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Re: (erielack) Silk Trains



There were also a number of silk mills in the Scranton-Wilkes-Barre area 
around 1900/

bob gillis

tonyhorn_@_earthlink.net wrote:

>Paterson NJ was known as "The Silk City" and had a number of silk mills.  I suspect that many of the silk shipments ended up there.  There were also numerous woolen mills in the area, most of which had closed and/or moved south by the mid-50s
>
>Tony Horn
>
>-----Original Message-----
>  
>
>>From: Fred Stratton <erief7_@_msn.com>
>>Sent: Mar 27, 2006 7:02 AM
>>To: erielack_@_lists.railfan.net, paultup@optonline.net
>>Subject: (erielack) Silk Trains
>>
>>
>>I recieved this question via my website, does anyone have any info on this?
>>
>>Fred Stratton
>>erief7_@_msn.com
>>Clearwater, Florida
>>
>>    
>>
>>>From: Alan Vanterpool <avtpool_@_shaw.ca>
>>>To: erief7_@_msn.com
>>>Subject: Silk Trains
>>>Date: Sun, 26 Mar 2006 17:50:43 -0700
>>>
>>>Hello:
>>>
>>>      
>>>
>>>From 1895 to 1935 fast trains moved bales of raw silk landed at west coast 
>>    
>>
>>>ports to the east coast. I understand the Erie Rail Road was one of the 
>>>eastern roads with which the western roads interchanges their cars of silk. 
>>>Do you have any information on this - especially where the loads terminated 
>>>on the Erie system.
>>>
>>>Thank you.
>>>
>>>Alan Vanterpool
>>>      
>>>
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