Hunter’s railroad wasn’t being very cooperative. I had set up on the West Main Street bridge in downtown Kent hoping to get a train or two on the CSX New Castle Subdivision.
Westbound intermodal trains Q015 and Q137 have been operating in mid to late afternoon of late. But I got crickets. There wasn’t as much as a peep on the radio.
After about 45 minutes of waiting, I got out and walked around to make photographs of whatever caught my eye, including some Erie Railroad relics.
The most prominent of those is the former passenger station, which has been restored and now houses an Italian restaurant.
Just south of the station is a heavyweight passenger car painted in Erie colors. It apparently is used as a meeting room, although I’ve never seen anyone in it.
There is a signal box by the station that I know I’ve seen dozens of times, but never photographed. Today I saw something there as the late afternoon sunlight cast a warm glow on the rust-covered box. Who knows how many years it has been here and how many trains it has seen?
Finally, I checked out the siding for the Star of the West grain elevator. Just the night before during a program at the Railroad Enthusiasts meeting in Cleveland there was speculation as to what will happen with this property, which closed earlier this year.
The Erie would have served this facility as did the Akron Barberton Cluster Railway. Now the siding sits unused.
At one time, one of the mainline tracks would have been here, but it has been a long time since these rails were a double-track mainline.
Tags: Akron Barberton Cluster Railway, CSX, CSX New Castle Subdivision, Erie Railroad, Erie Railroad in Kent, Erie Railroad in Kent Ohio, Erie station in Kent, grain elevators, Kent, Kent Erie station, Kent Ohio, Passenger cars, Railroad stations, restored train stations, signal box, Star of the West grain elevator, train stations, trains and grain elevators
November 16, 2017 at 11:23 am |
The passenger car is an ex-CB&Q commuter coach, put there by the Kent Jaycees in 1977, about the time of the Steam Tours #2102 trips from Kent to Greenville. Yes, it was intended to be a meeting space.