Thanks for sharing your memory. I miss my dad as well. Dads are special.
Paul
On Sep 10, 2007, at 8:44 PM, Bob Blakely wrote:

> I grew up in Rutland. It was the second largest city in Vermont  
> with 16,000
> souls. The road from my rural home to town took us over an arched
> cement/steel bridge that spanned a narrower part of the Rutland  
> yard. This
> was the one of , if not the largest yard in New England at the  
> time. It was
> one of . My dad (now deceased) took me many times to a spot on the  
> bridge
> where we could sit and watch the goats make trains and switching of  
> engines
> at the round house. We saw trains come from the west & south with  
> produce
> and such for New England and trains being built to carry apples,  
> marble,
> granite and timber back. Twice he took me to a narrow, wooded glen  
> where the
> train from Barrie, laden with granite, would wind around following  
> These
> were the days of steam, mind you. They were magical dragons  
> belching smoke
> and steam and making a wonderful racket.
>
> http://users.rcn.com/jimdu4/Shaughnessy.htm
>
> The yard and the trains are gone now. A shopping mall has replaced  
> the yard
> and all the track has been torn up.
>
> I miss my dad.
>
> Regards,
> Bob...
> --------------------------------------------------------
> "Life isn't like a box of chocolates . .
> it's more like a jar of jalapenos.
> What you do today, might burn your butt tomorrow."
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Rebekah" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
>
>> I think it looks like great fun.  I love trains!
>>
>> rg2
>>
>> On 9/10/07, P. J. Alling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> As I said,.poorly, it's a tourist oriented website and  
>>> attraction. Why
>>> don't you drop them an e-mail with suggestions?
>>>
>>> John Sessoms wrote:
>>>> I was talking about the web site itself not being friendly to rail
>>>> enthusiasts. Yeah it's ok for the tourists, but it doesn't tell  
>>>> me what
>>>> I want to know.
>>>>
>>>> Most of the steam railroad web-pages have a link for the real  
>>>> old-timer
>>>> steam buffs that takes you to a listing of the equipment the  
>>>> railroad
>>>> is
>>>> operating, i.e. what kind of steam engines do they have and how  
>>>> many
>>>> are
>>>> operating ...
>>>>
>>>> Should I travel a thousand miles to get there if they don't have  
>>>> the
>>>> equipment I'm interested in? What if they don't have anything  
>>>> that's
>>>> not
>>>> in the local transportation museum, which is about 950 miles  
>>>> closer?
>>>>
>>>> And without a link on the web site to let me see what equipment  
>>>> they
>>>> have, how am I going to know if they do have something I'm  
>>>> interested
>>>> in?
>>>>
>>>> From:
>>>> "P. J. Alling"
>>>>
>>>>> No, it's a tourist attraction site. It's not that they discourage
>>>>> visitors, but they're old fashioned, no digital computers in  
>>>>> the age
>>>>> of steam, (but I bet they'd love to have a Babbage Difference  
>>>>> Engine
>>>>> to display).
>>>>>
>>>>> John Sessoms wrote:
>>>>> From:
>>>>> "P. J. Alling"
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>> The Valley Railroad, in Essex Connecticut. It's a working Steam
>>>>>> Railway museum. They run a couple of Restored Steam Loco's and  
>>>>>> have a
>>>>>> couple of Modern Chinese Steam Loco's, (one of which they run  
>>>>>> on the
>>>>>> line as well, the other on display), (to the untrained eye,  
>>>>>> with most
>>>>>> of the extra metal work removed they both look like a standard
>>>>>> American type. This engine is sitting a the end of a line of  
>>>>>> cars all
>>>>>> awaiting restoration, and as you can see, occasionally  
>>>>>> cannibalized
>>>>>> for parts.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> http://www.essexsteamtrain.com/index.html
>>>>>>
>>>>> Not a real rail enthusiast site though, because they don't  
>>>>> appear to
>>>>> have any link to the equipment itself.
>
>
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