buckeyefarmer
Epic Contributor
Ever noticed how many public buildings barely last 50 yrs without being replaced ?
Nice! Thanks.We sang that song in grade school.
There is also the Ohio Erie Canal from Cleveland to the Ohio river in Portsmouth.
1827-1861, then as a water source until 1913.
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Ohio and Erie Canal - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
Nothing is built to last today. It's the 'throw away' society we live in.Ever noticed how many public buildings barely last 50 yrs without being replaced ?
you pretty close the C&O canal?We sang that song in grade school.
There is also the Ohio Erie Canal from Cleveland to the Ohio river in Portsmouth.
1827-1861, then as a water source until 1913.
![]()
Ohio and Erie Canal - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
Yeah I realize that, but with all the economic crashes & rises, you would think its very risky to build a 77 mile railroad over some very challenging terrain for a mine, that also had to be built, that maybe had 10-15 good years? I dunno, maybe building railroads over mountains & peat bogs with fairly old school equipment wasnt as hard as I imagine??Mergers and acquisitions meant one railroad may have two or three routes between two cities. Usually the best was retained and the others scrapped.
If it was a single line to a resource, it would be abandoned when there was no more traffic to pay for maintenance and operation.
Bruce
Not a bad start.Personally, I'd like to see all government buildings built like pole barns.
Yeah I realize that, but with all the economic crashes & rises, you would think its very risky to build a 77 mile railroad over some very challenging terrain for a mine, that also had to be built, that maybe had 10-15 good years? I dunno, maybe building railroads over mountains & peat bogs with fairly old school equipment wasnt as hard as I imagine??![]()
I agree. Some bean counter figured out there's profit in it. Kinda like watching those gold mining shows. The amount of material they have to move and process for each ounce of gold is staggering. Yet there's profit in it.Yeah I realize that, but with all the economic crashes & rises, you would think its very risky to build a 77 mile railroad over some very challenging terrain for a mine, that also had to be built, that maybe had 10-15 good years? I dunno, maybe building railroads over mountains & peat bogs with fairly old school equipment wasnt as hard as I imagine??![]()
But not quite as significant.....I imagine It was easier than building the pyramids.
MoKelly