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Well, the '"transcontinental" (of which there are five or six depending on how you count them - the first - UP/SP, the second - NP, then GN, ATSF, Milwaukee, and eventually SP on its own) did start, basically, at the Iowa border. At least that's where it connected to the existing eastern lines.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
Chris, how many scales do you model in? How many layouts do you have?
I have several Train & Trooper locos for the "one day" layout.
But strangely enough there was no bridge between Counsel Bluffs and Omaha until 1873. So the first true "Transcontinental" rail link was made in 1870 in Strasburg Colorado at the completion of the Kansas Pacific Railroad...
I've been reading about the settling of the northern plains by the railroads and it's quite fascinating stuff. Especially James Hill's sensible commitment to traffic creation through road building (intermodal hub and spoke at its earliest incarnation) and agricultural development of the region via animal husbandry and crop and irrigation research. He may have been an amalgamation and consolidation capitalist but he was a true visionary as far as community/economic development was concerned.
Mark, that sawmill looks excellent. Quite a unique structure with all of the angles and height variations. One thing I have been curious about, is how are operators uncoupling cars. Some sidings and yard tracks seem to be a bit of a reach for manual uncoupling.