Viscose Radford Plant-Viscoe Road, Bridge
NW Mailing List
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Thu Jan 25 22:12:48 EST 2007
Farmer Jeffries can not add much. Viscoe Road is the name for the access
road to the site now from Rte 114. The American Viscose was to build a
factory there after WWII and the N&W built the bridge across the New River
to give rail access to the proposed site. There is no reference of the
bridge's construction in the N&W annual reports, but a source of mine says
the bridge has a date of 1951 on a builders plate. I thought it was a little
earlier than that. The factory was never built by American Viscose because
of decreasing demand for its products. For the same reason, its Roanoke
plant closed in July 1958.
A company, unknown to me, built the large industrial building that is there
now in the 1970s. AT&T took it over about 1981. Today the whole American
Viscose site is an industrial park, a housing subdivision and golf course.
The old RR bridge is being used to extend utilities to that area.
Abram mentions Tom Gravitt. I remember him well and I believe he was the
second trick yardmaster. I interviewed him for my book in 1975. He was a
character, but was a good man.
The tie yard explosion occured in November 1953 [I believe]. The yard closed
its operations in 1955.
Hope this helps a little.
Bud Jeffries
----- Original Message -----
From: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
To: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
Sent: Wednesday, January 24, 2007 7:14 AM
Subject: Re: Viscose Radford Plant-Viscoe Road, Bridge
> AB:
> The name change of the road was simply a local thing. That's what it
> 'gravitated' to over the years. It happens when there is no operating
> facility to correct it (keep it right). The correct name should have been
> Viscose. In addition to the original buildings, the property is now an
> industrial park that can be reached via VA Rt. 114.
> The girder bridge you saw was probably the AV bridge. The next bridge down
> would have been Plum Creek on the main line if you were in Radford Yard. I
> too have discharged a firearm in Radford Yard (early '60's) but at a
> quail!
> And, yes, you saw the remains (very little by '65) of the tie treating
> plant, mentioned in a couple of books. It exploded in the early hours of a
> 1950's morning awakening this writer!
> Maybe farmer Jeffries can add something to this.
> Charlie Long
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
>>From: NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
>>Sent: Jan 23, 2007 7:58 PM
>>To: NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
>>Subject: Re: Viscose Radford Plant
>>
>>
>>The MapQuest image leave me guessing... Why is the name of the road spelt
>>"Viscoe" rather than "Viscose" ? The foix paux of the the map maker, or
>>of the political patronage hack in charge of naming roads?
>>
>>There is an interesting website dealing with the Viscose Corporation, put
>>up by one of the descendents of the man who brought the Viscose process
>>here from England.
>>
>>I recall being in Radford one day about 1965, with nothing to do. As I
>>recall, I was working an away-from-home local, or maybe the
>>Radford-Bluefield Short Run, and staying on the caboose (as most of us did
>>back then.) In my idle hours, I walked to some place that had been
>>pointed out to me as the former railroad tie processing plant, or perhaps
>>proposed location for an unbuilt tie processing plant. There was a
>>trackless open deck girder bridge across a creek or river and into the
>>concrete abutments were cast a date in the late 1940s (1946 or 1949, if I
>>recall correctly.) Being young and deficient on good judgment, I took a
>>pistol shot at the numerals on the northeast abutment, and the bullet
>>riocochetted back in what sounded like very close proximity to my head.
>>
>>Could this be the same place now identified as the proposed Viscose
>>site...?
>>
>>This was about the time that Tom Gravitt, the 70+-year-old clerk in the
>>Radford Station overindulged on his daily ritual of going across the
>>street at lunch hour and knocking off a quart of cold ice cream, and had
>>to be hospitalized. How in the world anyone could eat a quart of ice
>>cream daily and stay as thin as a rail was always a mystery beyond my
>>comprehension... Anyone remember Tom?
>>
>>--adb
>
>
>
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