This is a little redundant of part of a different thread. But I’m asking this more directly in its own thread, in hopes of perhaps catching more attention.
We will be vaccinated, and so masks and all, we are going to take the trip referenced in another thread or two. It will be mid June.
As part of it, we plan to follow the BNSF Chillicothe sub from Joliet to Galesburg. The next day we will go up to Clinton IA, then follow the UP thru Rochelle and over to DeKalb. From there we will make our way down to Aurora, then to Midway Airport.
I am interested in any suggestions for photo locations. What I look for most are interesting trackside buildings, structures, etc. I seek not just directly RR-related things, also any Americana of note; or, really, anything unique. I tend to lean towards things that are vestiges of the past, but am not tied to them only. And any gems just off of those above routes that are worth a detour. I’ve been known to wander off course a time or two.
And of course any obscure roads, bridges, etc. you know about that provide good access; and also warnings regarding what I should avoid.
If you’ve left comments regarding this circuit on other threads, thanks much; and please don’t feel a need to repeat them here.
You could go down to Hannibal Mo and get the Mississippi river crossing of Norfolk Southern, featuring a major bridge, a diamond, and what once was the only tunnel on the former Wabash all within arms reach of one another, and if you then venture west to Moberly, they have a Wabash Railroad History Museum and park there.
If you like rustic Americana, US24 from Peoria to Carrolton will give you an overdose. It’s been a while since I visited Carrolton, but the last time I was there between BNSf an NS blowing for crossings, they kept me awake most of the night. Of course the historic WB junction is just west of Carrolton.
Since you are interested in Americana, historic US Route 66 south of Joliet has a lot, and you may be able to include the ex-Alton/UP/Amtrak St Louis route in your photos.
Here’s a suggestion: Why don’t you go down and do a photo documentation of the underutilized/abandoned bypasses around Chicago, so the next time someone proposes that it should be up to the taxpayers to subsidize the stockholders of the class ones, so they can operate more profitably through the Chicago bottleneck, we can remind them that there is a “cause and effect” aspect they are overlooking?
Back in my earlier days of sales career (when we actually made sales calls on customers and prospects), I travelled all over the state…and always had my camera.
On the former ATSF, Chillicothe and Edlestein Hill to the west are of interest. Further west is the Mississippi River crossing at Ft. Madison, Iowa which is an interesting rail/auto bridge which also controls the lift for barge crossings. Worth the toll to cross. Ft. Madison is an active location for BNSF. Galesburg is a busy spot.
Following the Mississippi River north, the old Rock Island yard is in Silvis. On the Iowa side the CP line hugs the river. Clinton is (was) a busy spot…assume it still is. I would continue north to Sabula, where the CP line splits - line east to Chicago and line north to Minneapolis. The line north is quite scenic with the river.
Cross back to Illinois at Dubuque and check out the CN river bridge crossing, then the unique bridge/tunnel as the former IC line bores into a river bluff and curves to the south. The line then joins the BNSF Twin City - Chicago mainline and heads south along the river before the CN line heads to Galena. Very intersting views of Galena from the US 20 bridge. Unfortunately very few trains on the CN line. If you can time the train thru Galena, this will be worth the wait.
Following the CN line to a small town called Council Hill…that area is very scenic.
At that point I would head south to the UP mainline at Sterling/Rock Falls and check out the old steel mill (still in operation I believe) and the UP line adjacent. Dixon is about 20 miles to the east and be sure to stop in at Fern’s CAfe in downtown Dixon. Years ago, I would eat breakfast there…excellent diner.
Rochelle is another half hour to the east and is a major railroad center with BNSF and UP crossing plus a big intermodal yard to the west of town and a big logistics park
Thanks much. Alas, we won’t have time for Hannibal and Carrollton. But Peoria is (as a friend of mine likes to say) a definite maybe; and perhaps we could venture a little bit down US 24.
Lithouina shoot me a PM when you get into the Streator Area. I can not show you around the area due to my work schedule but my hubby should be able to. He works PT and knows more fun areas to railfan around here than most on the old Santa Fe. Places where you can see them running 60 MPH or better.
I’ll jump on Valpo Ed’s (MP 173) post, and chip in a bit. I’m honestly not sure about the steel and wire mill in Sterling these days. When I retired ten years ago, we were not sending any scrap gons there any more.
Between Sterling and Dixon is Nelson, site of a junction on the UP (tower long gone), but still home to a concrete coal dock that straddles four tracks.
From Dixon east, use Illinois 38 (basially the old Lincoln Highway) to get to Chicagoland. Rochelle, besides the Railroad Park, what’s left of the intermodal terminal, its own railroad and the industries adjacent thereunto, has a lot of neat buildings in the downtown, including an old corner Standard Station. East of Rochelle on 38, the towns of Creston and Malta, with elevators and old downtowns by the tracks, might appeal to you. Then you get to DeKalb, which is probably worth spending some time in. Yes, the coal dock is still there. A trip to the museum to see what is no longer there would be eye-opening.
I don’t know from experience about the diner in Dixon that Ed suggested, but there’s another diner in Cortland (east of DeKalb), on the main drag just north of the tracks, that we’ve often visited. I hope they’ve survived the pandemic, but I suspect that the locals would have helped them out in some way.
If you jump on I-88 between Cortland and DeKalb, you can use that to get to Aurora if you wish. Check out the old roundhouse there (good restaurant, a few shops), and you’ll probably be interested in photographing the Paramount Theatre in town.
I’ll jump on Valpo Ed’s (MP 173) post, and chip in a bit. I’m honestly not sure about the steel and wire mill in Sterling these days. When I retired ten years ago, we were not sending any scrap gons there any more.
Between Sterling and Dixon is Nelson, site of a junction on the UP (tower long gone), but still home to a concrete coal dock that straddles four tracks.
From Dixon east, use Illinois 38 (basially the old Lincoln Highway) to get to Chicagoland. Rochelle, besides the Railroad Park, what’s left of the intermodal terminal, its own railroad and the industries adjacent thereunto, has a lot of neat buildings in the downtown, including an old corner Standard Station. East of Rochelle on 38, the towns of Creston and Malta, with elevators and old downtowns by the tracks, might appeal to you. Then you get to DeKalb, which is probably worth spending some time in. Yes, the coal dock is still there. A trip to the museum to see what is no longer there would be eye-opening.
I don’t know from experience about the diner in Dixon that Ed suggested, but there’s another diner in Cortland (east of DeKalb), on the main drag just north of the tracks, that we’ve often visited. I hope they’ve survived the pandemic, but I suspect that the locals would have helped them out in some way.
If you jump on I-88 between Cortland and DeKalb, you can use that to get to Aurora if you wish. Check out the old roundhouse there (good restaurant, a few shops), and you’ll probably be interested in photographing the Paramount Theatre in town.
If you follow the Lincoln Highway west out of Rochelle toward Dixon, you will pass through the town of Franklin Grove. It has the HQ of the Lincoln Highway historical society. The HQ is on Elm St, and just a few yards from the UP double track main. There is plenty of Americana to photograph in that spot. The lady who runs the little museum/shop there has a lot of information and you should definitiely step in if they are open.
To add just a little-the locks at the dam at Starved Rock (can’t remember number) have an observation area and and interesting display of why not to get too close to the outflow of the dam. Utica is a nice little town with a few nice places to eat. West of there in LaSalle is a park with locks and part of the old I&M canal. Lots of rail/mining/canal history in that area.
Galesburg has a bridge that goes over the yard. It is so wide that you can park there and get good shots that include roof detail. West of Galesburg is Cameron and that is where the Santa Fe crossed over the Burlington. Anything going west of Galesburg is on one or the other track. You can also check out Galesburg on Virtual Railfan.
The steel mill in Sterling is still operating. Formerly Northwestern Steel & Wire, it was famous for receiving a group of 0-6-0 switchers from the Grand Trunk for scrapping, and decided to put them to work as plant switchers instead. Mr. Dillon, the owner of the works, wanted them kept around, and they would blow the whistles every noon so he could hear them. After he died in the early 70s, the switchers were retired, but they still make a half-million tons of steel there every year, running the largest electric-arc furnace in the W
Speaking of Lemont, the traffic on the former Alton line is relatively light but the line parallels Main Street/New Avenue (right next to each other) through the middle of the business district and can make for some interesting shots.