Living in the Promised Land
Ingomar was one of the towns plotted by the railroad as it headed west in 1908. As with many of the other small towns plotted by the Milwaukee Road, it was to serve as a hub for the local settlers and an access point to the railroad's growing empire that stretched to the east and west. Looking south along the main street, the US flag still flies high on this hot summer day in 2003. It marks the Jersey Lilly - one of the local watering holes left over from a time of grander intents.
The station still stands at Ingomar as a converted residence and is still lined closely to the old mainline that strikes through the north side of town. Also left behind is an old Milwaukee tender, likely from an S2 Northern steam locomotive. The classy white stripping and outline of the tilted emblem are clearly visible as the relic sits in the weeds just off the main. The story goes that water was supplied to the town by the Milwaukee Road when potable water could not be found [1]. Although no longer in use today, it stands as an unexpected and haunting reminder of the steel machines that used to traverse these promised lands.
Comments
Dan
Upper management was largely to blame but our wonderful government in Washington was also complicit in this terrible screw up.
It would be most interesting to me if I could do a mile-for-mile inventory of the right of way from Terry, MT to Renton, WA. I have tried to “fly over” much of the route on “Google Earth” but I don’t have the intimate knowledge of it.
The most glaring issue I have found to date is in downtown Ellensburg, WA where several buildings have been built on top of the old right of way. A bypass around Ellensburg would be in order.
As for the rest of the route, I cannot see why track couldn’t be relaid on it. According to one very knowledgeable attorney and expert on all things Milwaukee, the biggest hurdles would be political – not technical. It COULD happen someday but only if a miracle happens. As a last resort, I guess we can pray if nothing else works.
Regards,
Fred M. Cain,
Topeka, IN