(
Satellite, just the foundation is left)
Photo of roundhouse
Update: (
Shortlines,
Fixed)
Flickr photo of treated telephone poles leaving the plant in 1925. The MJ locomotive is a 0-4-0 steam engine.
The Manufacturers junction Railway Company was incorporated in Illinois, January,
1903 to provide rail connections linking the Hawthorne Works with all major railroad
systems entering Chicago. There are about 13 miles of track in and about Hawthorne
and a small but adequate rolling stock. The railway delivers all of Hawthorne’s inbound
rail freight (mostly raw materials) to required locations within the Works area and all
outbound finished communications equipment shipped as railroad freight. The railroad
also serves some of Hawthorne’s industrial neighbors. [TheBellSystem, pdf page 75]
Manufacturers' Junction Railway (MJ) was originally incorporated in 1903 to serve the
Hawthorn Works of Western Electric, which was the manufacturing arm of the Bell System. It began operation in 1906. AT&T closed Hawthorn Works and sold MJ to a subsidiary of
OmniTRAX in May, 1986. (
UP) According to their web site, MJ interchanges with BRC, which in turn interchanges with BNSF, CN, and CSXT (B&OCT). Even though some of the Hawthorn Works land was redeveloped as retail space, enough land was supposed to be redeveloped as industry to make MJ viable. And in 1998 it sounds like the plan was working:
"Our two locomotives were built in 1947, but they still run like tops," said Turk, a 30-year veteran of the Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Railway before taking over the MJ four years ago.
Its age aside, the MJ is a busy little railroad that keeps Turk and his colleagues hustling from 6:30 a.m. till whenever quitting time occurs.
"We already moved 60 cars this morning and have another 27 coming off the Belt (Belt Railroad of Chicago) later today," Turk said.
The little railroad, which serves seven industries and connects them with some of the city's major railroads and belt lines, has benefited from Chicago's booming economy as well as the efforts of its parent, OmniTRAX Inc., in redeveloping the sprawling but abandoned Western Electric Co. Hawthorne Works as a logistics center specializing in transferring commodities between trucks and railroads.
"OmniTRAX bought Hawthorne and is turning it into a warehouse transloading facility," Turk said. (ChicagoTribune)
During its hayday, it had 200 employees and 600 miles of track. In 1998, it had four employees and 5.5 miles of track with 1.78 route miles. (ChicagoTribune) But we have had two recessions since then, and it seems they have taken a toll. A
TrainOrders posting in Nov. 2012 indicates there had been no freight customers for a few years.
A Nov. 2012 photo of the remaining two engines indicates they are to be scrapped. I wonder if the
Menards replaced the industries they did have.
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It appears the rail car is on the blue overpass, which would be the MJ route. (The wider overpass behind the blue overpass is the Belt Railway of Chicago.) So I assume that CSX's B&OCT route has been extended south to include the old MJ route.
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Google Earth, Mar 2012
The last image with the "armstrong" turntable |
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Google Earth, Jul 2016
The last image with the roundhouse |
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Marc Malnekoff posted
MJ RY 23 at Cicero, IL 3/23/2007
Pete Kaplan IS MJ STILL IN BUISNESS?
Bryan Howell No. The locomotives were scrapped a few years ago [written in 2020] after copper thieves stripped them.
Dennis DeBruler MJ = Manufacturers' Junction
It was created by Western Electric in 1903 to serve its Hawthorne Works. When the works was closed in 1986, MJ was sold to OmniTRAX.
The turntable still appears in a Google Earth 2012 image and the roundhouse still appears in 2016.
https://industrialscenery.blogspot.com/.../manufacturers...
Marc Malnekoff posted
Going through my archives today and found this shot. Looking back I am glad I asked and was allowed to shoot some photos here. MJ 23 Cicero, IL. March ,23,2007 |
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Junior Hill commented on Marc's post This warms my soul seeing this beauty in such nice shape here in your photo, as she should be .. Last time I saw her, she was being ripped apart by scrappers... |
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Steven Kakoczki commented on Marc's post June 1980 |
Marty Bernard
posted three images with the comment:
A Loved SW1s
She is Manufactures' Junction Railway #6 built in January 1947. I had been looking for her for years but she was always hiding where I couldn't seek. Finally I tagged her near a street in Cicero, IL on January 10, 1991, first photo.
Manufactures Junction is a six mile pike (see map) incorporated to serve the former Western Electric Hawthorne Works which produced telephones and related equipment. It is now owned by OmniTRAX.
I shot the second photo on the same day. Unfortunately I didn't bring my chain link fence filter. Darn!
Stan Stanovich: …though his name escapes me, there was a gentleman who worked for the Conrail “flying squad,” (mechanical department gang that went from yard to yard to set up road power for outbound trains), who also worked for the MJ in some capacity. I was invited by him to visit the MJ, where I was treated to short cab ride and though I was unfamiliar with the ancient pre 26 brake valve was allowed behind the throttle for a few minutes! A memorable experience!!!
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Craig Holmberg commented on Stan's comment It was 6BL on the locomotive. I was on board several times. I saw no changes on the interior of the cab, still had the headlight control above the window. |
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Craig Holmberg commented on Marty's post, cropped The last tariff that I have listing the industries. 9/15/2006 |
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Craig Holmberg commented on Marty's post 4/9/1970 Aerial Photo |
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Bob Kalal commented on Marty's post not my photo, wish all that was still there. |
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Craig Holmberg commented on Marty's post Junior Farmer: Craig Holmberg Ex- CNW. |
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Larry Burke posted
Manufacture Junction Railway. Cicero, IL Oct 1968 Dave Regittko photo, John DePauw collection The railroad of Western Electric Hawthorne Works Plant. |
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Logan Fifer commented on Larry's post I believe this caboose is still in existence. Here is the lat/long: 42.2571058, -88.4473407. It's located next to a pond on Dean Street, south of Woodstock, IL. It's in serious need of repair and restoration. |
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Steve Pahl commented on Larry's post This is what it looked like February 2021. Pretty sad. |
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Art Gross commented on Edward's share I have slide of this same scene must have been taken seconds apart. Only difference is some smoke along the BRC to the right of the caboose. |
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Brian Krotzman posted to Off the Beaten Track Branchline |
Brian Krotzman caught a picture of an MJ locomotive running light around 2005. He took the shot while sitting on the BRC at 31st Street. The lower track is the BNSF connection from the BRC to the Aurora line.
Facebook has a closeup of this color scheme and
Marty caught a different color scheme. From the Facebook comments we learn that bums broke into the roundhouse and set both well-maintained SW1s on fire. The fire was bad enough that neither unit could be salvaged.
In addition to several pictures of the locomotives,
Paul Rome has pictures of the interior of the roundhouse and a
crane. David Parker posted
a 1982 picture of an engine on the turntable in a blue livery. And
a shot that includes the roundhouse. Larry Meyer
posted a sequence of five pictures of the roundhouse and turntable. (Click on the pictures to go through the sequence.)
Scott Griffith
posted five photos with the comment:
Any of you OLD HEADS remember delivering or interchanging with this railroad off the Cicero branch? Manufacturers Junction Railway If so could you explain the move or give details.
I guess I qualify. It was a very short, steep connection near 16th St. Early 70s we only had one car at a time.
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Ray Weart commented on a posting
The MJ was a very hard railroad to get photos of as it ran behind fences for the most part. I work for a Class 1 railroad which allowed me to be legally "Inside the fence" so to speak to get some rare MJ photos. This shot was taken May 1, 2009 on what we believe was one of the very last MJ runs |
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John DeWit Woodlock II posted
UTAH 2959; MJ 7;6 @ MJ shops/Ogden Ave-Cicero,IL 16 DEC 97. |
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WE 100th Anniversary
If the smile looks a little strained, it's probably
because the wrench was heavy. Irene Kramer of
the Hawthorne Works donned an oversized
pair of coveralls and engineer's cap and posed
in front of a Manufacturer's Junction Railway
engine. The year? 1931. |
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Junior Hill posted
In 2011 I was able to "access" the dormant roundhouse of the Manufacturer's Junction Railway at Cicero, IL. What I found inside wasn't nice, the RY's vintage SW1's were being picked apart by scrappers and bums who were living inside the roundhouse. Sadly, a couple years later the SW1's were pulled outside and scrapped onsite by contractors. Later the 100 year old roundhouse was demolished, ending the MJRR forever.
Charlie Benoit Do you have any other photos of the MJ? I am researching for a book on Chicago industrial railroading
Junior Hill Charlie Benoit I have 100+ photos of the MJ from 2 visits to the roundhouse from around the same time. All photos show the interior in decay such as above. The book sounds very interesting! I'd be happy to let you use any of my photos for the project. |
Rob Olewinski Cmraseye
posted three photos with the comment: "revisiting the former MJ before it was all torn down...Cicero, IL. 2/2010"
[There are a lot of informative comments on this post.]
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Not many railroads are small enough that the whole thing can be captured by a screen grab of a topo map.
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1929 Englewood Quad @ 24,000 |
John Smith
posted several pictures of the roundhouse and turntable from 2006 in a group that is now public.
Gary Talsky
posted three interior shots.
Edward Kwiatkowski
posted a 2007 photo of #23 pulling a train through
Hawthorn Junction. The comments provide the history that the last train ran in 2009, the switchers have been scrapped because the copper was stolen out of them, and the roundhouse was torn down in 2016.
Gary Talsky
posted a couple of pictures he took March 1, 2015.
Gary Talsky
posted 12 photos he took Feb. 25, 2012.
Gary Talsky
posted 3 photos of the interior that he took March 1, 2015.
John Smith collected 30 of Gary's photos into one "Part 1"
posting.
John Smith collected 38 of Gary's photos into one "Part 2"
posting, some of them are different.
Bob Lalich Flickr 1986 Photo, MJ #6 passing a neat looking steel storage yard.
Additional photos, including a steam locomotive, are available in this
Facebook posting.
Photo of
orange caboose #101 (
posting)
Jon Roma Western Electric's Hawthorne Works there in the background ... my grandmother and many of her siblings worked there.
Jeff Delhaye That caboose sits in a yard in Crystal Lake, Il, these days.
Bob Lalich I've never seen an MJ caboose before! It is striking! There are interesting details in the background as well - the Hawthorn Works tower, the rise of the MJ tracks to the Cermak Road bridge, the light tower of the BRC yard, and the smoke. It is coming from a stack; possibly on a caboose, but that is a lot of smoke to be coming from a stove.
Arturo Gross I noticed the smoke too, it appears to be coming from a smokestack beyond the BRC tracks, but can't tell for sure.
Earl Camembert Water Tower is still standing, but the MJ RR roundhouse was demolished just last year.
William Foamer
posted eight photos of the interior from 2003 and 2016. Some comments add two interior shots from 2015.