The plan is to build a 300-mile trail along the route of the disused Northwestern Pacific Railroad, stretching from the San Francisco Bay in the south to the Humboldt Bay in the north. It will be designed for non-motorized uses like walking, cycling, and horseback riding.
Showing posts with label rails to trails. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rails to trails. Show all posts
Sunday, March 29, 2026
The Great Redwood Trail will connect the San Francisco Bay to the Humboldt Bay via a 300-mile multi-use trail.
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
either no one owns this bridge, or, Norfolk Southern does not remember who they sold it too and told the news they don't own the trestle... but haven't sold it either
the railroad trestle was owned and managed by Norfolk Southern
Discussions of turning the trestle into a pedestrian walking bridge have been brought up numerous times, “A plan to turn it into a walking trail was in the works,” said Laurie Nearhood, Huntingdon County planning director, “Norfolk Southern owned the bridge, and it was a matter of someone, or some organization buying it from them. There was never a price that was decided on for the bridge.”
in late June 2022. Norfolk Southern said it would only consider selling the entirety of the track, not just the bridge.
So as of 3 years ago, they acknowledge they owned it.
Prior to 2022, the total estimated cost to buy the Huntingdon industrial track and return it to service was around $7 million
Additionally, they indicated the segment was not officially abandoned by the Surface Transportation Board, which would need to occur before Norfolk Southern could sell.
“I had made several trips to Harrisburg to talk to Norfolk Southern and try and get rail service back,” said county commissioner Jeff Thomas. “They had no desire to sell the bridge whatsoever, and were very difficult to work with. They took the switch out on the main line that would enable the train to be able to cross onto the Fairgrounds Road tracks because they thought it would never be used again. It would be half a million dollars to put a new switch in.”
Thomas said that while the county would be willing to revitalize the bridge, Norfolk Southern never expressed interest in selling the Huntingdon industrial track.
“They made a statement a few years ago that it would never be a walking trail,” said Thomas. “We’ve met with the president of Norfolk Southern and made no headway. I think it would be great to bring the train back on that line and bring in more business.”
Through the uncertainties, the debris remains in the waterway with no group claiming responsibility to remove it.
“I had made several trips to Harrisburg to talk to Norfolk Southern and try and get rail service back,” said county commissioner Jeff Thomas. “They had no desire to sell the bridge whatsoever, and were very difficult to work with. They took the switch out on the main line that would enable the train to be able to cross onto the Fairgrounds Road tracks because they thought it would never be used again. It would be half a million dollars to put a new switch in.”
Thomas said that while the county would be willing to revitalize the bridge, Norfolk Southern never expressed interest in selling the Huntingdon industrial track.
“They made a statement a few years ago that it would never be a walking trail,” said Thomas. “We’ve met with the president of Norfolk Southern and made no headway. I think it would be great to bring the train back on that line and bring in more business.”
Through the uncertainties, the debris remains in the waterway with no group claiming responsibility to remove it.
Monday, July 14, 2025
Damascus Virginia iron bridge showing just how much debris piled up when the river rose from Hurricane Helene
The bridge is part of the old Virginia Creeper Railroad, a former railroad line that was transformed into a National Recreation Trail in the late 1980s. It was a Rail Trail hall of famer in 2014
The Virginia-Carolina Railroad, a predecessor of the Creeper, was built in 1907 to connect Abingdon to Damascus.
I'm pretty sure this is the same bridge I posted about when I was showing the really nice rails to trails photos of this, years before the hurricane flood damage https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2018/08/virginia-travel-writers-and.html
I'm guessing it's part of the Appalachian Trail, but I didn't see anything to confirm that.
Thursday, February 16, 2023
Tuesday, November 22, 2022
The Great American Rail Trail is already half complete, and will be the longest bike trail in the world Coeur d’Alene Tribe, this trail offers one breathtaking vista after another on a 73-mile route across Idaho’s Panhandle
the Cowboy Recreation and Nature Trail is a Nebraska trail making the 3,700-mile route across the country https://www.instagram.com/p/CharZQWoeqK/
Wednesday, October 02, 2019
looks like a bit of abandoned rail road, which would be a good place to ride with a custom bike for riding rails, from County Rd DL to Devils Lake, and then on to the Wisconsin River, in Sauk City Wisconsin (90 miles West of Milwaukee)
the above sign says that this was a C and NW railway, which went bankrupt and was bought by Union Pacific
and another leg goes to Baraboo from Sauk City, and this 140 year old stone bridge will likely outlast us all, on Halweg rd, by Merrimac Town Hall
and out there in the middle of no where it looks like there used to be a military base or something like a town, which has little but old pieces of paved road left now
near Merrimac, but there's very much a lot of city grid pattern road, and nothing else
Huh, well, I got lucky in very little time,
"Sauk Prairie State Recreation Area was once designated as an army ammunition plant that manufactured nitrocellulose-based propellants during World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War. It was the largest munitions factory in the world during World War II.
So.... "the largest munitions factory in the world during World War II" 100 miles West of Milwaukee
was known as the Badger Army Ammunition Plant
The plant was in production from 1943-1945 for WW II, from 1952-58 for the Korean War and early Cold War period, and from 1966-75 for the Vietnam War. 25,000 worked here on construction and production during WWII alone, with a maximum of about 6700 at one time—a population larger than the those of the nearby villages of Prairie du Sac and Sauk City combined. Women Ordnance Workers, nicknamed “WOWs”, were especially important during WWII, and they comprised about half the work force by the end of that war.
Badger Army Ammunition Plant
The bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 1941 brought the U.S. immediately into World War II. Within a few weeks, planning for construction of the Badger Ordnance Works (later Badger Army Ammunition Plant) on the Sauk Prairie began. Within several months, 74 farm families had been forced to move off their farmsteads, the farm buildings, churches and schools were moved or destroyed, and construction of the largest propellant factory in the country began in earnest. The Plant eventually encompassed 7,400 acres and contained over 1,400 buildings and more than 120 miles of road and rail. The Plant was idled but kept in a state of readiness from 1975 to 1998.
Safety was a critical issue here, and the security force guarded all entrances, checked employees as they arrived and left, and patrolled the interior and the perimeter roads by foot, car and motorcycle.
And there was an additional cadre of safety inspectors. Matches, lighters and smoking materials were strictly prohibited. Many are the cat-and-mouse stories of workers sneaking smokes, and some getting caught and fired, or disciplined for as little as a single overlooked match in the bottom of a purse.
Why was the ammo plant making gunpowder in Wisconsin?
The supply of wood pulp.
Cotton or wood pulp was combined with nitric and sulfuric acid to produce nitrocellulose, to begin the transition into propellant. With each production step the material was moved eastward to new buildings designed for the next process, which included mixing, hydrating, drying, wringing, heating, pressing, screening, rinsing, resting, and extruding and cutting strands of propellant. As the material moved eastward and became more explosive, the buildings took on features such as break-out doors, escape chutes, lamps that shown into windows from the outside, and bunkered barriers. The buildings also tended to be separated by more grassy space, so that if any building were to explode, it would not set off another.
Ball Powder was a double-base propellant. It began with nitrocellulose, made in the adjacent smokeless production area, and was augmented with highly explosive nitroglycerin, also produced at Badger.
During the Vietnam War, peaceful protests occurred at the front gate. The first was in 1966, when a group of 45 adults and children walked up from Madison. A less peaceful protest was made by the Armstrong brothers, who dropped ineffective, homemade bombs from a stolen airplane to the north of the front gate, on New Year’s Day 1970.
What they didn't know back then, was what the ammo plant pollution was doing to the ground water, and short story? It flowed to the Wisconsin River, and then South
The ammo plant was the origin of a plume of groundwater contaminated with chemical toxins and carcinogens, like carbon tetrachloride and dinitrotoluene, which have flowed south beyond the Plant, to residential wells and the Wisconsin River below the Prairie du Sac Dam.
If you think that's strange, and unexpected, try looking up a local kook, Dr Evermor, and his mirror eye, and the Forevertron, and Memorial to the Munitions Workers of America. Hippie weirdness of course, taken to the extreme
The Forevertron was going to be the world’s largest scrap-metal sculpture, weighing in at 300 tons, incorporating such historic pieces as Thomas Edison dynamos from the 1880s, and the decontamination chamber from the Apollo 11 spacecraft.
That's what happens when you drink the kool aid, and take the bad acid. So, don't do drugs.
The Future: Sauk Prairie Restored!
When the Army announced in 1997 that the Badger Plant was to be decommissioned, a group of representatives from the area’s conservation community came together to discuss the opportunity for a “green future” to heal the land at Badger.
From the above satellite view, they failed.
they wasted money on this painting through. A painting by renowned artist Victor Bahktin, “Sauk Prairie Remembered” was commissioned to serve as the future vision of the Sauk Prairie Conservation Alliance for the land. There were many years of public planning of the Badger property, and then deconstruction of the buildings ensued from 2004 to 2013. Then, when the govt no longer funded anything, nothing was done. The artist died in 2016 https://www.savingcranes.org/victor-bakhtins-legacy/
as you can see if you click on these for full size, there appears to be some abandoned rail cars, and switch yards (below is next to the St Vincent DePaul)
and the closer it gets to Sauk City the easier to see that it's been abandoned since at least the 1995 sale to Union Pacific
lower left corner is a good indicator that it's not just abandoned, it's ignored, and overgrown.
The CNW was known for running on the left-hand side when running on double track mainlines. In the United States, most railroads used the right-hand track along double-track mainlines, while left-hand running was more common in countries where British companies built the railroads.
According to a display in the Lake Forest station, the reason for this was a combination of chance and inertia. When originally built as single-line trackage, the CNW arbitrarily placed its stations on the left-hand side of the tracks (when headed inbound toward Chicago). Later, when a second track was added, it was placed on the side away from the stations so as not to force them to relocate.
Since most passengers waiting at the stations were headed toward Chicago, the inbound track remained the one closest to the station platforms. The expense of reconfiguring signals and switches has prevented a conversion to right-hand operation ever since.
Might be getting made into the Great Sauk Trail, piece by piece, mile by mile
and from the piece of rail in the back of this old rail station (Sauk City Prairie De Sac) still with a sign claiming "The Milwaukee Road" I'm guessing there was a hope of a rail road museum
and in the above image, upper left, you can see the Great Sauk Trail come from the upper right of the image, down to the left, cross the road, and then it is a nice biking trail along the river
one of the many historical items of interest are the few Center Harp Shorties wig wags, iconically and nearly only used on the CNW, they were deemed unable to do the job by the feds in 1949, but rarely were replaced and often survived until the 70s, and a couple are still out there in the far abandoned places where no one goes anymore
here you can see that the line dead ends on an isthmus, where the bridge was torn down over the river
on the far side of the river, is what's left of the bridge
The railroad operated what was once the largest "potato yard" or potato market, at its Chicago Wood Street yards. Potatoes came to the yard from every point in the United States to be bought or traded by produce dealers and brokers.
A couple significant and historically important employees of the CNW were
Charles Ingalls, father of Laura Ingalls Wilder, William B. Ogden, the first mayor of Chicago and Abe Saperstein, founder of the Harlem Globetrotters.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_and_North_Western_Transportation_Company
and here I thought the most interesting thing I'd post all day was that Harley was a bridge engineer, and some of his bridges might still exist for Harley Davidson motorcycles to drive over
https://www.arcgis.com/apps/MapJournal/index.html?appid=a5bbaf97fedd428a9b6b19221016743b
Wednesday, May 08, 2019
Saturday, August 25, 2018
Virginia travel writers and photographers voted a bike trail #2 in their top 10best Virginia attractions list, the Virginia Creeper Trail
The entire trail length is just over 34 miles, and is entirely gravel except for the wooden decks of the 47 trestles along the route.
It starts up in Abingdon, Virginia and ends over by the border with North Carolina, just past Whitetop Station. The trail takes you through the town of Damascus, Virginia, which helps to maintain it along with the town of Abingdon.
Update, hurricane flood damage photos: https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2025/07/damascus-virginia-iron-bridge-showing.html
It was created back in 1984, but made memorable by O Winston Link's photo https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2025/09/before-and-after-of-famous-location.html for an indepth article on this photo, and the better comparison of before and after
It is considered to be THE single most beautiful rail trail in the country.
it even goes through this farm
The Virginia Creeper is the Appalachian Trail for a stretch through Damascus. When the rail trail was first approved the local assholes went ballistic. They even burned down the tallest train trestle which then had to be rebuilt to accommodate the trail (thus delaying the official opening of the rail trail).
The Virginia Creeper Trail got its name from a play on words. Virginia Creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) is a native five-leaved ivy found growing wild all over Southwest Virginia
At some point the Abingdon Branch of the Virginia-Carolina Railway that ran from Abingdon to Todd, NC was nicknamed the Virginia Creeper because of the slow speed of the train when climbing Whitetop Mountain. The name stuck and came into common usage though the railroad company did not like the nickname and never referred to it by that name.
https://underthemagnifier.wordpress.com/tag/visiting-the-virginia-creeper-trail/
https://tilthelasthemlockdies.blogspot.com/2013/09/virginia-creeper-trail.html
https://www.activeweekender.com/top-15-best-trails-for-fall-bike-rides-in-the-us/
http://summerscottageabingdon.com/the_creeper_trail
It is considered to be THE single most beautiful rail trail in the country.
it even goes through this farm
The Virginia Creeper is the Appalachian Trail for a stretch through Damascus. When the rail trail was first approved the local assholes went ballistic. They even burned down the tallest train trestle which then had to be rebuilt to accommodate the trail (thus delaying the official opening of the rail trail).
The Virginia Creeper Trail got its name from a play on words. Virginia Creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) is a native five-leaved ivy found growing wild all over Southwest Virginia
At some point the Abingdon Branch of the Virginia-Carolina Railway that ran from Abingdon to Todd, NC was nicknamed the Virginia Creeper because of the slow speed of the train when climbing Whitetop Mountain. The name stuck and came into common usage though the railroad company did not like the nickname and never referred to it by that name.
https://underthemagnifier.wordpress.com/tag/visiting-the-virginia-creeper-trail/
https://tilthelasthemlockdies.blogspot.com/2013/09/virginia-creeper-trail.html
https://www.activeweekender.com/top-15-best-trails-for-fall-bike-rides-in-the-us/
http://summerscottageabingdon.com/the_creeper_trail
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