Showing posts with label rrIHB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rrIHB. Show all posts

Monday, September 29, 2025

IHB Gary & Western LCL Transfer Yard

(Satellite)

Korry Shepard posted
The entry to the former Indiana Harbor Belt Gary & Western LCL transfer yard at Ivanhoe Junction (CP Ivanhoe). I'm looking east while an eastbound Canadian National freight crosses the diamond ahead. Loving the old Griswold signal tower. It still works.

I looked for, and found, the above posting after I saw this posting.
Korry Shepard posted four images with the comment:
I got a lot of questions about the Gibson Transfer Yard, the LCL yard, so here we go.
An LCL or Less-than-Container-Load yard is a space railroads use to hold cargo for multiple customers that does not fill an entire railcar or container. 
What did they do? LCL operations consisted of truck shipments and packages from shippers, as well as their deliveries to the LCL yard. At the yard, clerks consolidated clearance and shipping documentation, resulting in cargo being loaded into railcars until the cars were full. Each railcar carried cargo for multiple customers traveling in the same general direction. Once loaded, workers sorted and placed goods on new trains for distribution to various customers or to a single location. This was commonly seen as more cost-effective from the shipper's perspective, as they only paid for a percentage of the volume they required for any given freight car. In other cases, shippers would share the cost of volume with one or more businesses.
Railcars were spotted on set tracks designated for particular destinations every day. If a LCL load arrived by train or a shipment arrived by truck, the company knew exactly where shipments would go once they arrived at the yard. 
Let's say multiple trucks brought a shipment of barley destined for delivery to a brewery in Gary. At the LCL yard, that specific cargo would always be spotted on, say, "track 7". There could be 13 half-filled barley cars on track 7 that could be filled with the new shipment. Or, shipments can be broken into different "spots" on "Track 7." Say Brand X barely would be spotted on Track 7 at the 5th spot, and Brand Y would be spotted at the 12th spot on Track 7, etc. IHB would fill the cars until each was full. Once done, they would be delivered to the brewery, the empties would be brought back, and so on. 
Sometimes the cars delivered would contain barley on one half of the car, and barley slated for another brewery on the other, or any variation thereof. Now replace barley with any deliverable commodity. Coal, gravel, barley, rye, ore,  stone slabs, or wet goods such as milk, petroleum, water, rubber, etc. If they were local-bound, they were likely sorted in the LCL.
Sometimes, freight arriving at the central Gibson Yard would need to be unloaded into different cars at the LCL Yard. If a shipment of fish came into Gibson from, let's say, Blue Island, and that fish is destined for the IHB freight office in Gary. This car, or associated cars, would be detached from the initial train and transferred onto a train bound for the LCL yard. Once there, the fish would be transferred to another car spotted on a designated track, and the original car would be returned to Gibson later. Once in Gary, the fish would be unloaded into a truck for distribution.
IHB was not the only laborer in the yard. By the 1940s, much of this work had been contracted to brokers. These brokers hired workers to handle specific freight in the yard on behalf of the cosigner or company. These contracted grunts would load freight into cars owned by their employers. IHB would have rented out spots on certain tracks for these types of workers. This freight would be transported on LCL trains from a specific location. 
Sometimes the destinations were not local, but were set to be transferred to another train for further transportation east of Gary, and IHB was the bridge between. There were also situations when specific freight required the car to be in a different spot on the LCL train multiple times until the car was empty. All of this work was done on precise schedules. Time is money on the railroad. The work was hard, long, tedious, and went 24/7. This was the time when a freight yard clerk position was coveted. They were the ones keeping track of all of this movement and work, without sophisticated software and computers to aid them. Trucks would also come to the yard to pick up shipments.
In the early 1910s, IHB was the only railroad handling LCL operations. The next railroad to enter that game was the Baltimore & Ohio in July of 1912. That same year, in response to a new LCL yard opening at Clearing Yard by then Chicago Union Transfer Railway and the Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad, New York Central announced its intention to build a brand-new LCL yard for IHB near Gibson. The City of Gary had not been touched by any major railroad entity about a new interchange and LCL yards. Kirk Yard and some smaller yards in its orbit were about the extent of this business. It was so new that its population didn't justify the cost of scraping out new rail yards within the city itself, especially for LCL business. The streetcar system was enough to handle Gary's traffic. The new IHB LCL yard, which began construction in 1913, was expected to meet Gary's future business needs, as it was anticipated to grow exponentially over the next decade.
By November 1913, grading was completed at the new Gibson Transfer Yard, and work began on the initial 14 miles of trackage. Numerous freight sheds were built to serve the IHB, Michigan Central, and Michigan Southern railroads. The yard had two units. A gigantic "wye" was constructed west of Kennedy Avenue, which would connect the new LCL yard with the main Gibson Yard, and provide passage for Michigan Central freights to the yard as well. They called this section "Unit 1." Unit 2 was east of Cline Avenue, beginning just west of Ivanhoe Interlocking. By spring, construction had included 32 additional miles of tracks, more office buildings, loading platforms, a two-story boarding house, a cafeteria, and employed 230 workers. 
 In 1917, a large sulphuric acid fire caused by unknown means resulted in the loss of a few miles of track and three smaller platforms. This hastened an additional investment in the LCL yard. It ensured that IHB's LCL Yard was, according to the Times, "the largest and most complete 'less than carload' freight transfer yard in the world." When 1917 rolled around, the LCL yard had a 200-foot-long building with loading platforms. The building had modern electric generators and other conveniences not typically seen in other LCL yards. It wouldn't be until 1924 that the entire yard would be completed, with an additional 30 tracks. Another fire destroyed an office building, destroying many records.
In 1958, New York Central began its new "flexi-van" truck-to-rail piggy-back service at Gibson Transfer Yard. It employed a new technique that allowed flat trailers to slide from the train car to highway wheels in about 4 minutes. When the truck reached its destination, it could slide back onto a railcar and start the process all over again. This was the first instance of this service anywhere in the United States. This service operated between Chicago and New York.
By 1960, there was too much competition with trucks and the further evolution of commercial interstate road systems. LCL freight movements fell rapidly due to trucking. IHB petitioned the Indiana Public Service Commission to discontinue LCL freight service. The petition was granted that June, and service immediately ceased. As the IHB railroaders aged, they lost their positions and subsequently began retiring in large numbers. In 1977, a railroad relocation project nearly saw the Chessie System utilize the Wabash 4th District to access the Gary & Western high line, allowing it to reach the old Gibson Transfer Yard, where it planned to repurpose the abandoned yard. However, this never materialized.
Rick La Fever: At one point, NYC/IHB had a transload service called Flexi-Flo on the site of Gibson Transfer Yard. Flexi_Flo was a series of rounded covered hoppers that I think could loaded and unloaded by air pressure. Since many of them were used for cement service, it would make sense to route some to NW Indiana since we were still building with concrete. USS Atlas Cement used to be at Buffington Harbor but closed in 1991. After that LaFarge unloaded cement at Buffington from barges or boats(remember Great Lakes Ships are commonly known as "boats" no matter how large.)
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Korry Shepard commented on his post
Here is a close-up of Unit 2, from 1951. IHB Gibson Transfer Yard, LCL. You can see the trucks and other vehicles parked in the yard, along with other yard facilities. I annotated the image.

Korry Shepard commented on his post
Here is the LCL yard from 1983. It had ceased operating as an LCL yard for over 20 years by now.

I have to learn to completely read a posting before I research the topic! Obviously, the yard in question are the two sets of tracks between Kennedy and Cline. What surprised me was the lack of freight houses. Normally, freight houses are the center of operation for LCL freight. But those operations handled package freight in boxcars. According to Korry's description, this facility handled bulk LCL freight. (This map explains the "baseball diamond" looking facility at US-20 & Cline in the above aerial photo. It was a drive-in theater.)
1953/55 Highland Quad @ 24,000

Since I got an aerial looking for freight houses, I'll include it. It appears that I found the same photo. IHB's big Gibson Yard is out-of-frame to the left.
Dec 1, 1951 @ 28,400; AR1PK0000010133

Today, the yard has gone full circle in terms of providing an interface to the "last mile:" transloading. By using IHB's yard, the transload company can service all six Class I railroads.
savageco

Saturday, May 31, 2025

BRC 55th Street Junction Tower: BRC vs. BRC+IHB

Old: (Satellite, according to the aerial photo below, the tower was in the southwest quadrant.)
The connecting track behind the tower didn't make sense for the southwest quadrant so I dug deeper and discovered a newer tower was in the northwest quadrant.
New: (Satellite)

Edward Kwiatkowski posted
The Belt Railway Of Chicago's 55th Street Junction tower near Chicago's Midway Airport. Chicago Illinois, April 1984. ( Gone,)
Edward Kwiatkowski photo.
Jim Kelling shared
Chicago Belt Railway at 55th Street on the South Side
Tim Shanahan shared

This BRC train is heading geographically North.
NorthAmericanInterlockings_Illinois
[Back in the signalling pipelines day.]

NorthAmericanInterlockings_Illinois

NorthAmericanInterlockings_Illinois
Dennis DeBruler commented on Jim's share
This is the new tower, and it was in the northwest quadrant of the crossing: https://maps.app.goo.gl/rSMN7YdiN5HWt4cc6. Diagram is from https://northamericaninterlockings.com/illinois_9.html.
Dennis DeBruler also commented on Tim's share

1938 Aerial Photo from ILHAP

Dec 4, 1951 @ 23,600; AR1SA0000020018

BRC had both a north/south and east/west route through this crossing. The IHB had an east/west route through the crossing.
1953/56 Berwyn and Englewood Quads @ 24,000

Friday, September 30, 2022

IHB Stewart Avenue Tower

(Satellite)

Photo by J.D. (Tuch) Santucci via dhke, closed in 1989
Also uploaded by Mike Breski (in comment) and Michael Brandt.

IHB Diagrams, p12 via dhke

Ken Schmidt posted via Dennis DeBruler
[The Stewart Avenue Tower is a little right of the center of this photo.]

I include this 1929 topo map because...
1929 Blue Island Quad @ 24,000

...I was surprised by how many streets, including Stewart Avenue, didn't actually exist in 1939.
1939 Aerial Photo from ILHAP

I was even more surprised that I could not see the tower north of the mainline. (I included some boxcars to show that a building should be casting a shadow.) So I'm confused.
At photo resolution

Of course, it doesn't show up on a contemporary image.
Satellite

Jimmy Fiedler posted
Richard Fiedler shared


Friday, November 12, 2021

IHB Industries Served by the "510 Center Job"

(Satellite)

I've documented the remaining rail-served industries on several branches in the Chicagoland area. I'm happy to discover a branch that has too many industries to analyze in detail. 
George M Stupar posted
1-4-2010, unknown location, MIKE STUPAR PHOTO
Tom Siniawski: Sterling lumber on the right. Blue Island
Tim Hager: 510 Center Job, looking west. The bridge in the distance is 127th Street in Blue Island.
Tim Hager: I worked that job with Steve Wisneski a couple months ago. I couldn’t believe how many industries there are for that job.
Bill Randolph: Tim Hager used to be a lot more.
Chuck Mager: That location was called Wireton, back in the day. No clue what it is called today wirh all the track layout and signal changes!!
Larry Langley: I'm surprised to see a caboose in this photo. Thought all of them were gone.
[I noticed the caboose as well. Note the the of the date of the photo is 2010. I wonder if they still use them.]

I start with a road map image because it is easier to see where the tracks are.
Road Map

And then the satellite equivalent. It appears that some of the industries also use the Cal Sag Channel for transportation.
Satellite

The Sterling Lumber Co label one the maps must be old data because it looks like it is now a liquids transloading operation.
Satellite

This industrial park is a rather recent development. There was just some tank farms on this land in a 1963 topo map.
1978 Blue Island Quadrangle @ 1:24,000




Saturday, October 23, 2021

East Chicago Terminal Railroad's Railyard

(Satellite)

It opened July 27, 2021. [ProgressiveRailroading] I'm used to seeing railyards disappear. It is nice to see one that has been built.

EastChicagoRail
"Our facility has the capacity to store in excess of 200 railcars as well as transload 60 railcars."

(new window, 1:06)

Doug Kaniuk posted the above YouTube link.
Dennis DeBruler commented on Doug's post
That is new enough that it has yet to show up in satellite images.

Satellite



Sunday, September 5, 2021

Maps of Railroads in Southeast Chicago

I know enough about the railroads in Southeast Chicago to know that it was a spaghetti bowl of tracks. Because there was a lot of industry in the area, one railroad would build tracks along side another railroad just to access a large industry. These maps help untangle the noodles.

Michael Mora posted seven images with the comment:
U.S. government maps of just some of the railways that ran through Southeast Side, 1916-1919: Chicago & Calumet River Railroad; Chicago & Western Indiana Railway; Calumet Western Railway; Chicago Short Line Railway; Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Railway; Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad; Pennsylvania Railroad. Interstate Commerce Commission, U.S. National Archives, catalog.archives.gov

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Daniel Bovino posted
Here’s a late 1880’s view of Roseland, Pullman, and the Calumet region. It shows a Lake Calumet in its original state and other lakes that have since been filled in. Hyde Lake is almost completely gone. Wolf Lake and Lake George have also been altered by the industrial push into this region over the last 150 years. Thankfully, some of our remaining area wetlands are under restoration. 
I received this wonderful map from Mendel Alumni, John Ormsby.
John Ormsby: Map taken from Library of Congress. Map Room in Jefferson Building
Paul Jevert shared
1880's topographical map of the southside at that time unincorporated into the City!

Back in 1916-19, the C&WI still owned the BRC tracks. BRC was created for the freight operations so that C&WI could concentrate on passenger service to the Dearborn Station.  

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

1894,1961 Falstaff Malt Plant (#11)/(Albert Schwill and Columbia Malting)

(Satellite is below)

(There are more photos with the Falstaff Malt Plant in the background in NS/PRR's Colehour Yard and Junction.) 

Michael Mora posted three photos with the comment:
Vintage 1962 and 1965 aerial photos of Falstaff Plant 11 (Malting Plant) on East Side of Chicago, 103d & Indianapolis Blvd. Great views of surrounding area. From University of Missouri St Louis Digital Library, St Louis Mercantile Library special collection. https://dl.mospace.umsystem.edu/.../object/umsl%3A201201. High resolution links below
Tight aerial shot towards lakefront, 1962 (mislabeled as New York City plant), https://dl.mospace.umsystem.edu/.../object/umsl%3A201202
Aerial shot towards lakefront and Calumet Park, 1965, https://dl.mospace.umsystem.edu/.../object/umsl%3A201203
Bonus: 1945 blueprint survey of former Albert Schwill & Co. malting plant at same site https://dl.mospace.umsystem.edu/.../object/umsl%3A201206
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Neil A Spector posted

It is no surprise that brewing beer has been a big business for over a century. In this copy of a c1926 photo, I added a red rectangle around Falstaff's malting plant. "Prior to Falstaff ownership, it was actually two different companies, Albert Schwill and Columbia Malting." [Bob Lalich comment on a posting]
Carole Brozovich posted plus paint

Percy Sloan 1930 Aerial, cropped, via Newberry

Carole Brozovich commented on her posting
[I discovered this is from csu.edu, Photo 62.]

wrhistoricalsociety, this webpage has an extensive history of this plant
"The beer can silos were part of Falstaff’s Plant #11. The plant was, and still is, often referred to as something it was not.  It was not a brewery.  It was a malting plant that started out on that site by Albert Schwill & Co. in 1894.  It was only much later acquired by the Falstaff Brewing Corporation."
 
wrhistoricalsociety
The original malting plant.
"By 1960 Falstaff Brewing was the third largest brewer in America, behind only Anheuser-Busch and Schlitz. It was in 1961 that Falstaff purchased our local Albert Schwill malting facilities....Falstaff’s abandoned Plant #11 and its beer can silos were eventually demolished.  The job was completed in April of 1997, when the silos and the main barley processing building were dropped by explosives and disappeared into history."


The plant has been torn down. That explains this isolated property between tracks.
Satellite
1938 Aerial Photo from ILHAP

Wayne Koch posted
PC ex-NYC EMDs on the PRR at Colehour South Chicago ILL 3-1970 Jim Burd.
Dennis DeBruler I've never seen a photo that included the whole Falstaff facility before.
Bob Lalich The Falstaff plant was formerly two separate companies; Albert Schwill & Co and Columbia Malting Co.

BreweryMaltHouses, 1933 (search for "Schwill" for commentary and more photos)
Falstaff bought the plant in 1961, it was closed by the late 1970s, and torn down in the late 1990s.

3D Satellite
This Falstaff plant also solves a puzzle I have had ever since I spotted these silos along the Pennsy tracks just east of the big lift bridges across the Calumet River on satellite images. When I rode the Pennsy from Fort Wayne to Chicago when I was in college, I remember seeing a big Falstaff sign on a grain elevator on the right (North) side just before I got to the bridges. But the silos that still stand are on the left side of an inbound train. Now I understand that I was seeing this plant that has been torn down rather than the silos that are still standing. It is good to learn that my memory was correct. The Falstaff sign was just a little further east of the bridges. I've since learned that the still standing silos were part of the Norris Grain Elevator.

John DeWit Woodlock II commented on his posting
Part of Falstaff is in the background.
John DeWit Woodlock II commented on his posting
Looking "eastbound" down the PRR. Note the remaining portion of the Falstaff complex on the left.
Kim Tonry commented on a post
I took this shot of them on November 16, 1985 back when I worked for the Daily Calumet.
Kim Tonry Torn down 1996-97.
https://www.nwitimes.com/.../article_a75cffa6-fd02-52b4...
Benito Herrera They did the right thing by tearing down these silos and this is why: https://www.chicagotribune.com/.../ct-xpm-1990-09-14... "The brewery has remained vacant since the 1970s."
Susan Johnson-Deneen Benito Herrera I think about all the dangerous places I “investigated” as a kid. We used to build underground forts and spend hours in them underground. They were secret and if they had caved in, it would have been terrible for our parents. We would’ve been hard to find.

Marty Gatton shared
Falstaff Beer malting plant, pre-demolition. SE Chicago.

Karen Brozynski posted
The photo taken by C. Stricker that I posted the bottom only last week.
[A photo of the State Line Generating Station, the malting plant, and Colehour Yard.]

Marty Gatton shared
Aerial shot of Colehour yard and surrounding area as seen at Southeast Chicago Historical Society...
Unknown photographers or year
Dwain Jerantowski I worked Conrail N S, had to say overtime when they imploded the silos in case debris landed on the tracks.
Dennis DeBruler commented on Marty's share
Karen states the photographer is C. Stricker. There is no Skyway, so it was taken before 1958. In fact, the white label on the photo indicates circa 1940.

George M Stupar posted
November 1976, An Amtrak French Turboliner is seen on the Chicago Line near the IN / Ill border.
Dennis DeBruler: Not only is the Turboliner history, but so is the Falstaff Malt Plant.

Rod Sellers posted
Where am I?

Rod commented on his post
Answer: Photo from Albert Schwill Malthouse later Falstaff Malthouse (as of 1961) view toward Indianapolis Avenue Most noticeable landmark is St. Francis De Sales (dedicated 1912) near center of photograph. Bethlehem Lutheran Church (which burned down in 1918) at 103rd and Avenue H is partially visible at extreme left. Attached photo gives clear view of Bethlehem Lutheran Church 1917.

William Shapotkin posted
We are on Chicago's Southeast side near 103rd St/Indianapolis Blvd (street to left of tracks). At right is the PRR's Pittsburgh Ft Wayne & Chicago Mainline. Veering off to left is the PRR's South Chicago & Southern line (now abandoned north of approx 130th St) over which such trains as the SOUTH WIND used to enter Chicago off the PRR's "Panhandle" at Bernice Jct. The junction here was known as "Colehour." View looks S/W in 1929. From the facebook page "Chicagoland Before We Were Born."

Cropped from a photo of Roby Racetrack posted by Rod Sellers.
[There were three racetracks in Northwest Indiana because of a law that a place could gamble only 10 days of the month.]

idaillinois aerial view     It took me a while to identify that the tracks in the foreground are NS/NYC because the caption says the view is Northwest. The view is basically West. If anything, it is south of west. I also didn't recognize the name because I think of this as the Falstaff malting plant. I keep forgetting the Albert Schwill and Columbia names. The green rectangle is the malt plant, yellow is the Keystone elevator and blue is Wisconsin Steel.
1953 Calumet Lake Quadrangle at 1:24,000

Carole Brozvich posted
STORIES BEHIND THE GIANT FALSTAFF BEER CANS
Countless people, especially children in their parents’ cars on their way to Chicago, watched for the huge beer cans and the Chicago Skyway, signs they were getting close to their destination.
[With a 1904 expansion, Albert Schwill & Co.'s plant became the largest malting plant in the world.]
"By 1960 Falstaff Brewing was the third largest brewer in America, behind only Anheuser-Busch and Schlitz. It was in 1961 that Falstaff purchased our local Albert Schwill malting facilities."
[The plant was demolished in 1997.]


Neil A Spector shared four photos posted by Al Swiatek with the comment: "Schwill Malt Co. 10200 South Indianapolis Blvd, Chicago. Later sold to the Falstaff Co."
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Rod Sellers posted
Answer to Feb 23 "Where are we?"
The first thing to clarify is that there was never a brewery between 103 and 106th along Indianapolis Boulevard. The various companies involved were all malt houses not breweries. . However the locations, dates of operation and other details are confusing. National Malting, Albert Schwill, Columbia Malting and Falstaff were in that area at various times. Any help in clarifying this mess is appreciated.

Dennis DeBruler commented on Rod's post
Both facilities were owned by Albert Schwill according to this photo from
The caption on this photo indicates that National Malting was present in 1915.
I deleted the following from my Facebook comment because it didn't agree with the Sanborn map.
So I think the headhouse on the right side of your photo belonged to National Malting and we are looking Westish across the NYC tracks.
Given the 1933 advertisement in the above linked BreweryMaltHouses, I think that Schwill must have bought National Milling (north facility) and Columbia Malting (south facility) by 1933.
And then Falstaff bought Schwill in 1961. National obviously built new facilities after the 1915 fire and they appear in Falstaff photos. The Columbia Malting part got completely rebuilt between the Schwill photo and more contemporary photos.


Michael Mora posted on Rod's post
Here's a 1913 Sanborn map showing locations of National Malting (103rd & Indianapolis, 1906-1912, total loss in 1912 fire), Albert Schwill old and new plants (1895-1961, sold to Falstaff), and Columbia Malting (1898-1964, sold to Falstaff). As a kid from South Chicago, my favorite thing about this area was bike racing on the access road to Hammond with a pit stop at Dunkin Donuts.

Dennis DeBruler commented on Micahel's comment
These elevators are another reminder that industries changed a lot during the first two decades of the 20th Century. Even the state boundary has moved since 1913. This 1938 aerial shows that the "B" plant of Schwill made it through the depression. And that Schwill expanded southwest across the State Line.
Falstaff must have bought another Columbia Malting facility in 1964 because the one in Chicago was gone by 1938.

Michael Mora commented on Dennis' comment
So for Columbia Malting I found this November 1961 Trib story about malting workers strike that hit Falstaff and Columbia at their East Side locations. And a few years later US brought antitrust suit against Falstaff for buying a major New England brewer after it bought a buncha other ones elsewhere, as well as Schwill and Columbia of Chicago malting plants in '61 and '64. But this history sure is complicated. There was another one next to Schwill in 1890s that United Breweries conglomerate bought, but it must have either died or been absorbed by Schwill maybe by time of 1913 map.

Dennis DeBruler commented on Michael's comment
OK, my current theory is that just the grain elevator in the red rectangle was part of Schwill and that the rest of the facility to the south was Columbia. Looking at historical aerials, the Schwill facilities remained the same until they were torn down between 1988-98, but the Columbia facilities got rebuilt and/or the artist got lazy.

Riod Sellers commented on his post
Thanks for your help with this. Definitely a confusing history. Here is what I think.
SECHS has 2 photos of the National Malting Company fire, both of which were dated as c1915, obviously an incorrect date. A Chicago Tribune article on September 4, 1912 details the fire which destroyed the plant. The parent company of National Malting liquidated in September of 1912. Albert Schwill was there from 1895 to 1961 when it was bought by Falstaff. An article (attached) about South Chicago real estate in 1902 which appeared in the Daily Calumet on the occasion of South Chicago’s 125th Anniversary verifies the dates for the startups of Schwill (1895) and Columbia (1898). According to the Daily Calumet Falstaff took over Schwill on June 30, 1961. Columbia Malting was there from 1898 to 1964? Could not find anything about the sale of Columbia to Falstaff but November 1961 Trib article about the strike proves that Columbia was still in business after the June 1961 takeover of Schwill by Falstaff. Falstaff closed the operation in the mid 1980s.
A couple of additional items found in my research. Neither Schwill nor Columbia Malting crossed the state line into Indiana as shown by the Sanborn map and a 1945 survey I came across. The road which runs from under the viaduct entering Calumet Park (between Ewing and Avenue J, between the railroad tracks) has been known both as Albert Schwill Company Road and Columbia Malt Drive. A Chicago History Museum guide to Chicago street names states: Columbia Malt Drive, 3960E 10456 to 10548S Street facing the Columbia Malting Company that closed in 1964. Neighborhood folks called it by another name. Does anyone remember?

Rod Sellers posted
[The State Line Generating Station is in the foreground.]
  

Was National Malting Co a predecessor of Albert Schwill? A 1915 idaillinois photo of a fire provides a location of "near 104th and Indianapolis."  Another photo of the fire

1996 Flickr of the silos being torn down     photo of the headhouse

More photos with Falstaff in the background

In the background of a 1995 Flickr railfan shot (source)

1982 d.w.davidson Flickr of the north side of the facility

Heathen Adams posted the results of a search but with no information as to how to repeat the search.