richard carr
Western Thunderer
Last weekend I was lucky enough to find the time to travel to Cincinnati, it is about 300 miles south east of Chicago and took about 5 and half hours to drive there from O'Hare airport.
The first port of call was the Union Station, it is a beautiful art deco building constructed in 1931. It is now a group of 4 or 5 museums, but you can get into the main building for free and the parking was free too.




The main classification yards are behind the station building, Tower A is a preserved signal box, unfortunately it is closed for renovation at the moment and I was told that it is unlikely to open before 2024.
You can't see much of the rail in Cincinnati itself, the lines are generally above you at the southern (river) end of the yards. The north side of the Ohio river is Ohio but the south bank is Kentucky.
So I headed over the river to Tim's Train and Hobby store, the CSX mainline south passes close by. One train was heading south as I arrived, you will be able to see that on the video once I have posted it up on youtube.
After this I headed to Erlinger, the Depot here has been restored and has a nice caboose.

The depot is at the summit of Erlinger Hill, a 7 mile steep climb south from the Ohio river. The hill is double track through out and there are a few places mid hill where you can get a good view as trains crawl up, often with pushers. I did video one going up hill and then drove to another spot behind a strip mall, so plenty of parking.
I found this train waiting to head down the hill, the crew had just arrived.

The train was well over 2 miles long as I had seen part of it parked about 2 miles away.
Once that had departed, it's on the video, It was 7:30 in the evening and I found a nice indian restaurant to get a bite to eat.
Richard
The first port of call was the Union Station, it is a beautiful art deco building constructed in 1931. It is now a group of 4 or 5 museums, but you can get into the main building for free and the parking was free too.




The main classification yards are behind the station building, Tower A is a preserved signal box, unfortunately it is closed for renovation at the moment and I was told that it is unlikely to open before 2024.
You can't see much of the rail in Cincinnati itself, the lines are generally above you at the southern (river) end of the yards. The north side of the Ohio river is Ohio but the south bank is Kentucky.
So I headed over the river to Tim's Train and Hobby store, the CSX mainline south passes close by. One train was heading south as I arrived, you will be able to see that on the video once I have posted it up on youtube.
After this I headed to Erlinger, the Depot here has been restored and has a nice caboose.

The depot is at the summit of Erlinger Hill, a 7 mile steep climb south from the Ohio river. The hill is double track through out and there are a few places mid hill where you can get a good view as trains crawl up, often with pushers. I did video one going up hill and then drove to another spot behind a strip mall, so plenty of parking.
I found this train waiting to head down the hill, the crew had just arrived.

The train was well over 2 miles long as I had seen part of it parked about 2 miles away.
Once that had departed, it's on the video, It was 7:30 in the evening and I found a nice indian restaurant to get a bite to eat.
Richard








































