Radford bridge
NW Mailing List
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Sun Jun 8 23:08:39 EDT 2008
Guys:
I've been lurking but reading and soaking up every email. I've learned so much about my old 'playgound'! The train bridge was a fairly regular place to sail our wooden planes (with and without firecrackers attached!). It had (and I think still has) a great and SAFE walkway on it.
Back to the subject, thanks for the great Radford map! I didn't know about the wagon/car bridge upstream of the RR bridge. Any thing left of it? I've waded a lot of the river around there but don't recall any old piers there. I also learned of the wye on the New River (community) side.
Let's keep it going!
Charlie Long
-----Original Message-----
>From: NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
>Sent: Jun 8, 2008 9:09 AM
>To: NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
>Subject: Re: Radford bridge
>
>Here's a map from the VT site that shows the first part of the old route:
>
>http://spec.lib.vt.edu/imagebase/04DLA/screen/01MAP0828031058.jpg
>
>
>
>Mike Brown
>
>NW Mailing List wrote:
>> Sure is nice to get all this expert info on the old ROW. Must have
>> been a typo in the "Class J" book photo caption on page 5. It said
>> 1887, but it's an excellent photo of the curved bridge.
>>
>> And it is (was?) Northside Flower Shop where the old ROW (Rt. 600)
>> meets Rt 11 there Charlie. (Also, it was Carl Long whose name I was
>> trying to remember.)
>>
>> And Bruce's GIS photo
>> -------
>> The better view is via the Pulaski County GIS site, with the aerial photo
>> layer turned on.
>> See http://www.netgis.pulaskicountyva.gov/pulaski/index.php You can
>> zoom in
>> even
>> closer with better resolution, to the point where you can check out the
>> westbound train
>> with empties. With the view zoomed in to where the scale reads 1320, it is
>> easy to see
>> Crosstie Lane in Parrott. There is an interesting triangle in the property
>> lines there, which
>> seems to indicate where the original line came off the river. I've
>> posted a
>> PDF of the
>> view on my website, see
>> http://filebox.vt.edu/users/bharper/nwrwy/OldMainLine2.pdf
>>
>> Bruce in Blacksburg
>> -------
>> shows where the old ROW meets the "new" cutoff to Walton all right.
>> Just off the bottom edge of the
>> pdf file photo is Back Creek, just like Bud said.
>>
>> Now, I just wonder if anyone knows how "Schooler Hill" got it's
>> name...? Old family name maybe?
>>
>>
>> Thanks for all the info, gentlemen.
>> Vince Albert.
>>
>>
>> > Message: 1
>> > Date: Tue, 3 Jun 2008 12:41:54 -0400 (GMT-04:00)
>> > From: NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
>> > Subject: Re: Radford bridge
>> >
>> > Thanks, Bud, for the additional info. I knew you would have it! Was
>> I right, or close, concerning the flower shop?
>> > Charlie Long
>> >
>> > -----Original Message-----
>> > >From: NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
>> > >Sent: Jun 2, 2008 11:55 PM
>> > >To: NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
>> > >Subject: Re: Radford bridge
>> > >
>> > >This reply probably addresses a couple of mailing list items.
>> > >
>> > >In the early 1880s, a line began at the west side of the New River
>> that would extend to open up the Pocahontas coalfields. The first load
>> of coal was dispatched in March 1883 eastward to Norfolk. Trains
>> leaving Radford for coalfields proceeded westward across the New River
>> bridge on the Bristol line [at the present site], then would reverse
>> direction to proceed to Bluefield. The shelf visible today near the
>> west side of the bridge is where this line began. The eastbound trains
>> from Bluefield had to reverse direction to continue east toward
>> Radford and beyond. Obviously this was a very awkward and expensive
>> way to send and receive trains over the New River line.
>> > >
>> > >In 1888, a new curved bridge was completed, next to the Bristol
>> line bridge. The curved bridge created a wye. Trains leaving Radford
>> for the Pocahontas region could now proceed across the new bridge
>> without having to reverse direction that was previously required. The
>> line followed the current road now known as Hazel Hollow Road to the
>> highway bridge then curved to the left following a side of the draw to
>> a point that today is Route 600 or Belspring Road. As a boy I remember
>> the old highway followed the old RR road bed until the new four-lane
>> road was completed in 1949 when a new highway bridge was built
>> connecting Radford and Fairlawn. The original road bed continued
>> upgrade to about where the golf driving range is today and this "hill"
>> was known as Schooler Hill. The line then descended down to Belspring
>> in the vicinity of Back Creek where it progressed westward along the
>> New River like today.
>> > >
>> > >The hill was a real operational challenge since it rose 78 feet per
>> mile eastbound and 86 feet per mile westbound and was about 11 miles
>> in length. To reduce grade and reduce operating expenses, the new N&W
>> Ry began building a new low-grade line from what is now known as
>> Walton to Belspring. The new line reduced grades to 11 feet per mile
>> eastbound and curves from 14 to six degrees, and was shorter by 4.3
>> miles. It went into service on October 11, 1900 and the Va. General
>> Assembly authorized the N&W to abandoned the old line on February 15,
>> 1901.
>> > >
>> > >In the archives there is a folder of correspondence about the
>> disposition of the old New River curved bridge. I do not have copies
>> of this file but most of it was dated about 1904-5 and I believe in
>> 1905 there is a document about a portion of the old bridge being used
>> on the Galax line which Robb Fisher referenced below. I do not have
>> any information about when the line was stopped being used but
>> railroads, the N&W not being excepted, tend to get rid of something
>> when approved for abandonment, especially something as costly as using
>> the Schooler Hill line.
>> > >
>> > >The N&W said that savings for using the new line was greater than
>> the interest to pay for the new construction which included the 3500+
>> foot Pepper Tunnel and a bridge across the New River at the tunnel.
>> The line was certainly out by 1907 and the Jamestown Exposition.
>> > >
>> > >Bud Jeffries
>> > >
>> > >----- Original Message -----
>> > >From: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
>> > >To: <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
>> > >Sent: Monday, June 02, 2008 3:15 AM
>> > >Subject: RE: Radford bridge
>> > >
>> > >
>> > >>
>> > >>> [Does anyone know when this wye track and the second bridge were
>> fully
>> > >>> abandoned?
>> > >>> Was everything taken out of service with the completion of the
>> Walton/Cowan
>> > >>> line? Or
>> > >>> was this piece kept in service for a while, which could explain
>> how the
>> > >>> Exposition
>> > >>> specials served Radford -- run forward from Walton to Radford,
>> cross the
>> > >>> river and
>> > >>> turn on the New River wye, then run forward back through Radford
>> and on out
>> > >>> of town.]
>> > >>> Bruce in Blacksburg
>> > >>
>> > >>
>> > >>
>> > >> Bridge 802 (IIRC) was completely abandoned before 1908... it was
>> reused on the North Carolina branch (where it crossed over US 52).
>> > >>
>> > >> Robb Fisher
>> > >> RFDI
>> > >>
>>
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
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