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John:
The barbed wire as shown on my layout is to keep people from falling off cliffs or high embankments. A 25 to 75 foot fall must hurt worse than getting scratched by the wire. I suppose railroads could run safety railings along high edges too. People include railroad workers on foot and passengers who might possibly detrain up in those high places during emergency situations. The train may catch fire and people may need to get off in a hurry. I have fencing track side in other areas to keep off cows and other large animals. Whenever I design a road, I always have safety in mind.
The fencing may also deter right-of-way trespassers as little boys who like to play on the tracks. I used to like to walk along one rail trying to keep my balance. It was also fun to jump from one rail to the other without falling off. A boy in the 5th grade used to like to put coins on the track to flatten them out and removed the stampings. In the 1960's - 1990's, I lived in Novato, CA where the old SP line came through town. There is still an old abandoned passenger depot in town. Transit bus service in the early 1970's effectively killed SP regional passenger service in that town. SP GP 7/9 road switching engines hauled the local passenger trains, Pullman heavyweights. Those gray locos with red nose wings are so familiar.
The reason you have makes sense a bit of safety of course, which is rare for a railroad to think of though.![]()
I saw kids place coins on the old Boston and Maine tracks. One day unknowingly, I picked up about $5 bucks in change. Some little rich brats had placed their spending money on the tracks and I came across it while walking along the path that crossed by near the Rose Glen ice cream stand. They were mad when I came back with an ice cream on their cash and they could smash it down to nothing. Ooops!
What happened to your SP branch happened here as well. The B&M ran short commuter branches all over, but in many locations the rail service was stopped due to "temporary" cost-cutting moves only never to return. One of the branches I remember ran from Swampscott and Salem (there was a big Wye) to Marblehead. The Swampscott end served Cliftondale and a few other commuter destinations on its short trip to Marblehead where as the Salem branch served the state college and a few other places on its way up to Marblehead. The terminus in Marblehead Mass. was a gorgeous ca. 1850 passenger station. My mom told me of riding in the old wooden coaches with the velvet seats to the station and how the station had an old Ben Franklin potbelly stove in the waiting room. Today, the station is gone and the small yard are parking lots and stores. The tracks disappeared sometime in the early 1960s and the old station was ripped down along with the row of weeping willows that stood along the railroad street. Today, Marblehead is a congested mess with no main roads and served by buses from Boston and Salem.
As a young Lad, I walked more RR Tracks, climbed on-top of more RR Boxcars/Flat Cars than you could shake a Stick at . And watched 70 Plus MPH UP Passenger Consist blaze past me.....Played in an old Granary Mill tool.....Yup ran into some unsavory characters on occasion, some Hobo's luckily didn't get hurt.....But that was the simpler life and times in 1950-1960's......Only memories now.....
And we believed Buses would do a better job than Trains.....What a Crock of.....@!@#$#%%...:hehe:
Now we need to build more 1-5 Million$$$$$ Light Rail PER Mile systems etc to keep up with the times....What Bill of Hogwash we were served..........
Alluding to Red and White Car Line, in California ran 350 miles to anywhere you wanted to go.........I digress now....!!!
Please excuse my Rant.......I go stand into a dark corner and think about it some more.....:wave: