Saturday, March 31, 2012

Derelicts










I’ve passed these two old boxcars hundreds of times, on my way to one place or another. I often thought: “I should take a picture.” But I never did—until now.
So on the weekend I stopped to photograph the two derelicts, sitting on the property of the Central Grain Company (alongside the CPR Emerson Sub.).









Most of the lettering is long-faded, but the number of one car can still be made out: CN 464106. It’s a Type A Series 1 outside braced boxcar, built in 1923. The lettering on the other car is completely gone. Soon, perhaps, the cars themselves will disappear.









How long have they been there? Lettering on CN 464106 indicates that the draft gear was inspected in October, 1956. Presumably, it was still on the rails and earning its keep at that time.
The two cars were among the thousands of outside braced 40-foot boxcars that carried a variety of cargos from 1909 to about 1964. In western Canada, they carried the lifeblood of the prairie economy—grain.












Today the two cars are derelicts—too much trouble for the company to even bother tearing down. But for the railfan, they are reminders of another time, when grain rode the rails in boxcars.

4 comments:

  1. Good idea to preserve those boxcars for posterity, John. I photographed them from the Canadian in 1984 from the CN...must look for that photo.

    Not to mention Central Grain would be a modeller's nightmare with all that piping.

    Eric

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  2. How was the smell from the Loveday Mushroom plant. Those are great shots. I foung some old cars by Sanford MB a few winters ago, but didn't have my camera. I need to go looking for them again.

    JSL

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  3. Ah, yes, the mushroom plant. When my kids were little and we drove by that location, they called it the "stinky yard." It's still stinky today.

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  4. If you look in between them on the north side, you can see CN 4648?? on the other car. I think it is 464885, but I;m not sure.

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