Tuesday, July 17, 2018

making sense of Folsom part 1


Folsom was the center of CP operations in the late 1800's. There were yard facilities, warehouses for CP freight transferred to horse drawn wagons bound for towns farther up the hill. There were repair shops for both cars and locomotives.
Type 22 station sitting at the center of the action
Photo Tom Ebert
Another shot of yard switcher 1307 working a cut
of  PFE's now iced and ready for delivery up the hill
Photo Tom Ebert
Eventually this was sold off to the Southern Pacific which moved its operation center to Sacramento.  I had planned for Folsom to contain a yard with trackage into town. It seemed ludicrous not have a yard for the Placerville Branch, where trains could be built and broken down. The yard at Folsom then is a work of fiction, based on the ancient yard of the Central Pacific. It was created so that I could fill a yard master position and provides a pivot point for all trains coming and leaving the Placerville Branch. The  point to point design of the Placerville Branch has Folsom being the western end of the modeled portion of the layout and Camino at the eastern terminus. There was a small turntable built by the CP at the original Folsom yard. Today its been unearthed, preserved and is part of a park just below Sutter Street. The Folsom wye came later when it was found that the 85' McKeen passenger car would not fit. So a wye was built so all power, no matter the size could turn at Folsom. Trains entered Folsom WB or EB ran down the wye and perform switching duties as needed, The cars going west could be left on the wye  be picked up  later by trains headed back down the hill. SP did not take anything unnecessarily up the 2% grade to  Placerville . Set outs up hill, pick ups down hill was the rule .It wasn't too long, probably in the late 40's that one train a day handled traffic on the branch save for the fruit rush where a 2-8-0 or two would handle extra traffic as needed. More next time
Switcher 0-8-8 performs switching duties east of Folsom Station
Photo by Tom Ebert
Pulling cars for Earl fruit at Folsom Photo Tom Ebert





 

Tuesday, July 10, 2018

Latrobe ramblings

I want to complete several of the thoughts posted last time regarding the model work at Latrobe, the rail serve industries on the Placerville Branch, and why I chose them. I've been thinking about this post over the past day or so, trying to compose my modeling rationale. In other words what’s my goal in modeling the Placerville Branch.
I'm not is a strict prototype modeler obviously and that's not to say I don't respect that option. As I move along in this process of building my layout I aspire to that goal. It maybe that “I’ll get there,” one day, and perhaps not. What gives me the greatest satisfaction is creating scenes that will burn in the viewers memory. I think my creative abilities are a barrier to following the prototype. I’m getting to the point in this process where how it looks to me as a modeler is more important  then a carbon copy of a photo I have. A friend once jokingly called me an impressionistic modeler. And that maybe it. I think my version of the Placerville Branch will always have signature scenes designed and built to capture the flavor of the Branch, just not exactly.
I do like to think that I'm ratcheting downward and bearing down to the prototype, but I'm not a stickler for it. I'm not a rivet counter. I am often amazed at the modelers who scratch builds everything on their layout to match their chosen prototype. I don't see how they do it and still have time for the rest of their lives. Perhaps their secret is that modeling is the rest of their lives - I don't know.
I had a vision of what I thought Latrobe would look like 2 years before I built it out. I drew lines on the bare plywood that essentially marked where the town would go and how it would look. Of course it changed over time,  and understanding what fits and what doesn't will cause these changes to occur. My last post showed the areas track work,  and I suppose if I had followed the prototype I would have had a station, perhaps a livestock pen with stock car ramps. I've never seen any photo's or station plans of rail served livestock pens at Latrobe, but when I drive out there I do see lots of pens in the area and close to the old line. So I use my imagination, and think, "what might have been," or "whats reasonable to assume." As is shown on the previous post, I positioned my Latrobe station on the main line. On the prototype photo in the last posting their is nothing except a line of trees and a field behind where the old station stood. I didn’t do that, instead choosing to build the town of Latrobe in front of the main and siding with plenty of vertical space to switch the industries in or near Latrobe. Here are some photo’s of the this part of the Placerville Branch

Amador Copper above Latrobe photo Tom Ebert

Latrobe Livestock photo Tom Ebert

Latrobe Livestock photo Tom Ebert
Latrobe photo Tom Ebert

Latrobe detail photo by Jeff Aley

Latrobe freight house looking toward Amador Copper Photo by Jeff Aley

Close up Latrobe Freight Photo by Jeff Aley

Latrobe Freight looking west. The yellow building is the Latrobe Hotel
                                    Photo by Jeff Aley
Latrobe Livestock photo Jeff Aley


Latrobe EB mogul through town photo Jeff Aley

Unless otherwise noted these photo's were taken with an IPhone 8.