2jakes
I'll Lock Up
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- 9,680
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- Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
It is the EL alive and well run by the CTA,(Chicago Transit Authority). It runs north west and south of the city. Here it is traveling the loop. I think on Wabash Ave. Part of the downtown is known as "the loop". Stauffers restaurant is on the right, My mother would take me there to eat and teach me good table manners. The picture seems to be about 1965.Stumbled across this awesome pic and thought others would enjoy it to (and, perhaps, even get some color about it from ChiTownScion):
View attachment 118998
⇧ That is very cool and quirky and of-the-period and railroady, but that's a lot of trains to have go by each day. And I'm confused - if the trains are still stopping there (which is implied), then why isn't the station in use anymore / is there a new station nearby or do passengers just use the platform but not the station (which would be odd and not very private)? That said, it is a beautify looking station and property.
To understand your question you need to go back to the 1960's when we lost 11,000 miles of our rail network. It was deemed to be underused and therefore expensive, so it was ripped up. However some lines destined for closure survived, this particular line was one of them. Many of the lines that closed passed into the hands of volunteers who rescued them from demolition and run them today as heritage lines. Those destined for the chop but survived had some of their infrastructure sold off, like railway stations, this station being a case in point. At the time of construction the station was only put there as an office for the railway company and a stopping point for steam engines to take on water. You can see from the photographs that there's no community for it to serve. It wasn't unknown in Victorian times to have such remote stations. As there was no motor cars the train was everyone's choice of travel. So when the rich and titled went to Scotland in late August for the grouse shooting, they caught the train and alighted in the Scottish Highlands at one of our country's remotest railway stations.
This particular station known as Dent has been in private hands for over fifty years. Whether or not the trains still stop there I know not, but I can tell you that it won't be on the market long. If it doesn't stay a private dwelling someone will turn it into some sort of quaint Victorian tea rooms, (tea rooms was how the Victorians described a cafe,) or it could become a restaurant or whatever the authorities accept when planning consent is given.
It's difficult to answer this, but as a speculative guess I would say that about 50% would be used. Some lines ran almost parallel to existing ones, due to over expansion in the 19th century. You could say that the railways were the Victorians dot com bubble. But a lot of lines could easily have been utilised as local trains, run like London's underground system, but overground instead.Do you think, if all that rail that was ripped out had been maintained, it would be used today or is Britain, like the US, too much of an individual car country to revive its rail use?