Jim and list The word Anthracite is a catch all phrase that can be interpreted by many individuals many different ways. In this particular instance it's involving the railroads that served the Anthracite coal fields, but there stating its depicting a 1954 time frame thus there telling you the NYS&W, WB&E are not in it, so don't look for them. Sure the PRR was there to a smaller extent, but was probably left off because you couldn't show a detailed map going all the way to Chicago. They were never thought of as a Anthracite Road and it would have mucked up the map even more. A map gets to the point were sometimes you just can't fit anything else in without hindering it. I'm sure the decision to not show the PRR was made somewhere between day one and day two. As a perfectionist in the area Jim you have to weigh what one can do in 21 or 22 working days every month. There are some pretty knowledgeable names mentioned as assistance providers to that map. I suspect Bill Metzger continues to make changes right up to deadline and then that's it. It goes to print, and they live with the few discrepancies that local perfectionists bring out. Would we be discussing ANY ERRORS if it was the monthly map of De Monies, IA or San Antonio, TX? I have to agree with Ron Dukarm that your term "Screwed up again' is a bit harsh and that's coming from one who doesn't like errors and thinks that when something goes to print it better be correct. ALA Morning Sun Books, which isn't on a time deadline, involves text and not a few additional lines on a map and has no reasons to NOT get it right but seems to never be mentioned on this list. I give Trains a 99 for there presentation of What Ever Happened to the Anthracite Roads. In any school I know of that's an A +. Bob Bahrs In a message dated 4/30/2009 8:17:00 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, jguthrie_@_pipeline.com writes: The new Trains magazine popped into my mailbox today, with its map of the "Anthracite Railroads Today." The first howler is the omission of the NYS&W/WB&E -- which carried more anthracite than the O&W (though the Erie buried the numbers for competitive reasons. Also omitted is the DS&S, although not lasting very long, also carried more anthracite than the O&W. I suppose one could also be nit-picky and note that the L&NE's route to the Port of NY is not showm although that was a pretty busy route too. The NYS&W's Edgewater Terminal was one of the busiest anthracite tidewater terminals of all -- yet is omitted as well, but the Erie at Weehawken(!!!) **is** shown. If Weehawken is "important" for the Erie, then the DS&S and L&NE should have been shown; And considering that most of the Erie's anthracite was dumped at Edgewater -- and not Weehawken after 1906 -- makes it even more annoying in its omission. I wonder if there'd be any interest in a map that shows the railroads that actually shipped anthracite and where the anthracite was consigned over the years? Take that map -- and then re-do this map to show what happened to those routes might be a revelation. In any case, I am again irritated by railfan mythology overtaking railroad history here: the Northern Field Map last year had a few nitpicky errors; the NY Harbor Map had a bunch of real howlers, and this one is delightful as far as it goes, but doesn;t thell the story that **is**anthracite. Cheers, Jim Guthrie ELHS #1296 The Erie Lackawanna Mailing List http://EL-List.railfan.net/ To Unsubscribe: http://Lists.Railfan.net/erielackunsub.html **************Access 350+ FREE radio stations anytime from anywhere on the web. Get the Radio Toolbar! (http://toolbar.aol.com/aolradio/download.html?ncid=emlcntusdown00000003) The Erie Lackawanna Mailing List http://EL-List.railfan.net/ To Unsubscribe: http://Lists.Railfan.net/erielackunsub.html ------------------------------
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