Hay Dude
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2012
- Messages
- 18,725
- Location
- A Hay Field along the PA/DE border
- Tractor
- Challenger MT655E, Massey Ferguson 7495, Challenger MT535B, Krone 4x4 XC baler, (2) Kubota ZD331’s, 2020 Ram 5500 Cummins 4x4, IH 7500 4x4 dump truck, Kaufman 35’ tandem 19 ton trailer, Deere CX-15, Pottinger Hay mowers
That is really cool stuff. I cant believe how much railroad history is contained in so many towns & villages across the US.
In the picture below, you see the steel tube. It was used as a pipe for a stream crossing into a property that I farm hay on. The gentleman that owned the property passed away 2 years ago. He claimed that his father acquired this from a steam engine that rolled off the tracks and was scrapped about 100 years ago. I was skeptical because the steel looked like it was too thin for a boiler. But there is a railroad just 300 feet from this picture. In the early 1900s a steam locomotive also blew a cloud of sparks and burned their barn down. It was completely rebuilt and paid for by the Pennsylvania Railroad
In the picture below, you see the steel tube. It was used as a pipe for a stream crossing into a property that I farm hay on. The gentleman that owned the property passed away 2 years ago. He claimed that his father acquired this from a steam engine that rolled off the tracks and was scrapped about 100 years ago. I was skeptical because the steel looked like it was too thin for a boiler. But there is a railroad just 300 feet from this picture. In the early 1900s a steam locomotive also blew a cloud of sparks and burned their barn down. It was completely rebuilt and paid for by the Pennsylvania Railroad