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There was a car float operation maintained by the Western Maryland that connected its main Baltimore terminal, Port Covington, to a smallish industrial area at Wagner's Point on the other side of the South Branch of the Patapsco. As I recall, there were chemical manufacturers in that area. The traffic was pretty regular, and the float was the secondary connection to the outside world, the main being the B&O Curtis Bay Branch. The WM serviced the area with one of its GE 44 tonners.It was also an urban residential neighborhood that was embedded among the industrial sites, so it could make for an interesting and busy backdrop. (The close proximity to industrial uses led to the neighborhood being purchased by the city, abandoned and demolished in the 1990s)The map shows the area as part of Anne Arundel County, but it was annexed into Baltimore City in 1919. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4e/Fairfield_Peninsula_Map_Detail_1907.pngYou can see the ferry bar on the map, which is now the location of the Louis Dreyfuss grain elevator near what used to be the Key Bridge. The Wikipedia article gives you a bit more of the history. The article below touches briefly on WM's carfloats around Baltimore harbor.https://www.alphabetroute.com/wm/history.phpI'm sure the operation existed during the steam era, and the WM maintained a fleet of small steam that worked the various urban industrial lines it worked in the city up until the "smoke ordinance" curtailed that in the 1930s, thus ushering in the small diesels.Somewhere in my stacks of stuff I have a 1948 rail shippers guide for Baltimore published by the Chamber of Commerce in that year, which is indexed to a map of the city that color keys the several rairoads serving it, and shows numbered locations of the industries. Being it's an incredibly useful document, I've lost track of where I have it stowed since my move. It's digitized on one or another laptop I've set aside over the years. If this is of interest to you, I'll be happy to dig it up... eventually Lee
This was captured in part of Paul Dolkos's Baltimore layout. Never getting to see that in person is up there with never getting to see Tom Petty live in my book of missed opportunities.