Monthly Archives: May 2018

You are browsing the site archives by month.

S&NY Towanda Office

A better title for this post might be, “They look, but do not see.”

Several years ago, I purchased a couple of digital scans of photos from glass-plate negatives in the Bradley-Hahn Collection at the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania. Unfortunately, this collection is not digitized, and I picked the images based on a written description only.

One of the images was a city scene that showed no trains, to my disappointment; or so I thought. Thus the image sat unused in my digital collection for years, until recently while looking for more “Wordless Wednesday” material I looked a little closer…

Bradley-Hahn Collection, RR Museum of PA

The neat thing about these old glass-plate negatives is the fine detail they contain:

Bradley-Hahn Collection, RR Museum of PA

Behold! The S&NY business office at Towanda, located in the Towanda Opera House.

Bradley-Hahn Collection, RR Museum of PA

And around the corner on Washington Street, the LV-S&NY freight house with a Boston & Albany boxcar on the siding.

So, there was railroad content in the photo after all. I just didn’t look close enough. There is a lesson there somewhere…

Same corner in the modern day via Google:

Google Earth

 

(Note: No “WW” or “TT” last week, this week, and possibly next week due to family commitments and the NMRA MidCentral Region Convention in Cincinnati.)

Wordless Wednesday #155

Bill Caloroso – Cal’s Classics

Talky Tuesday #112

Last week’s “WW #154” is a snapshot of a S&NY section crew and their transportation. The “speeder” looks to be a home-built contraption cobbled together from hand-car wheels applied to a Model-T chassis. While probably a pleasant mode of transport to the job site during fair weather, the ride was probably a cold, wet one in inclement weather. On the deck of the trailer we can see a keg of track spikes and a jack of some sort, stacked together with various tools. I cannot identify any of the fellows in the photo; even magnified there is quite a bit a of blur to the faces. The location is also a mystery.