0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
One of the puzzles I've got is the road crossing for the stream. Today, it's probably a 36" - 48" corrugated culvert, rock and gravel dump fill. It's still a narrow road - only 18 feet. Dialing it back to 1920 or earlier you have to wonder what was there, and how to model it. Stone arch? Small truss? Something simple and wood? Seeing as how everything around was put up with wood and in a heck of a hurry I'm leaning toward that. With only about a 20' span, it could be pretty simple. PRR might have upgraded, but a down-and-out oilboom town would not have.Looking for inspiration, I found this - the story of virtually every road bridge in Yellowstone, built in the same era. Wow, what a collection of little road bridges to admire...every shape and size.http://www.npshistory.com/publications/yell/hrs-roads/chap12.htmI'm really leaning toward a simple A-frame truss, single span, wood, with wooden cribs on the ends. Suggestions?
Like everything on this small project, I'm torn between trying to be historically accurate and yet have some modeling fun as well, and find that sweet spot in the middle.
One thing I observed about early oil tanks was that if they could, they always located them ABOVE the rail siding on a hill, as it was all gravity feed. No pumps. So given the geography I've actually seen down there (and the big flat spot above the road on the hillside that now has a newer house on it) that would appear to me to be where the original oil pipeline tanks were.
The most amazing part of this country around here is that because of the ample rainfall, vegetation recovers rapidly, and with it, eats all signs of anything human (wood, metal, and even concrete) given enough time.
I was at a major industrial-scale Amish/Mennonite greenhouse yesterday just over the NY border and the 2-story new store was done entirely open-framed, hemlock beam and pin construction by the Amish, not a commercial truss or steel plate or bolt anywhere. Flash back to 1870 again.