Friday, May 16, 2014

Introduction

I have been interested in railroads, bridges, dams, etc. since I can remember. When I moved to the western suburbs of Chicago in June, 1973, to work for Bell Labs, I drove around the area taking pictures of movable bridges, coaling towers, etc. And I tried to take a picture of every roundhouse I could find using USG topographic maps. But I could never figure out what to do with them.

When I started reading my daughter's blog, http://jessandprinceofthieves.blogspot.com/, I realized that this would be a perfect medium for those old pictures and for new ones. An advantage of a blog is that you can start writing with no idea how it is going to end. And, unlike a book, it also doesn't require a linear organization. You can choose to view articles according to location, railroad, canal/river, etc. But I decided to wait until after I retired to start it so that I did not have to worry about a time conflict with work because I knew that just surfing the web can be a significant time sink. I retired May 2, 2014.

My profile picture is from a trip to Neucahtel, Switzerland, to watch my daughter, Laura DeBruler, play professional volleyball. She has already documented our trip to a watermill ruins that is in that town.

8 comments:

  1. I have been reading a number of your entries and find them fascinating!

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  2. Do you know anything about these railroad piers in the Kankakee River? They were built by a railroad that ran out of money. https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/547520393

    You might enjoy my unfinished railroads page at http://russnelson.com/unfinished-railroads.html . My contact information is on that page.

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  3. Dennis, thanks for posting all of this! I am a manufacturing nerd, many years ago had a degree and 12 years experience in computer services before getting into metalbending. Fun stuff! best..............Brad Pritts, Ann Arbor, MI, born and raised in Cleveland, OH ... center of the Rust Belt...

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  4. I'd like to use some images from the Chicago area, can I get them in 300dpi or better?

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    1. If they are my photos, sure. Contact me at bruler@xnet.com

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    2. Dennis, check your email.

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  5. Nice compendium of the wonders of physical infrastructure that made the US Great. I have made a post at SOAR.earth that presents the Rice Railyard in a high resolution topographical map. You might consider posting some of your drone shots there, as that seems to be their primary interest.

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  6. Do you know where the 1946 International Harvester Model K-5 truck was manufactured? Thanks.

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