acres of yards spanning three miles, employed 20,000?4,000 of whom worked in the yards and 16,000 of whom were in the shops?and produced 6,873 locomotives, becoming the world?s largest such railroad shop complex. Altoona?s population hovered at the 90,000-mark.

Once subdivided into five locations, it performed locomotive repair and production in the Altoona Machine Shops, themselves comprised of 36 departments and running from 12thto 16thstreets. The Altoona Car Shops, located in the southern portion of the city, both built and repaired passenger, parlor, sleeping, and mail coaches. The Juniata Shops fielded the full range of current locomotive propulsion types: steam, electric, gas electric, and diesel electric.

At 395 feet in diameter, with a 75-foot turntable, the East Altoona Engine House, its fourth location, was the world?s largest, featuring 50 stalls. The hub of locomotive servicing, it handled between 325 and 350 per day, including the T-1 Class, the last and largest steam engine built in Altoona after a 110-foot turntable had been installed in 1942. The nearby East Altoona Coal Dock, a 135-foot-high concrete structure based by a steel-frame and replenished by 35 daily hopper cars, supplied steam engines employed on the Pittsburgh and Middle divisions with its 1,250-ton capacity.

The South Altoona Foundries, the fifth of the complex?s facilities, produced wheels for both locomotives and cars.

The post-World War II decline in train travel, sparked by an increase in automobile popularity, saw the progressive replacement of the railways with highways, beginning a period of Altoona Shop facility and employee retrenchment.

The short-lived merger between the Pennsylvania Railroad and the New York Central, which formed Penn Central on February 1, 1968 and initiated a $ 6.5 million modernization program, just as quickly plunged into the tunnel of bankruptcy two years later, on June 21, emerging as Conrail after Congress passed the Regional Rail Reorganization Act of 1973 to study the precarious Penn Central situation. The recommended, and adopted, solution was the formation of the privately-owned Consolidated Rail Corporation, or ?Conrail,? from similarly-blighted companies, including the Penn Central, the Erie Lackawanna, the Central of New Jersey, the LeHigh Valley, the Lehigh and Hudson River, and the Reading railroads, and, in the event, it selected the Juniata Locomotive Shops as its principle repair facility, of which it assumed managerial control.

After a 1983 modernization program, it was able to offer a full menu of production, repair, overhaul, and maintenance services of engine governors, alternators, power assemblies, fans, generators, and blower motors, as well as manufacture of state-of-the-art EMD and General Electric locomotives for BNSF, CSX, and Norfolk Southern, the latter of which ultimately acquired Conrail?s Pennsylvania route system and, indirectly, its Juniata Shop Complex.

Still fielding some 60 to 80 daily trains, including the easterly and westerly ?Pennsylvania? runs to New York and Pittsburgh operated by Amtrak, Altoona, located at the foot of the Allegheny front and in close proximity to the Horseshoe Curve, capitalized on its topographical obstacles, making an invaluable contribution to both the country?s transportation infrastructure and the Industrial Revolution, through the Pennsylvania Railroad and its shop complex, in an ultimate obstacle-into-opportunity transformation.

An Allegheny Mountain tourist hub, the ?Railroad City? of Altoona shares its past with present visitors through its Railroaders Memorial Museum and Horseshoe Curve sights.

Railroaders Memorial Museum:

Located in the 1882 Master Mechanics Building, formerly used by the Pennsylvania Railroad as a testing lab, ?the Railroaders Memorial Museum,? according to its self-proclaimed purpose, ?is dedicated to revealing, interpreting, commemorating, and celebrating the significant contributions of railroaders and their families to American life and industry,? chronicling the history of the railroad without which Altoona would not have existed.

Sprouting form a seed first planted in 1967, when the Altoona Railway Museum Club was formed, it was officially incorporated as the ?Railroaders Memorial Museum? five years later. Its eventual five-acre parcel of land, once occupied by the Penn Central Railroad Shop Complex and sold by the Altoona Redevelopment Authority to Center Associates, was acquired in 1993, along with the former Masters Mechanics facility, and the museum, having already had its grand opening on September 21, 1980, celebrated a second such event 18 years later, on April 25, 1998, with these additions.

Entering the interactive museum?s time portal, which transports the visitor back to the Pennsylvania Railroad?s 1950s pinnacle-of-operations period by means of recreated scenes, store fronts, interiors, voices, and sounds, he finds himself at a railroad station alive with hissing steam and ear-piercing train whistles, about to board a full-sized replica of a K-4 locomotive displaying number 1361.

The reason for the town?s very existence is explained in the ?Why in the World Altoona?? exhibit. Pittsburgh needed a rail connection with the eastern part of the state, it explains, and the fledgling Pennsylvania Railroad fiercely competed with the already-established Baltimore and Ohio for the right to build it. Eventually winning, it linked Pittsburgh in the west with its mirror-image metropolis in the east, Philadelphia. But mounting the Alleghenies was an almost impossible climb. A spot of wilderness, chosen by Chief Engineer Thomson, developed into the base camp, which supported the feat and was designated ?Altoona,? ultimately evolving into the railroad capital of the world. Trains were designed, constructed, tested, and repaired here. Its people would change the face of America and prove indispensable in its protection, from the Civil War to World War II.

Like so many chapters of technological development, Altoona, its people, and the Pennsylvania Railroad played an important role in America?s rise as a nation.

Additional insight about the area?s railroad roots can be gleaned from two films, ?Altoona at Work: An Era of Steam? and ?Birth of a Curve,? shown in the first floor Norfolk Southern Theater.

The second floor ?Railroad Work? and ?A City of Railroaders? exhibits bring early-Altoona back to life by means of its storefront and neighborhood recreations, such as Dutch Hill and Little Italy, and even features an extensive Pennsylvania Railroad model train layout.

?The Pennsy was the ?engine? of Altoona?s growth,? it explains. ?But the company did not build the city that made up ?the rest of the train.?? Although it founded, laid out, and aided it, it elected not to own and construct the city beyond the actual shops. Nevertheless, the company?s power and influence coursed through its arteries. Its many neighborhoods were the result of railroaders reinvesting their savings to build houses, which, in turn, provided income-supplementing rents.

The visitor can temporarily step into their shoes. At the Newstand, which was formerly located at the 12thStreet Bridge, a boy, ?standing? behind it in holograph form and bordered by magazines for sale, relates tales about old Altoona. In Kelly’s Bar, which was once located at the threshold to one of the many railroad shops, you can also eavesdrop on the talk of the town.

Several residents shared insights through the philosophies they left behind. Sally Price, for example?a Pennsylvania Railroad clerk?proclaimed, ?A dirty city was good because it meant that people had work. We always considered it gold dust, not coal dust. That?s what made America run.?

In May of 1936, Fortune magazine reported, ?Think of the Pennsylvania Railroad as a nation at war. The men who move these trains are soldiers on duty, day and night.?

And the far-reaching value of the railroad?s track network, which ultimately spread throughout the northeast like a spider?s web, was captured by this compact gem: ?Travel is the nation?s university.?

There was no more appropriate name for a railroad than that which reflected the very state it conquered and connected with the rest of the country.

The museum?s third floor exhibits, which offer a children?s focus, include ?Railroaders as American Heroes,? ?The World?s Fair,? ?How to Run a Railroad,? ?A Report to the Shareholders,? ?The Test Labs,? and ?The End of an Era.?

Outside, the museum invites the visitor to ?stand at the center of what was once the greatest railroad shop complex in the world?the Altoona Works of the Pennsylvania Railroad.? Established in 1850, along with the town, the shops eventually sprouted across 218 acres and occupied 122 buildings. Containing 88 acres under roof, they held 4,500 machine tools and 94 overhead cranes. Four distinct groups of buildings emerged.

The shops met the Pennsylvania Railroad?s ever-growing need to build, test, repair, and rebuild a vast fleet. In the eight-decade period from 1866 to 1946, some 6,873 steam, diesel-electric, and electric locomotives were produced here, along with thousands of standard–and the world?s first all-steel–cars, of which 16,415 for freight alone emerged from its doors between 1921 and 1940.

Today, you can inspect several types of Pennsylvania Railroad cars, inclusive of a Class N5 cabin car/caboose (number 477577), a Class X29L steel boxcar (number 2136), an express refrigerator car (number 2561), and a Class D78F dining car (number 4468). At 81 feet in length, this ?Altoona-built restaurant on wheels? accommodated 36 at formally set tables, but a later reconfiguration reduced this number to 32, along with another ten seated in a lounge section. In 1941, the Pennsylvania Railroad served 3.9 million meals.

Horseshoe Curve National Historic Landmark:

An innovative engineering approach to conquering the Allegheny Mountains and thus provide a trans-Pennsylvania, continuous-track, east-west rail link between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, the Horseshoe Curve replaced the inclined-plane hurdle employed by the Allegheny Portage Railroad. Located 5.9 miles from the Railroaders Memorial Museum, it is included in its admission price.

With its increasing popularity as a train-viewing area, Kattanning Point, site of the curve, was developed into a telegraph and sightseeing station in 1855, while a reservoir, built in the middle of it, provided water to the ever-growing city of Altoona.

Demand for rail transport, generated by the equally growing country?s need for factory-produced commodities, soon necessitated increased train frequencies, which, in tun, required additional track to accommodate. The Horseshoe Curve, opening with a single line, was quadrupled by the very end of the 19thcentury, receiving a second track in 1898, a third in 1899, and a fourth in 1900, the latter two of which could only be laid after additional clearance was provided with removal of part of the rock face–all the while accomplished while trains continued to ply the inside of the curve.

Accessed for the first time by a macadam road in 1932, Kattanning Point sprouted a small stone guest lodge at its base eight years later, but it was relegated to a gift shop and visitor center, since that very road was symbolic of what had gradually gnawed away at the track?s original purpose. This actual station was subsequently demolished.

By 1957, operation of the park was transferred from the Pennsylvania Railroad to the city of Altoona, and a decade later, Horseshoe Curve was designated a National Historic Landmark.

The semi-circular curve?an industrial link to the west, a topographical triumph, and a catalyst to growth?represents, in essence, an act of perfection, designed by and for the railroad which gave birth to the very town where its locomotives and rail cars were manufactured so that its Horseshoe Curve could connect it with the rest of the country?a single need, sparking multiple byproducts, to serve each other, none of which could have been possible without the other, in an ultimate earthly expression of ?creation.?

Two plaques attest to these facts. The first, reflecting its status as a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark, states, ?Horseshoe Curve was designed and built under the direction of Pennsylvania Railroad Chief Engineer, and later company president, J. Edgar Thomson. When it opened, (it) was 366 meters across, 1,310 meters long, and had a 1.8-percent grade.?

The second states, ?Horseshoe Curve has been placed on the National Register of Historic Railroad Landmarks?1854-2004. First railroad to cross the Allegheny Mountains between Harrisburg and Pittsburgh with a maximum grade of 1.87 percent, was engineered by J. Edgar Thomson 150 years ago.?

The museum, across from the gift shop, features exhibits entitled ?Building the Curve,? ?Maintenance,? and the ?Changing Face of the Curve,? as well as an area relief map and a small video room where the film ?Birth of the Curve? can be viewed, if it was missed at the Railroaders Memorial Museum. It is also the departure point of the 12-passenger funicular, which ascends to the summit of the ridge and the Horseshoe Curve viewing area. Alternatively, the area can be reached by climbing the 194 steps.

A picnic table-dotted park, whose centerpiece is Pennsylvania Railroad diesel locomotive number 7048, enables the visitor to view the frequent trains rounding the three tracks which currently comprise the Horseshoe Curve in front of him or the Kattanning Reservoir behind, which appears like a blue gem shimmering amidst the verdant hills. A train-viewing schedule, available in the Visitor Center?s gift shop, lists frequencies, approximate passing times, and passenger- or freight-comprised operations, and is augmented by the loud speaker-broadcast transmissions from the actual trains. Dual-locomotive-pulled Norfolk Southern freight trains, emitting protesting screeches as they round the massive curve on the furthest, shale rock-hugging track from the viewer, are common sights.

A plaque lists the curve as being 2,375 feet long and having a nine-degree, 15-minute curve, a 220-degree central angle, a 1,594-foot east end elevation, and a 91-foot-per-mile grade.

A board, positioned in front of the track and entitled ?Over the Hill,? describes ?how railroads surmounted the spine of the Alleghenies between Altoona and Johnstown.?

The state-owned Allegheny Portage Railroad, of course, was the first to do so, its eastern terminus located just west of Hollidaysburg and its ?first of ten,? so designated because it was the first of its ten inclined planes. Duncansville served as the original connecting point between it and the Pennsylvania Railroad, whose initial mainline had been routed through Altoona until the Horseshoe Curve opened in 1854.

Concurrent with its design had been the building of the continuous-track New Portage Railroad, which eliminated the awkward inclined-plane method of travel. Purchasing it in 1857, the Pennsylvania Railroad failed to use it until 1904, when increased freight transport demand necessitated a reliever route, but abandoned it a second time in 1981.

Area tracks had also been used by the S. E. Baker Railroad and, later, by the Glen White Coal and Lumber Company.

Today, the Pennsylvania Railroad?s mainline, originating in New York and routed through Philadelphia and Harrisburg, arcs through the Horseshoe Curve before negotiating numerous, but lesser ones, including the McGinleys, McCanns, AG, Greenough, Brandimarte, Allegrippus, Cold, Bennington, and Salpino curves. Continuing through the Allegheny and New Portage tunnels, it proceeds to Pittsburgh and the west?the goal envisioned more than a century and a half ago.

May 14 2012

Abandoned Railroad Bridge Over Little

This a film I made with my friends exploring an abandoned railroad bridge in Hillsborough County i Wimauma Florida the Little Manatee river railway bridge which was abandoned in 1985 and is being claimed by the earth.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

★ Watch In 720p HD! ★ Part 1 – This video includes several trains arriving, departing and passing by at the low level of Smethwick Galton Bridge train station, just outside Birmingham, on 7/9/11. Although more trains pass by here than trains that stop, the station is quite busy due to the fact that there are 2 railway lines, a lower level serving main destinations such as Birmingham New Street, Birmingham International, Walsall, Wolverhampton, Holyhead, Aberystwyth and Liverpool Lime Street, and a higher level serving main destinations such as Kidderminster, Worcester, Great Malvern, Birmingham Snow Hill, Birmingham Moor Street, Dorridge and Stratford-Upon-Avon. I decided to film these videos from platform 3 for easy access returning home. I had recently arrived from Wolverhampton, and was planning to return back there in a few hours after doing a bit of train spotting on both levels of the station for the day. The station is situated just outside Birmingham and West Bromwich, near the M5 motorway and Smethwick Galton Bridge itself. It is between Sandwell & Dudley train station and Smethwick Rolfe Street train station on the low level (situated on the West Coast Main Line) and between The Hawthorns train station and Langley Green train station on the high level. As I spent a long time there, there are 2 parts to this video, please go to www.youtube.com for part 2. Here is a list of the trains that can be seen in this video: 1) Cross Country Voyager Class 220 passing by
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Visit Beverly Hills California | Corporate Photographer West Palm Beach | asphalt shingle | bad credit payday loans | Proven Strategies For Making Your Home Business Successful | Make Your Money Last A Lifetime: TIps For Success | Home Improvement Help You Need To Succeed | Be A Better Web Designer With This Advice | How To Get The Most Out Of Payday Loans | Need Advice About Payday Loans? Keep Reading | co-redemptrix | rubber matting | Who Are The French Unique Forces? | Workshop Plans For Your Shed Building | Teletown | A great bag – Michael Kors handbag | iPhone Accessories – Cleaning and Caring Tips | Top Rated Electric Shavers | Facebook Fan Pages and Brand Visibility | Collum

May 12 2012

Latest Burlington Railroad Auctions

Burlington Railroad on eBay:

Nebraska Zephyr Burlington Route Railroad Train Chicago Omaha Lincoln postcard

US .00
End Date: Saturday May-12-2012 4:29:27 PDT
Buy It Now for only: US .00
Buy it now | Add to watch list

Mockba | 4486s | Firefox | Review — The get backlinks Advantages As well as Cons | Areas to consider when Finding the Best Online Casino | Eurycoma longifolia ist eine Pflanzenart, die zum Familie der Bittereschengewächse (Simaroubaceae) gehört | comedy hypnotist | Hot Tubs in San Diego | The Skinny Jean: A Brief History | posicionamiento seo | Tips For Getting An Injury Solicitor Immediately after An Accident | Comcast Texas | Yearbook | Ways To Stay On Top Of Your Finances | foot pain san diego | Dentist Boronia | History of ANB with 2009 – 2011.

May 11 2012

Nice Burlington Railroad Photos

Some cool Burlington Railroad images:

Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad (CBQ) Caboose No. 14581
Burlington Railroad

Image by shannonpatrick17
Burlington Railroad Depot
Gage County Museum – Beatrice, Nebraska

www.nebraskabeautiful.com/southeastern-nebraska-tourism/g…

Burlington Railroad Station – Iowa.
Burlington Railroad

Image by Loco Steve
Burlington station was built in 1944 by the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad (CB&Q, now BNSF Railway). It is a two-story limestone masonry structure used for Amtrak service, as a bus transfer station and for other city needs.

New Englanders settled here in the 1830s and named their town for Burlington, VT. The arrival of the steamboats, the railroad and a plank toll road in the 1850s established Burlington as a transportation gateway to Iowa. The CB&Q Railroad originated in Burlington. This railroad evolved into the Burlington Route and then the BNSF Railway. Burlington is the home of Snake Alley, the most crooked alley in the world. Burlington has also been called the Backhoe Capital of the World. William Frawley, Fred Mertz on the “I Love Lucy” television shows and Aldo Leopold, one of the founders of the wildlife management and conservation movement, hailed from Burlington.

Edited Fromhttp://www.greatamericanstations.com/Stations/BRL

Nice Realtor | Cardmetropolitan | 134/365 | Citydreamhomescom | Mileshas | Almaguer | police ufos | nike foamposite | Have some fun as well as buzz inside Best Minecraft Servers | Sky Cardsharing | Togas | The Logic Behind Why Fuel Prices Are So High | Us Postal Service | cheap aquarium decorations | Free Cell Phone Spy – The Best Free Cell Phone Spy You can Buy! | Jammie | Take Pictures Like A Pro

May 09 2012

The Transcontinental Railroad Places America

The Transcontinental Railroad Places America on The Right Track

May 08 2012

Model Railroad Print Out Buildings

Model Railroad Print Out Buildings
Have A Railroad Site? These Printout Railroad Buildings Are An Easy Sale – And The Bundle Deals Are Great Value To Push The Sale Value Up.
Model Railroad Print Out Buildings

How To Get A Railroad Job And Make Upto ,000 Per Year!
E-book Explains The Tips And Strategies Needed To Get Your Resume And Application Noticed And How To Answer The Trick Questions Rr Employers Ask Those Who Interview For A Railroad Job. This Guide Is A Must For Anyone Seeking Railroad Employment!
How To Get A Railroad Job And Make Upto ,000 Per Year!

6 Southern Pacific Railroad 1/2″ Buttons

US .99 (1 Bid)
End Date: Tuesday May-08-2012 7:36:47 PDT
Bid now | Add to watch list

Cleveland & Pittsburgh Railroad stock certificate authentic collectible

US .00
End Date: Tuesday May-08-2012 7:37:28 PDT
Buy It Now for only: US .00
Buy it now | Add to watch list

Tanque | Humerdinck | Clydesdale | Columbus Law | Kastmaster | Komfort | Squareaustin | Assistant/hygienist | Handy Home Improvement Tips Everyone Can Use | The Pros and Cons of Dealing With Your Cable Net Clients | big women dating | The Undeniable Truth About Organic Clothing That No One Is Telling You

May 08 2012

Railroad Logging And Mining Books

Railroad, Logging, and Mining Books For Sale

in Minnesota by Luecke F/VG Everywhere West, the Burlington Route by Dorin F/VG Ghost Railroads

Price:

Location

Anoka, USA

Mechanical Foreman I – Belen, NM

Company: BNSF Railway
Base Pay: N/A
Other Pay:
Employee Type: Full time
Industry: Transportation
Manages Others: Not Specified
Job classification: Engineering
Other
Required Education: Not Specified
Necessary experience: At least 1yr(s)
Required Travel: Not Specified
Relocation Covered: Not Specified
Reference ID: e19529dd-eefb-83f1-88e5-00505681
Location: US-NM-Belen

Contact: Not Available
Phone: Not Available
Email: Not Available
Fax: Not Available

Company Overview
For more than 150yrs, BNSF Railway has been quietly delivering cars, coal, clothing, games, and nearly anything else found in homes and businesses. When the predecessors to BNSF Railway 1st started operations, we were building a nation by shrinking America’s borders. Today, our focus is on using speed, agility, and resourcefulness to help expand the global marketplace for goods and services.

Price: $ 22,000

Location

Belen, USA

Propert | Shaji | Emails | was ist kratom muessen ihnen serioes erklaeren und wo euch es online kaufen koennt | It is Not That Hard To Receive A Cash Advance | Internet Marketing Techniques And Ideas To Help You Succeed Online | Polaris ATV Parts, Alternative Sections, and Car Covers | 12c02001 | Sexy Toys | Sniped Games | timeshare rentals | Quantum Physics and Legislation of Attraction – What Is the Website link? | A Beginners Guide To Having A Baby | alimentacion deportiva | Bootstrapped | Solid Ideas For Starting Up A Blog | Liner2

May 07 2012

Central Railroad Of New Jersey

Central Railroad of New Jersey – China Pulse Valve – PU/PE/Pneumatic/Hydraulic tubes

Article by hi joiney

history origins the elizabethtown and somerville railroad was chartered on february 9 1831 to build from elizabeth on the newark bay with a steamboat transfer to new york city west to somerville the line to plainfield was completed in march 1839 connecting to the new jersey rail road in elizabeth extensions took it west to dunellen in 1840 just east of bound brook in 1841 and to somerville in 1842 the somerville and easton railroad was chartered on february 26 1847 to continue the line west to easton the first extension to whitehouse opened in 1848 and was leased to the elizabethtown and somerville railroad on february 11 1849 the elizabethtown and somerville railroad bought the somerville and easton railroad and on february 26 the two companies were consolidated as the central railroad of new jersey map of cnj and other terminals in new york region ca 1900 the rest of the line to phillipsburg opened in 1852 and on september 8 1855 the upper level of the lehigh valley railroad s easton bridge over the delaware river taking the cnj to easton at that time lehigh valley coal trains began running over the cnj to elizabeth a similar operation with the delaware lackawanna and western railroad joining at h ton began may 27 1856 this required the addition of a third rail to join the broad gauge dl w onto the standard gauge cnj on december 1 1859 the cnj arranged to run over the new jersey rail road to the latter s terminal in jersey city that operation began december 19 and included a third rail for dl w trains the south branch railroad controlled by the cnj opened july 1 1864 as a branch from somerville to flemington the cnj s extension to their new terminal in jersey city including the first crrnj newark bay bridge opened on july 29 1864 with a ferry transfer to cortlandt street in new york city ending operations over the njrr on july 23 1869 the newark and new york railroad opened providing a straight route from downtown newark to the cnj s jersey city terminal the newark branch running north from elizabethport to the n ny in newark opened june 7 1872 expansion communipaw terminal in jersey city on october 6 1873 the cnj leased the new york and long branch railroad which was in the process of building from perth amboy southeast to long branch at the same time the perth amboy and elizabethport railroad was building from elizabethport on the cnj south to perth amboy hostilities at the crossing of the pennsylvania railroad s perth amboy and woodbridge railroad in april 1872 led to an injunction against the prr interfering with the construction the cnj bought the pa e later that year the full line to long branch opened september 7 1875 and was later extended south reaching bay head in 1881 by acquiring other companies in 1882 the cnj and pennsylvania railroad agreed to use the line jointly with trackage rights granted to the prr over the perth amboy and elizabethport between the perth amboy and woodbridge crossing and its south end at the raritan river bridge the cnj leased the dover and rockaway railroad for 990 years from april 26 1881 the ogden mine railroad for 999 years from january 1 1882 and the hibernia mine railroad for 20 years from october 1 1890 renewed at least once for another 20 years a cnj camelback locomotive built by baldwin in the 1920s behind the terminal in late 1917 the following companies were absorbed into the cnj buena vista railroad carteret and sewaren railroad carteret extension railroad cumberland and maurice river railroad cumberland and maurice river extension railroad elizabeth extension railroad freehold and atlantic highlands railroad lafayette railroad manufacturers extension railroad middle brook railroad new jersey terminal railroad new jersey southern railroad navesink railroad passaic river extension railroad raritan north shore railroad sound shore railroad toms river railroad toms river and barnegat railroad vineland railroad vineland branch railway west side connecting railroad west end railroad in 1901 the reading railroad gained control of the cnj which lasted until the creation of conrail on april 1 1976 the first commercially successful diesel electric locomotive manufactured by alco in 1924 was built for the central railroad of new jersey in 1929 the cnj began operating its most famous train the blue comet from jersey city to atlantic city it ran until 1941 the interstate commerce commission icc authorized the cnj to acquire the wharton and northern railroad and the mount hope mineral railroad on february 4 1930 the hibernia mine railroad was merged into the cnj on november 25 1930 decline on june 6 1935 the icc authorized the cnj to abandon the ogden mine railroad concourse at communipaw terminal with tablets is separated from the abandoned trackage by a fence reproduction of a tablet designator for the cnj blue comet lafayette street terminal newark in 1961 the cnj purchased two portions of the dissolving lehigh and new england railroad from the lehigh coal and navigation company this became the lehigh and new england railway with two segments lansford to tamaqua pennsylvania connecting coal mines to the reading railroad and bethlehem to bath and martins creek pennsylvania connecting cement mills to the cnj and lehigh valley railroad paralleling the lehigh valley railroad from the hudson river to scranton the cnj was a fierce competitor for anthracite coal and freight traffic with heavy commuter traffic and short freight hauls the company was in and out of bankruptcy throughout its history another problem the railroad had was simply its overall size whereby larger competitors tended to take away potential traffic in 1967 bankruptcy was declared for the last time in 1972 all pennsylvania operations ceased and the lehigh valley railroad took over the remaining pennsylvania trackage the cnj was merged into conrail on april 1 1976 it did not help the cnj that new jersey heavily taxed railroads operating in the state the state was quick to tear up and abandon former cnj lines shed by conrail notably its four track main line and impressive newark bay bridge which came down in the early 1980s a structure that would be an ideal commuter line into nyc today little of the former cnj remains in operation cnj emerged from bankruptcy in 1979 as central jersey industries later cji industries a corporate shell it eventually merged with the packaging company triangle industries owned by nelson peltz in 1986 stations further information list of stations on the central railroad of new jersey see also central railroad of pennsylvania high bridge branch cnj branch from high bridge nj to wharton nj which mainly carried iron ore from mining operations ss asbury park a crack coastal steamer built for the cnj in 1903 and subsequently rebuilt and operated as a car ferry in san francisco bay 1919 to 1940 puget sound 1943 to 1951 and the strait of georgia 1952 to 1976 the blue comet new jersey central luxury coach train provided service from 1929 to 1941 between new york and atlantic city references alecknavage ii albert july 6 2003 philly nrhs reading company history http www trainweb org phillynrhs rdg html retrieved 2009 12 06 160 opening of the newark and new york railroad new york times july 24 1869 p 160 8 160 railway consolidation new york times march 19 1872 p 160 5 160 new york and suburban news new york times june 1 1872 p 160 8 160 railroad history database http www earlpleasants com search_1 asp 160 prr chronology http www prrths com prr_hagley_intro htm 160 v 160 160 d 160 160 e class i railroads of north america current united states amtk 160 bnsf 160 csxt 160 gtc 160 kcs 160 ns 160 soo 160 up 160 canada cn 160 cp 160 via 160 mexico fxe 160 kcsm former 1956resent aa 160 acl 160 ac y 160 ags 160 a sab 160 at n 160 at sf 160 aut 160 a wp 160 b ar 160 b le 160 b m 160 bn 160 b o 160 car nw 160 cb q 160 c ei 160 cg 160 cgw 160 c im 160 cnj 160 cno tp 160 c nw 160 c o 160 cpme 160 cr 160 cri p 160 crr 160 c s 160 cspm o 160 cv 160 c w 160 c wc 160 d h 160 dl w 160 dm ir 160 d rgw 160 dss a 160 dt i 160 d tsl 160 dw p 160 ej e 160 el 160 erie 160 fec 160 fw d 160 ga 160 gb w 160 g f 160 gm o 160 gn 160 gs f 160 gtw 160 ic 160 icg 160 itc 160 ko g 160 l a 160 l hr 160 li 160 l m 160 l n 160 l ne 160 ls i 160 lv 160 mec 160 mga 160 mi 160 milw 160 mis 160 mkt 160 mn s 160 mon 160 mp 160 m stl 160 nc stl 160 nh 160 nkp 160 no ne 160 np 160 ns 160 n w 160 nwp 160 nyc 160 nycn 160 nyo w 160 nys w 160 pc 160 p le 160 p n 160 prr 160 prsl 160 p wv 160 rdg 160 rf p 160 rut 160 qa p 160 s a 160 sal 160 sbd 160 scl 160 sd ae 160 si 160 sirt 160 slsf 160 slsftx 160 sn 160 sou 160 sp 160 sp s 160 ssw 160 tc 160 tfm 160 tm 160 t no 160 t p 160 tp w 160 vgn 160 wa 160 wab 160 wc 160 wm 160 wp pre1956 a 160 ab a 160 ab c 160 ac 160 a d 160 ae 160 a nm 160 a stl 160 a v 160 ba p 160 bc a 160 b g 160 bri 160 br p 160 b s 160 bsl w 160 c a 160 ca c 160 c c 160 cc cs 160 ccc stl 160 cd c 160 c e 160 c g 160 ch amp d 160 c amp i 160 cinn 160 ci amp s 160 ci amp w 160 cl amp n 160 cm 160 cm amp ps 160 cne 160 cnne 160 cnor 160 c amp oin 160 cp amp stl 160 cpvt 160 cri amp g 160 cr amp nw 160 crp 160 cs 160 cth amp se 160 cv amp m 160 cvrr 160 dgh amp m 160 d amp ir 160 d amp m 160 dm amp n 160 dnw amp p 160 d amp sl 160 ei amp th 160 ep amp sw 160 e amp th 160 f amp cc 160 fj amp g 160 fs amp w 160 fw amp rg 160 gc 160 gc amp sf 160 gh amp sa 160 gm amp n 160 gr amp i 160 g amp si 160 he amp wt 160 h amp tc 160 hv 160 icry 160 ign 160 isrr 160 kcm amp o 160 kcm amp otx 160 k amp m 160 la amp sl 160 la amp t 160 le amp w 160 lh amp stl 160 lr amp n 160 lr amp ntx 160 ls amp ms 160 lw 160 mtr 160 m amp a 160 mc 160 md amp v 160 m amp i 160 mkttx 160 mlr 160 ml amp t 160 m amp na 160 m amp o 160 mo amp g 160 msc 160 msp amp ssm 160 mv 160 nal 160 ncry 160 nj amp ny 160 nn 160 nogn 160 nom amp c 160 not amp m 160 nyp amp n 160 ocaa 160 oe 160 or amp l 160 osl 160 owrn 160 pb amp w 160 pcc amp stl 160 pco 160 pe 160 p amp e 160 perk 160 pm 160 p amp nt 160 prdg 160 p amp s 160 p amp sf 160 ps amp n 160 qo amp kc 160 sa amp ap 160 sau amp g 160 sb amp ny 160 sd amp a 160 sfp amp p 160 s amp ie 160 sind 160 sj amp gi 160 sktx 160 slb amp m 160 slim amp s 160 soums 160 sswtx 160 sun 160 t amp bv 160 t amp fs 160 t amp n 160 t amp oc 160 tstl amp w 160 u amp d 160 utah 160 vand 160 vs amp p 160 v amp sw 160 wf amp nw 160 wf amp s 160 wj amp s 160 w amp le 160 wpt 160 wsn 160 wv 160 y amp mv timeline 19101929 160 19301976 160 1977resent categories central railroad of new jersey railway companies established in 1849 railway companies disestablished in 1976 former class i railroads in the united states companies affiliated with the reading company railroads transferred to conrail defunct new jersey railroads defunct pennsylvania railroads predecessors of conrail

The e-commerce company in China offers quality products such as China Pulse Valve , PU/PE/Pneumatic/Hydraulic tubes, and more. For more , please visit pneumatic equipments today!

More Railroad Articles

Huge/harveynew | Wv~zanesville | 3sml | Babbarea | Offpage | History of ANB because of 2009 – 2011. | Massage – Info On Reaching Entire Well-Being with Massage Treatment | The Basics of the Comcast Cable Company | Westy23′s | Office Refurbishment – The Advantages of Office Partitions and What Should Be Evaluated | Effective Small Business Computer Infrastructure Investment – How to Spend Wisely | Service | Une perte de poids facile ? Dégoter ces conseils pour perte qui fonctionnent pour | Shopping Online For Jewelry Is Extremely Good | taxi fares london