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How to Find the Abandoned 100-Year Old Locomotives in the Maine Woods

How to Find the Abandoned 100-Year Old Locomotives in the Maine Woods

Have you heard the stories of the West Branch Railroad in Maine??The remains of the short rail still stand ominous and spooky in the woods near Eagle Lake in northern Maine.

According to the Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry, "The Eagle Lake and West Branch Railroad replaced the?Tramway. In 1926 this railroad ran from the Eagle Lake end of the tramway thirteen miles to Umbazooksus Lake, which connects to the West Branch of the Penobscot River via Chesuncook Lake."

The Dangers of Train Yards, Through the Eyes of Railroad Employees – Atlas Obscura

The Dangers of Train Yards, Through the Eyes of Railroad Employees – Atlas Obscura

In 1960, looking west from the Texas and Pacific freight yard in El Paso, Texas, you’d see the lines of the rails curving off to the north, towards the city buildings and smokestacks in the distance. In the yard, after an engine gave a rail car a push on its way, workers might uncouple the car and let it roll under its own momentum down the way, or simply release a brake to start it in motion. During the day and the night, children from the neighboring houses would find their way into the yard, along with itinerant workers and drifters. Cars and trucks following Tornillo Street, a public road, across the dozen or so rails in the yard, might find heavy train cars traveling straight towards them or blocking their way.

For the men working on the trains, it felt like a dangerous situation. The photos shown here were taken by engineers and other rail workers on tracks across the country, in an effort to prove how hazardous these places could be and to show why cutting crews was a terrible idea.