The Resurrection
c. 1511-1515
News and views of progress at the Illinois Railway Museum
The Resurrection
c. 1511-1515
Posted by
Randall Hicks
at
6:00 AM
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April showers bring shorter hours. Today's work time was shorter than usual due to heavy rain, and the radar was threatening worse to come, so I left early. But some progress was made.
Posted by
Randall Hicks
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7:48 AM
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Let me draw your attention to an art exhibit coming to a museum near you -- the work of Mitch Markovitz. I haven't seen him in years, but we're glad he's still going strong. You won't want to miss it.
Posted by
Randall Hicks
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8:27 AM
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For the last six months or so I've been turning out third rail beams for our CA&E cars, and it may seem rather monotonous. But I'm not done yet. I just got the wood and started assembling the eighth one of this series. We need to make some more cast iron parts to complete the next ones. And that will be expensive.
Posted by
Randall Hicks
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9:00 PM
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The museum business can be rather challenging at times; it's not easy to get all the publicity we want and deserve, although we have a lot to offer, of course. We need something new and exciting to pull in ever bigger crowds. Our planned Visitor Center will go a long way towards fulfilling that goal, and we encourage everybody to donate what you can to its construction. But one of our previous General Managers thought that we should also have something even more exciting and stupendous: the Kolossus of IRM!
This will be a huge concrete statue of Nick Kallas bestriding Main Street, welcoming the masses into our Museum. It is planned to be about 120' tall, and it will certainly be the most astounding tourist attraction of its sort anywhere this side of North Korea.
Now we realize that this may not be everybody's cup of tea. And in fact, when the idea was proposed at the most recent Board meeting, the discussion became rather heated, to say the least. But the survivors agree that this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that we can't afford to miss. So please donate today! Do not send cash or stamps. No refunds.
Posted by
Randall Hicks
at
6:00 AM
4
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Labels: April First
Master craftsman Buzz Morisette reports:
Posted by
Randall Hicks
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5:00 PM
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Frank writes...
Posted by
Frank Hicks
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11:10 PM
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Labels: 453 Progress, 460 Progress
Two thumbs up for "Off His Trolley": https://ia801601.us.archive.org/25/item ... LEY.ia.mp4This is a very educational guide from 1924 on how not to operate streetcars, disguised as a Mack Sennett comedy, and recently restored. They just don't make them like they used to.
Posted by
Randall Hicks
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3:09 PM
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On Saturday I was running the 714 and 749 for the Bunny Hop event. Derek White was the conductor and we were the only mainline train. Basically everything went well, and I was too busy to get any pictures. But you've all seen the North Shore cars before. Whether attendance for the event met expectations I couldn't say; our passengers all seemed to be in a good mood.
But during a brief lunch break I managed to get a few pictures of the projects in the shop.
Posted by
Randall Hicks
at
1:00 PM
2
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Our indefatigable investigative reporter, Gregg Wolfersheim, is back at it, relaying news about progress on the Green Bay car. I think we can all agree that at this point, thanks to the amount of time it's spent in the Electric Car Shop, it's really an electric car. That's how that works, right?
Posted by
Frank Hicks
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5:00 PM
2
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Labels: GBW 109