[PRCo] Re: an unknown Pittsburgh coal haulage trolley line?
Edward H. Lybarger
trams2 at comcast.net
Fri Jan 5 07:34:59 EST 2007
Yes they are, Don...they show the NORTH end of the tunnel, and the terminal
facilities that permitted the coal to be lowered to Carson Street for sale
and distribution. That's what the woodcut illustrates. The map locates
this for real and the photo shows us how primitive the thing really was.
The second Castle Shannon Incline (north) was farther west than the one in
the map that Bob found.
You have well described the facilities at the SOUTH end of the coal tunnel.
Ed
-----Original Message-----
From: pittsburgh-railways-bounce at lists.dementia.org
[mailto:pittsburgh-railways-bounce at lists.dementia.org]On Behalf Of
Donald Galt
Sent: Friday, January 05, 2007 5:01 AM
To: pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org
Subject: [PRCo] Re: an unknown Pittsburgh coal haulage trolley line?
On 4 Jan 2007 at 20:47, Edward H. Lybarger wrote:
> Aha! Then it IS the north end of the P&CSRR! PRCo ownership of the
parcel
> where the tunnel portal is located kinda ties it down, doesn't it? And
> explains why you don't see the tunnel in the photo. It's behind a building
> but is more likely boarded up.
Forgive me if I'm missing something, but none of the pictures I picked up in
this thread is anywhere near the P&CS, neither incline nor tunnel.
The P&CS original line did a complete 180-degree horseshoe just short of
Haberman Avenue, headed back west and curved around to proceed up the draw
above the south portal of the PRCo tunnel. Its own south portal was just
west
of Westwood Avenue, at or possibly just above the level of Eutaw Street. Not
quite straight, it emerged on the north below Neff Street and above the
hairpin
bend of Sycamore Street, and bifurcated in a triangular junction. The left
branch ran along the west side of the draw and ended in what must have been
a
coal tunnel, below and more or less in line with the east end of Grandview
Avenue. The right branch bent toward the east and ended at the head of the
original incline at about the 1025-foot level of the right of way used
eventually for the Castle Shannon (north) incline of recent memory.
The Castle Shannon south incline, for those uncertain, started across Bailey
Avenue from and just east of the head station of the north incline, and ran
down the reservation between Haberman Avenue and Laclede Street.
Don G
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