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re: Interesting historical pictures thread (add captions please)

Posted on 1/29/13 at 7:09 pm to
Posted by HarryBalzack
Member since Oct 2012
15229 posts
Posted on 1/29/13 at 7:09 pm to
Those Aegis Class Guided Missile Cruisers made in Pascagoula are capable of producing so much torque that it causes the ship to list to the right.
Posted by WG_Dawg
Hoover
Member since Jun 2004
86624 posts
Posted on 1/29/13 at 7:20 pm to


The Winecoff Hotel in Atlanta, GA is best known for a fire that occurred there on December 7, 1946, in which 119 people died. It remains the deadliest hotel fire in U.S. history. Arnold Hardy was an amateur photographer in the area at the time of the fire. Turning up he saw a woman falling to the ground. He pointed his camera and fired his last bulb just as she was passing the third floor. Her body hit a pipe then bounced into a railing and fell to the ground. She miraculously survived.
Posted by lsewwww
Member since Feb 2009
376 posts
Posted on 1/29/13 at 7:24 pm to
November 25, 1941: The explosion of HMS Barham.


Courtesy of the shipbuilders at BIW:
MV Mighty Servant 2 carrying mine-damaged Roberts on 31 July 1988


Hull damage to the Samual B. Roberts, which was fully repaired
This post was edited on 1/29/13 at 7:25 pm
Posted by HarryBalzack
Member since Oct 2012
15229 posts
Posted on 1/29/13 at 8:19 pm to
quote:

May, 1886. President Grover Cleveland was making final preparations for his wedding. Jefferson Davis, in a rare public appearance, was drawing large and enthusiastic crowds of admirers. Throughout the nation, final preparations were being made for the celebration of Memorial Day. And in the South, plans were nearing completion for one of the most complex and dramatic two-day periods in railroading history-changing the gauge of an estimated 11,500 miles of track. It was a little over a half-century since the South Carolina Canal and Rail Road Company had inaugurated steam-powered freight and passenger travel on a regularly-scheduled basis. Horatio Allen, the railroad's chief engineer, had departed from the 4-foot 81/2-inch gauge used in England by prescribing a 5-foot gauge and in the years that followed, most of the South's railroads copied his example. But in the North, the British example was dominant. It made little difference in the years preceding the War Between the States, since the two regions exchanged few goods requiring rail transportation. But as the South began its recovery from the war, it became readily apparent that complete economic reconstruction would require easy commerce with the rest of the nation-an impossibility so long as differences in gauge existed. At first, the problem of interchange had been temporarily relieved by laboriously loading freight from one car to another at interchange points between railroads of different gauges. But the growing trade between the South and the rest of the nation soon required faster and less costly methods.

In effect, the pressures of free competition had provided a catalyst, and the stage was set for changing the gauge of practically every road in the South - a change that, ultimately, would be accomplished in less than 36 hours.

February 2-3, 1886, marked the first step. As agreed the previous October at a meeting of the Southern Time Convention, operating officers of the South's railroads met at the Kimball House in Atlanta in a "Convention ...called for the purpose of fixing date and arranging details for change of gauge."

Only one rail would be moved in on the day of the change, so inside spikes were hammered into place at the new gauge width well in advance of the change, leaving only the need for a few blows of the sledgehammer once the rail was placed. As May 31 drew near, some spikes were pulled from the rail that was to be moved in order to reduce as much as possible the time required to release the rail from its old position.

Finally, in the early morning hours of May 31, the concentrated work began. Men worked in crews of various sizes charged with various goats-some given specific mileages to cover, others under instructions to begin at a specified point and work in a specified direction until they met another crew working toward them.

Along thousands of miles of track-approximately half of which was operated by predecessors of today's Southern Railway System-spikes were pulled, rails moved in to the new gauge, and more spikes hammered into place. At shops and rendezvous points throughout the South, motive power and rolling stock were being altered to fit the new gauge. Wheels of cars were moved in, steam engine brakes and tires were altered-and the screeching of axles being narrowed on lathes joined the ringing of heavy hammers.

In less than three days, standard-gauge trains were serving the South.
Complete Story
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Kimball House in Atlanta
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The Gainesville yard of both the Florida Southern and the SF&W circa 1886. The narrow gauge tracks of the FS are on the far left while the five foot gauge of the SF&W are on the right.
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Here the view is from the south, with FS narrow gauge tracks on the right, the mainline on the far right. The next siding has narrow gauge flat cars
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Moving tracks
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Chinese workers moving track in California
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Logging line affiliated with the New Orleans And Northeastern Railroad. They typically used narrow guage tracks
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Narrow guage logging line on the left and a broad guage line on the right
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Train Depot at Laural, MS
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Workers setting rails
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