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Just a random comment, your stand-in monument seems a bit...monumental. Comparing to the size of the station it feels 20 feet tall? I dunno, just seems a little overpowering for such a small space where it resides on the layout. I think you're doing excellent work though and continuing this layout's fine legacy.James
Many small towns would put the cannon barrels on a concrete support, since carriages would rot out in the weather and need constant painting and repair. With your space available, maybe, one cannon barrel on a concrete base?
lol I like the fence...
Semaphore would still probably have been there, but not used. I don’t know how this particular one scales out, is it too thick? C&O practice was to mount the schedule board on an outside wall, so I would consider that over a stand. I do not recommend the clock, just my opinion, you asked.The attached picture shows the board located at the station in Catlettsburg, KY taken a couple of months ago.
Well, are you asking about a semaphore, or a train order signal (that looks kind of like a bi-directional semaphore)? They were two entirely different things, and in my opinion, "semaphores" don't belong in front of the depot, but train order signals definitely do. If the telegraph (or telephone) operator based in the depot had orders for an approaching train, he would lower the blade to let the engine crew know. A horizontal position meant stop for your orders, diagonal meant slow down and pick them up on the fly, vertical, no orders, proceed. It's very railroady, for the era, and I would use one on a TT&TO railroad (the vast majority of lines in the 50's).Otto K.