Satellite |
MJ = Manufacturers' Junction Railway
BRC = Belt Railway Company of Chicago
CB&Q = Chicago, Burlington and Quincy
Forgotten Railways, Roads & Places posted Immediately east of Cicero, IL, an abandoned transfer track from the #BNSFRacetrack. Image taken aboard a train. #abandonedrailway #urbex #history #chicago#illinois Dennis DeBruler Looking south. The tracks still exist. But I can believe they have not been used recently. https://www.google.com/.../@41.8451034,-87.../data=!3m1!1e3 Forgotten Railways, Roads, and Places That imagery is from 2017. I actually watched them tear up this track. It's not to say BNSF won't rebuild this section, but as of now the track is gone. Dennis DeBruler Forgotten Railways, Roads, and Places A "stale" satellite image. Thanks for the update. Dennis DeBruler That Unilever Best Foods building in the background used to be a very common architectural style in Chicago for industrial buildings. https://industrialscenery.blogspot.com/.../continental... |
Dennis DeBruler commented on a post There used to be (1929 Englewood Quadrant) a lot of industry and spurs in that area. The upper-left corner was Western Electrics Hawthorne Works. https://industrialscenery.blogspot.com/.../western... |
Dennis DeBruler commented on a post Some remnants of Manufacturers' Junction Railway, including the roundhouse, still exist in a satellite image. That railroad served the Hawthorne Works. https://www.google.com/.../@41.8461157,-87.../data=!3m1!1e3 |
20161021 6513 |
Nick Hart posted BNSF train S LACNSA didn't quite meet the requirements of the height restriction at the BRC bridge in Cicero. 40 cars suffered significant damage and the bridge also suffered structural damage. Cargo is littered on and around the tracks, ranging from paper towels to boxes of cereal. A WSOR grain train is tied down on the BRC main above and likely won't be going anywhere until the bridge is inspected. 02-14-21 Stan Stanovich: ...got word of it this morning John, train destined for Ashland Avenue!!! [It is nice to see that at least BNSF and NS do a steel-wheel interchange of containers.] |
Matt Hovey commented on Nick's post Wasn't the first time, won't be the last. You see how much lower m4 m5 are at this angle |
The are more photos in the comments on Matthew Linhart's post.
Walt Del Calle: This was a through train that normally runs on the Santa Fe.
[I had seen a comment that the crew was unfamiliar with this route. This explains why. It doesn't explain why there wasn't a pilot. But some Facebook comments indicate that the crew had paper work that would explain which tracks to use for double stacks. You would think if they were on a new route they would have been more diligent about reading their paperwork, not less.]
In the comments on this post the opinion is that if a crew gets orders to do something stupid, the crew should push back using a medium (e.g. radio) that will be recorded and if they are still told to do something stupid, they do something stupid. But I doubt if the crew pushed back in this case. If they knew there was a problem, then they would not have pulled 3/4 of a mile of train under the bridge.
Twisted Truckers posted three photos.
Justin Hughes shared
Ridge Abbott: Good to know the pins work .
1, cropped |
2, cropped |
Keith Huff commented on the third photo, cropped |
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