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An overall view of Chessie,s engine facilities in St Thomas before every thing was demolished. The yard office is directly behind me and the actual yard ( Buffalo yard ) to the west across the hi level bridge. Named Buffalo yard because there was a farm with buffalo next to the yard. Three homely looking units in one spot. GP38,s soon replaced these wore out engines.
Copyright Notice: This image ©darrell lupson all rights reserved.



Caption: An overall view of Chessie,s engine facilities in St Thomas before every thing was demolished. The yard office is directly behind me and the actual yard ( Buffalo yard ) to the west across the hi level bridge. Named Buffalo yard because there was a farm with buffalo next to the yard. Three homely looking units in one spot. GP38,s soon replaced these wore out engines.

Photographer:
darrell lupson [110] (more) (contact)
Date: 08/00/1984 (search)
Railway: Chessie System (search)
Reporting Marks: WM 6410 6413 6402 (search)
Train Symbol: n/a (search)
Subdivision/SNS: St Thomas (search)
City/Town: St Thomas (search)
Province: Ontario (search)
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Photo ID: 21592

Map courtesy of Open Street Map

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10 Comments
  1. Yard office is still there – (can see it on Street View in the map on this page)

    Thanks for sharing – amazing. I spent some time here in 2007.. the pit is still there!

  2. Great shot Darrell.

  3. where the C&O turned down of the NYC….was it shared track with the old L&PS until the C&O line turned westward? can’t remember….

  4. Yes Snake, it appears so, but it’s not noted as ‘joint track’ in the timetables i’ve seen.

    I added the GPS to this (and Darrell’s other) great photo. For the benefit of those who are unfamiliar (young kids especially) I’ll share what I know from research:

    Looking behind you would be the C&O mainline that ran directly west to Windsor(Walkerville) and would lead past the yard office, then to the large steel tresle, which just beyond it was the C&O Talbot Yard.

    The mainline , shown at bottom left (furthest track I believe) curved as shown to the north joining the L&PS at mile 16.8 (Pinafore), where C&O trains used the L&PS to mile 15.6 (P.C Interchange).

    This from the October 26 1975 Timetable #55

    “Main track is east track of two through tracks extending from PC interchange to South Pinafore (Mileage 16.8). C&O Rlwy trains utilize yard track, first west of main track; for movements in either direction between C&O and P.C. Interchanges, this track must be clear of cars for these movements.

    Normal position for crossover and junction switches to main track of P.C Interchange is when set for through movements between C&O and PC Interchanges”

    Furthermore, one track tracks for the car department (car shop) crossed the L&PS at a diamond on the others side of the roundhouse, with a semaphore signal..

    All of this of course was abandoned in 1985 and ripped up by 86 or so.. even the bridge was torn down.

    the only things that survive today is the L&PS (both tracks too!), the pit, and the yard office, which is boarded up and derelict.

  5. in this photo – you’re looking north/ northeast, the LP&S track is north /south directly behind the shop/roundhouse

  6. C&O predecessor’s Pere Marquette and Lake Erie & Detroit River had a share of the L&PS; so the running rights agreement on that short distance within the city goes back a long way.

    The ‘yard office’ on Wilson Ave was actually the Canadian DIVISION head office for decades. It housed the Senior staff such as Division Superintendent, Road Foreman of Engines, Trainmaster, Crew Callers and Train Dispatcher (complete with CTC panel).
    You can view my b&w images of this location at Flickr -
    https://www.flickr.com/photos/29268670@N04/albums/72157606600973006

    The official name for the C&O’s yard was Talbot, ” Buffalo ” was merely a nickname. And I think that only came about during the final couple of years.

  7. Interesting…. has anyone an idea when the Talbot yard was built? Was it a later addition or was it simply a necessity to build it out of town due to lack of land in town? Must have seemed awfully remote back in the day all things considered, when transportation was mostly by foot or stagecoach, unless of course it was in the 20th century sometime.

  8. The Talbot yard ( still buffalo to me ) was built in 1903 by the Lake Erie and Detroit railway. There is a book in the works on the C&O in Canada and details of the St Thomas area are included.

  9. I want this book and will buy it. Waiting. :) Patiently :)

    The LE&DRR is still the operating subsidiary that owns the CSX in Ontario. The company remained on the books, like GJR, with annual meetings in Windsor until 2013 or so, after which the company was consolidated into the Canada Corporations act.

    Still exists, but not as the act of parliment it once was.

    GJR has effectively performed the exact same corporate manoeuvre.

  10. The Morning Sun publication is being undertaken by Tim Swaddling of Kingsville. I am uncertain of the present status.

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