FK Plous, Day Trips; A Rare Ride on the Rock Island Line. Chicago Reader, Oct 11, 1990.
www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/da ... /Content?oid=876481
Quote:
"Rock Island's stockholders [hence creditors in a bankruptcy proceding, opposite a debtor] finally persuaded US District Court Judge Frank McGarr that their railroad--operating in bankruptcy since 1975--was worth more dead than alive [calling for asset liquidation].
"The original end of the Rock Island line had been its namesake city on the Mississippi, site of the US Army's Rock Island arsenal. But the directors had ambitions. They extended the road to Omaha, the starting point of the railroad Union Pacific had begun building toward the west coast after the Civil War. Trying to reach Omaha may have been the Rock's undoing.
"four-fifths of the Rock's tracks are still being used. Metra, for example, carries 33,000 riders a day in the Chicago-Joliet commuter corridor, which it totally rehabilitated. * * * But the resurrected Rock has no passenger trains. Amtrak's sole Chicago-to-Omaha train uses the competing Burlington Northern tracks. That's something of a shame. Rail enthusiasts agree that of the six lines running west from Chicago to the Union Pacific line, the Rock's was the prettiest. The 61 miles paralleling the Illinois River west of Joliet are postcard stuff--mingled water, foliage, farms, and villages. West of Bureau the line leaves the river, twisting along the Illinois' tributaries as it climbs out of the valley and up onto the plateau of cornfields. For 15 miles it follows the old Hennepin Canal, which connects the Illinois with the Rock River. Recreational boaters sail through the old wooden lock gates into a time warp.
Note:
(a) Omaha, Nebraska
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omaha, Nebraska
(the largest city in the state of Nebraska [wose capital is Lincoln]; The word Omaha (actually Umoⁿhoⁿ or Umaⁿhaⁿ) means "Dwellers on the bluff")
(b) Joliet, Illinois
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joliet,_Illinois
(a city; located 40 miles (64 km) southwest of Chicago; French Canadian explorer Louis Jolliet, who in 1673, along with Father Jacques Marquette, paddled up the Des Plaines River [emptying into Illinois River; see map] and camped on a huge mound, a few miles south of present-day Joliet)
(i) Jolliet
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/jolliet
(note the French pronunciation)
(ii) Note the city name has one letter L, whereas the explorer name has two.
(c) Bureau Junction, Illinois
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bureau_Junction,_Illinois
(usually called Bureau; a village in Bureau County, Illinois; Bureau Junction was the point where the Rock Island Line railroad's branch line to Peoria split; section 1 History: The village is named for Michel or Pierre Bureau. Their original surname was probably Belleau. [Little else can be found about them online; The brother(s) ran a trading post near where Big Bureau Creek empties into the Illinois River (hence the place name "junction")])
* Illinois River
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illinois_River
(This river flows west across northern Illinois * * * [In] Bureau County it turns south at an area known as the "Great Bend," flowing southwest)
(d) "For 15 miles it [Rock's track] follows the old Hennepin Canal, which connects the Illinois with the Rock River. Recreational boaters sail through the old wooden lock gates into a time warp.
(i)
(A) For the Hennepin Canal, see Hennepin Canal Parkway State Park
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hennepin_Canal_Parkway_State_Park
(an abandoned waterway in northwest Illinois, between the Mississippi River at Rock Island and the Illinois River near Hennepin[, Illinois--a village on the Illinois River];
(B) Richard W Steiger, Hennepin—First US Canal to Use Concrete for Locks, Dams, Viaducts; A commercial failture becomes a recreation success. The Aberdeen Group, Oct 1, 1992 (publication #C920729)
www.concreteconstruction.net/ima ... crete%20for%20Locks,%20Dams,%20Viaducts_tcm45-342463.pdf
(section heading "First concrete in US canals" on page 1; section heading "Railroads cause demise of the canal" and map on page 4)
Quote:
(ii) Rock River (Mississippi River)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_River_(Mississippi_River)
(approximately 299 miles (481 km) long; "joining the Mississippi at Rock Island. It was on the Rock River in Dixon where Ronald Reagan served as a lifeguard")
(iii) "the old wooden lock gates"
(A) Wht do they look like?
Jim & Judu Buzzard, Sunday Morning July 22, 2012 Ride on the Hennepin Canal. Trek by Jim & Judy, July 24, 2013
buzardjj.blogspot.com/2012/07/sunday-morning-july-22-2012-ride-on.html
(caption of photo no 7: "Lock 16 Miter Gates")
(B) Navigation Lock and Dam: Miter Gates. Management Measures Digital Library (MMDL); Floodwalls, levees, and dams, undated
library.water-resources.us/docs/MMDL/FLD/Feature.cfm?ID=25
("A miter gate has two leaves that provide a closure at one end of the lock. The miter gate derives its name from the fact that the two leaves meet at an angle pointing upstream to resemble a miter joint. Horizontally framed miter gates have many advantages over other gate types and have been used on more locks than any other type gate. Miter gates are rugged and do not involve complicated construction problems. Miter gates are also easily serviced and fast operating. The only drawbacks arise from the inability of the gates to operate under head and to withstand reverse head")
(C) miter joint
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miter_joint
(D) mitre
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitre
(iv) Dixon, Illinois
(A) Ronald Reagan
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronald_Reagan
(1911-2004; Born in Tampico, Illinois, and raised in Dixon)
Quote: "He attended Dixon High School * * * His first job was as a lifeguard at the Rock River in Lowell Park, near Dixon, in 1927. Over a six-year period, Reagan reportedly performed 77 rescues as a lifeguard, notching a mark on a wooden log for each one.
(B) History. Ronald Reagan Boyhood Home & Visitors Cente, undated
reaganhome.org/history
("The white house at 816 Hennepin Avenue was built by a man named William C Thompson, who built the house for $1,500 which included the barn out back. The Reagan family moved in on DEcember 6th, 1920, just 2 months shy of Ron turning 10. The Reagan's [sic] rented the home for $15 a month until 1923 where they then moved to other homes in Dixon. The Reagan's [sic] rented every home they lived in until Ron bought them their first house in California")
(e) "two Quad Cities housewives, Pam Siegert and Rose Ann Hass, decided the railroad was too good to be wasted on railroad men. They established Rails to the River and began chartering a special Amtrak excursion train to bring Chicago day-trippers to Rock Island each year during the height of the fall color season. They also chartered the paddle wheeler Quad City Queen to give their passengers a three-hour river cruise and lavish buffet lunch as the centerpiece of the trip."
(i) Quad Cities
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quad_Cities
(The name "Quad Cities" for a group of five has resulted from the history of the community [for that , see section 1.2 Evolution of an identity])
(ii) paddle wheeler
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paddle_wheeler
(section 3 History, section 3.1 East Asia: The Chinese used the paddle-wheel ship even during the First Opium War (1839–1842) and for transport around the Pearl River during the early 20th century)
(f) "As the train rumbled over the drawbridge at Joliet, you could see that the surface of the water in the Sanitary and Ship Canal was higher than the roofs of the houses next to the dike--sort of like New Orleans or Holland. At Starved Rock the river behaved as rivers should, running safely between natural banks, placid and beautiful. At Sheffield the train passed a gigantic pig farm, where 50 or 60 piglets, unaccustomed to a speeding passenger train blaring its air horn, fled to their farrowing sheds"
(i) drawbridge
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drawbridge
(ii) Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canalen.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Sanitary_and_Ship_Canal(Before completion of the canal in 1900, the sewage in the Chicago River flowed into Lake Michigan, the city's drinking water supply)
(iii) And I thought Yellow River is the only river in the world whose riverbed is higher than its vincinites.
(iv) Starved Rock
(A) Starved Rock Lock and Dam
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starved_Rock_Lock_and_Dam
([constructed between 1926 and 1933, and] managed by the US Army Corps of Engineers along [within, but next to river bank of] the Illinois River)
(B) Starved Rock State Park
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starved_Rock_State_Park
(Located just southeast of the village of Utica, in Deer Park Township, LaSalle County, Illinois, along the south bank of the Illinois River; section 2 History, section 2.4 The "Starved Rock": There is no historical evidence that this siege ever happened)
(C) Starved Rock State Park - Voted the #1 attraction in the state of Illinois!
www.starvedrockstatepark.org/
Click "History" at the top horizontal bar.
(v) Sheffield, Illinois
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheffield,_Illinois
(a village in Bureau County)
(vi) farrow (v): "to give birth to (a farrow)"
farrow (n): "a litter of pigs"
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/farrow |