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I model my home town short line of the Tallulah Falls Railroad. It operated from 1871 until 1961. It ran from Cornelia Georgia to Franklin North Carolina. It spanned 58 miles with 48 trestles. All the trestles were wood except the Tallulah lake trestle which was steel and concrete.  Here's one of the six hopper cars I built to haul stone from Rabun quarry.

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While l am incorporating aspects of NE Colorado's Great Western sugar beet road into my freelance effort, the nearby to my hometown short-lines both made the famous Beebe and Clegg book "Mixed Train Daily". They were the Louisville, New Albany, and Corydon, which had a brief reincarnation as a dinner train, after years of providing combine caboose passenger service, and the Frankfort and Cincinnati, "Bourbon Route", which climbed up out of Frankfort's deep Kentucky River valley to serve several bourbon distilleries, including a now abandoned stone castle, on its way to a junction with the L&N at Paris, KY.

There were a lot of short line railroads in Pennsylvania that got bought up by either the Pennsylvania RR or Philadelphia & Reading Railways who later became known as the Reading Railroad in the 1920's. I try to model the Reading railroad; either Reading Lines(the freight side of Reading) or Reading Company(the passenger side of Reading). Also I have some freight cars in Reading & Northern RR from MTH.

Currently there is the Reading & Northern railroad that is operating out of an area near Allentown PA. It is a short line RR but has a lot of freight traffic between 2 major railroads(CSX & Norfolk Southern, if I am correct) in Pennsylvania and is looking to expand into passenger service near Reading & Hamburg PA. Reading & Northern also services the Prell shampoo factory near Mahopany PA.

I'm sure there are other states that had a lot of short line railroads but those are the ones I know of. I know that Georgia and North Carolina had some small railroads as well.

Lee Fritz

Last edited by phillyreading

I got the San Diego Imperial Valley Genset that was originally owned by Rail America which was what MTH's Model depicted. They were shortly sold to Genesee and Wyoming which made it look like a pumpkin.

I don't Model it that great because they run on the San Diego Trolley Lines at night when the Trolley is not in service and It depends on what goes down to the border because BNSF Brings it in and SDIV does drop off and pick up service for BNSF. I usually run freight cars I see in the SDIV yard next to the SDT yard and BNSF yard. I hope MTH does another run of the Genset I would love it's opposite number and color, their is only 2 Gensets on their roster.

phillyreading posted:

There were a lot of short line railroads in Pennsylvania that got bought up by either the Pennsylvania RR or Philadelphia & Reading Railways who later became known as the Reading Railroad in the 1920's. I try to model the Reading railroad; either Reading Lines(the freight side of Reading) or Reading Company(the passenger side of Reading). Also I have some freight cars in Reading & Northern RR from MTH.

Currently there is the Reading & Northern railroad that is operating out of an area near Allentown PA. It is a short line RR but has a lot of freight traffic between 2 major railroads(CSX & Norfolk Southern, if I am correct) in Pennsylvania and is looking to expand into passenger service near Reading & Hamburg PA. Reading & Northern also services the Prell shampoo factory near Mahopany PA.

I'm sure there are other states that had a lot of short line railroads but those are the ones I know of. I know that Georgia and North Carolina had some small railroads as well.

Lee Fritz

I've ridden the Reading & Northern steam excursion from Port Clinton PA to Jim Thorpe PA. Great trip! They are adding a station in Muhlenberg Township as well. I believe they have about 370 miles of track. They haul a lot of anthracite coal. Of those I've met from the railroad, I can say they are great people.

I live near Colebrookdale Railroad based in Boyertown PA. Great short line with some motivated people. They're running a GP10. I want to have a GP9 customized to look like it soon.

I don't but I would like to model Butler, Pa., where I live, maybe back in the 1930s. four RRs served this small city and it had steel, RR car mfg, oil, glass, bricks & refractory,lime, and coal, and autos plus passengers. If you went back a little further you could stir in two interurbans in the soup. Not bad for a town with about 30 thousand people. Forgot agricultural products too.

Badge109 posted:
phillyreading posted:

There were a lot of short line railroads in Pennsylvania that got bought up by either the Pennsylvania RR or Philadelphia & Reading Railways who later became known as the Reading Railroad in the 1920's. I try to model the Reading railroad; either Reading Lines(the freight side of Reading) or Reading Company(the passenger side of Reading). Also I have some freight cars in Reading & Northern RR from MTH.

Currently there is the Reading & Northern railroad that is operating out of an area near Allentown PA. It is a short line RR but has a lot of freight traffic between 2 major railroads(CSX & Norfolk Southern, if I am correct) in Pennsylvania and is looking to expand into passenger service near Reading & Hamburg PA. Reading & Northern also services the Prell shampoo factory near Mahopany PA.

I'm sure there are other states that had a lot of short line railroads but those are the ones I know of. I know that Georgia and North Carolina had some small railroads as well.

Lee Fritz

I've ridden the Reading & Northern steam excursion from Port Clinton PA to Jim Thorpe PA. Great trip! They are adding a station in Muhlenberg Township as well. I believe they have about 370 miles of track. They haul a lot of anthracite coal. Of those I've met from the railroad, I can say they are great people.

I live near Colebrookdale Railroad based in Boyertown PA. Great short line with some motivated people. They're running a GP10. I want to have a GP9 customized to look like it soon.

The Reading & Northern which is the main part of the company hauls freight, not always coal because the demand for coal is way down. The Reading & Northern is a company that does a lot of short hauling for major railroads like Norfolk Southern. Have you ever heard of Mahoopany PA? That is where Prell shampoo is made and the R & N hauls the freight for them from their terminal to major railroads.

I know about the Muhlenberg Township train station near highway 61 and Bellevue Ave. The R & N already owns the track rights.

Lee Fritz

jim pastorius posted:

I don't but I would like to model Butler, Pa., where I live, maybe back in the 1930s. four RRs served this small city and it had steel, RR car mfg, oil, glass, bricks & refractory,lime, and coal, and autos plus passengers. If you went back a little further you could stir in two interurbans in the soup. Not bad for a town with about 30 thousand people. Forgot agricultural products too.

I am not sure off hand what railroads ran in that area but Pennsylvania is considered the railroad capital of the US in the late 1800's because of all the short line railroads that used to run there.

Lee Fritz

My model railroad theme is built on the former Buffalo Rochester and Pittsburgh Railway that served my home town of Rochester.  That line was later merged into the B&O.  I also draw inspiration from the former "Hojack Line" of the NYC that ran along the shore of lake Ontario.  I do enjoy r researching these roads and even discovering structures and industries along the former road beds

Rusty,

   The name I use (Pine Creek Railroad) is the original name of the WAG Wellsville, Addison & Galeton Railroad (Sole Leather Line) that ran thru our mountains, although my layouts are all child like wonderland, I use the Pine Creek Railroad name to identify my Christmas layouts, even have a Legacy Shay engine and skeleton logging cars, along with the Box cars and Logging Caboose for all to see.  I guess you could say I use my home town railroad as inspiration for the Christmas layouts.

PCRR/Dave

 

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