Pocahontas mainline operators
NW Mailing List
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Tue Aug 24 09:15:25 EDT 2021
Marty,
Crews referred to them variously as "operator," "tower" or by name. The
three mainline Pocahontas towers you mention below, plus HQ tower (the
late version), were of a similar frame design. Two exceptions were Devon
(mentioned earlier, was in the depot) and Eckman, between Bluestone and
Tug. The Eckman operator was in the yard office, a depot-like structure
pictured in Alex's book, "The Norfolk And Western In West Virginia
1881-1959" on page 261.
As mentioned, the operator count was a moving target and declined
through the 1950s. A handy inflection point that includes those
mentioned here was the start of centralizing TC in Bluefield. I believe
Bluestone was the first to move and close, barely making it into 1950,
then Eckman, then HQ.
Grant Carpenter
On 8/23/2021 5:52 PM, NW Mailing List wrote:
>
> Thanks for the replies. I would have responded sooner but haven't had
> much time to sit and spend on email lately.
>
> I guess from a modeling perspective, when I say tower, in this case I
> am looking for a structure that's primary or sole purpose was
> controlling train movements at a yard, junction, crossing, or other
> such location, to see what options I have for including such a
> structure on my layout, which I guess you could say is loosely based
> on or inspired by the Pocahontas Division. I have seen pictures of
> SU/Bluestone, DY/Iaeger, Tug, KX/Kenova, Cowan, and RD, and was
> wondering if any other structures would have been standing and in use
> in the 1950s.
>
> That being said, it is also helpful to know what locations were
> controlled remotely or by a tower integrated with a station or other
> building, so that way I know I don't have to spend time trying to find
> pictures of a structure that never existed.
>
> Marty Flick
>
> -----------------------------------------
>
> From: "NW Mailing List via NW-Mailing-List"
> To: "NW Mailing List"
> Cc: "NW Mailing List"
> Sent: Sunday August 15 2021 8:37:43AM
> Subject: Re: RD and other Pocahontas Towers
>
> Larry you hit the nail on the head. The N&W called it a tower. That
> gets to the point of how do you define a tower. By the building or by
> the function. Or perhaps what the RR wanted to call it. Jim B
>
> On 8/14/2021 7:33 PM, NW Mailing List wrote:
>
> Add Kermit it wasn’t exactly a tower one level
>
> Larry Evans
>
> *From:* NW-Mailing-List [mailto:nw-mailing-list-bounces at nwhs.org]
> *On Behalf Of* NW Mailing List
> *Sent:* Saturday, August 14, 2021 12:21 PM
> *To:* 'nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org' <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
> *Subject:* RD and other Pocahontas Towers
>
> Pages 240-241 of Alex Schust's "The Norfolk And Western In West
> Virginia 1881-1959" describe and show a picture of RD Tower, on
> the east end of Bluefield Yard. What isn't clear to me is if it
> controlled only the east end of the yard or both ends? If RD only
> controlled the east end of the yard, was there another tower that
> controlled the west end, perhaps Graham/RQ?
>
> While we're on the subject, how many towers were there on the N&W
> main, particularly between Bluefield and Kenova? I know there was
> SU tower at Bluestone Junction, TUG at Welch, DY at Iaeger, and KX
> at Kenova. I believe the Devon depot contained the controls for
> the Buchanan Branch. Are there any others? I've tried browsing
> the online Archives, but haven't had much success, maybe using the
> wrong search terms.
>
> Thank you
>
> Marty Flick
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://pairlist6.pair.net/pipermail/nw-mailing-list/attachments/20210824/9bd7f0d1/attachment.htm>
More information about the NW-Mailing-List
mailing list