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Check Out The Icing Platform

 

Check Out The Icing Platform

A post by Doug Harding on Facebook.

He comments:

Today I ran on a very nice Union Pacific layout modeling the Council Bluffs and eastern Nebraska. HO scale, no scenery, but superb track and operations. I handled the transfers between the UP and all the railroads that came into Council Bluffs from the east.

My Notes:

Two icing machines! Doug took this at ProRail last week.

Layout owned by Mark Amfahr of Woodland, MN.

Bob Chaparro

Moderator


Packing Citrus In The Grove - I. L. Lyon & Sons

 

Packing Citrus In The Grove - I. L. Lyon & Sons

A post by Robert Wilkiewicz on the Facebook Urban Archaeology SoCal Pomona Valley Ontario IE History group.

Description:

Antique postcard from Redlands California

C. N. Jackson Photographer

My Notes:

This appears to reflect an earlier time when the crop was packed in the grove. Notice these are packing crates and not field boxes. This evolved to packing on the open platforms of local railroad depots to packing at purpose-built packing houses.

Bob Chaparro

Moderator


Re: Ghost Sunkist Sign

 

I remember in the early sixties I went on a Cub Scouts tour of that packing house on 19th Street in Upland.
My only memory was watching all the citrus being sorted. My brother¡¯s best friend¡¯s dad operated a lemon and grapefruit farm near 15th and Campus (¡°Squeak¡± Wilson Farm).
My brother and I and Darryl Wilson spent one day after school up in a tree house in a eucalyptus tree. We were reading Playboy magazines and smoking cigarettes. Our experience turned my brother and I from taking up smoking.
Our family lived on 14th and First Avenue and growers had homes all around us.
Sometimes I would wake up in the middle of the night and hear the Santa Fe local either heading up or returning from the 19th Street Packing house.
-Bruce Brewer?
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Re: Ghost Sunkist Sign

 

Reminds me of this incredible discovery in Upland several years ago.


Inline image













Ghost Sunkist Sign

 

Ghost Sunkist Sign

Merle Dech on the Facebook Ghost Signs group.

Location:

Toledo, Ohio. Souk Restaurant at 139 South Huron Street.

Bob Chaparro

Moderator


BAR 2903 ex-BAR 10113 (Boxcar)

 

BAR 2903 ex-BAR 10113 (Boxcar)

Pacific Fruit Express used Bangor & Aroostook reefers under an arrangement with that railroad.

This photo is from a post by Larry Curtis on the Facebook Bangor & Aroostook Railroad group.

Larry identifies this as a refrigerator car.

BAR 2903 is not a refrigerator car. Visually, the latitudinal running boards on the roof confirm this. But more importantly, the January 1955 Official Railway Equipment Register identifies this car as a boxcar, specifically an AAR Class IXH or insulated boxcar with a heater.

There have been reports of two older wood sheathed BAR refrigerator cars having been painted in the red-white-blue paint scheme as an experiment but this car is not one of those.

And there were never any BAR steel sheathed reefers painted in the red-white-blue paint scheme. Every photo identified as such actually is a photo of an insulated boxcar. Many model manufacturers get this wrong.

Bob Chaparro

Moderator


UP 3610 With Reefer Block

 

UP 3610 With Reefer Block

A post by Taylor Rush on the Facebook From the Album group.

Description:

Flying white extra flags and trailing a long line of iced and loaded refrigerator cars as she enters the yards at Cheyenne, Wyoming is Union Pacific MC-2 class "Mallet Consolidation" number 3610. The big coal-burning 2-8-8-0 "Mallet" articulated was built by the Schenectady plant of the American Locomotive Company, construction number 58272, in May of 1918. Nicknamed "Bull Mooses" by their crews, eventually the Union Pacific would roster seventy of these slow but powerful locomotives. They were succesful enough that between 1937 and 1943 all were simpled and upgraded. Number 3610 would emerge from the shops as a SA-C-2 class and carrying the new number 3510.

Bob Chaparro

Moderator


California Citrus State Historic Park - Riverside

 

California Citrus State Historic Park - Riverside

Looking to get out into nature? Now you¡¯ll have even more time to explore! California Citrus State Historic Park is now open from 8 AM to 7 PM on weekends and 8 AM to 5 PM on weekdays.

Take a walk through our scenic trails, enjoy the fresh air with your furry friends, or find the perfect spot for a sunny photo ¡ª there¡¯s no better time to soak in the beauty of the citrus groves!

My Notes:

The Visitors Center has many citrus industry displays.

Bob Chaparro

Moderator


Sunkist Billboard (1933)

 

Sunkist Billboard (1933)

A photo from the Milwaukee Public Library.

Description:

This photograph shows a two-story clapboard building on the corner of N. 4th and W. Vliet. The building has a false front, and advertising for cigarettes on the side of the building. A billboard for Sunkist oranges is to the right of the building.

Photographer: Henry H. Hunter

Bob Chaparro

Moderator


Echo Brand Crate Label

 

Echo Brand Crate Label

A post by Bruce Little.

He comments:

ECHO brand orange crate label. #1 of at least 3 versions. Grown and packed by the Pasadena Orange Growers Association, Pasadena. Printed by Los Angeles Litho. Company, Los Angeles; early 1900s.

Bob Chaparro

Moderator


Re: Model: SP Beet Gondola With Cull Lemon Load

 

Here is a photograph of a beet gondola full of culled oranges parked at the Sunkist packing plant on my Santa Maria Valley Industrial Railroad.
I extended the sides of a Round House gondola to make the beet gondola.? I used Woodland Scenics Fruit Trees and Orchards TK11 and TK12.
I used diluted?white glue and a little green and yellow high lights?to add some interest to the loaded oranges.
The SMVRR is located?in central?California, from what I have read, the oranges could be sent to the City of Industry in the Los Angles?area and used for making flavoring and citric acid.
PXL_20250424_143445298.jpg
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Machine For Washing Lemons

 

Machine For Washing Lemons

A post by Joseph Laden on the Facebook Forgotten History & Memories Of Ventura County group.

Description:

Invented by the Limoniera Company.

Bob Chaparro

Moderator

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Rialto's Orange Shipments - 1904

 

Rialto's Orange Shipments - 1904

A post by David Eck.

He comments:

Left: Newspaper article on August 20, 1904 from the San Bernardino Daily Times-Index. The article talks about the California Citrus Union's (CCU) packing house in Rialto. It was a great year for them. They shipped 757 rail cars of oranges and lemons in total which was 234 cars more than the previous season. Mentioned specifically were CCU's Rialto Brand and Gondolier Brand oranges.

Right: Rialto Brand Orange Crate Label and Gondolier Brand Orange Crate Label. Both were in use in Rialto in 1904.

Bob Chaparro

Moderator


Re: PFE Switcher 1048

 

It can be found at the following coordinates on Google Maps:
39¡ã44'10.5"N 104¡ã19'23.6"W
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Here's Google's Street View imagery dated May 2023.
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Danny
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Re: PFE Switcher 1048

 

Rich Sievers commented:

The unit is now privately owned and has been stored out-of-service for many, many years at an abandoned grain elevator next to the UP main track in Strasburg, Colorado, east of Denver.

Its reporting marks are 'MCRX 1048', standing for Markus Rail Transport.


Re: PFE Switcher 1048

 

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Since the lettering is black on white, it shouldn¡¯t be too hard to print your own with blank decal paper.

It is a very nice photo.

Gary

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From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Neil Fernbaugh via groups.io
Sent: Tuesday, April 22, 2025 11:59 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [RailroadCitrusIndustryModelingGroup] PFE Switcher 1048

?

Nice! Did anyone ever make decals for this PFE switcher?

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Re: PFE Switcher 1048

 

Nice! Did anyone ever make decals for this PFE switcher?
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PFE Switcher 1048

 

PFE Switcher 1048

Photo courtesy of Craig Walker.

Pacific Fruit Express NW2 No. 1048 began life as Union Pacific 1048. It is seen here at the PFE shops in Tucson, Arizona, on September 12, 1981. Russell Eslick photograph.

Bob Chaparro

Moderator


Re: PFE Reefers At Villa Park Orchards Packing House

 

When this photo was taken, the Tustin Branch end at Villa Park and the Villa Park Orchards (VPOA) packing house was one of the few remaining packing houses still operating in Orange County. By this time, most of the fruit packed by VPOA was trucked in from other counties, especially San Diego. VPOA business was so good that they purchased the old Santiago Orange Growers packing house in Orange and packed out of it to where both the SP and Santa Fe provided service, eventually the SP abandon service to this house. In a few years, the Villa Park packing was closed and the SP Tustin Branch ?was cut back more. VPOA¡¯s packing house in Orange became the last operating packing house in Orange County. VPOA eventually closed the Orange Packing house but still operates packing houses on Ventura County and in the Central Valley. The Orange packing house was purchased by Chapman University and incorporated into a resident housing development.


PFE Reefers At Villa Park Orchards Packing House

 

PFE Reefers At Villa Park Orchards Packing House

A post by Don Golde?on Flickr.

Description:

At least seven PFE reefers on the SP on the old Tustin Branch spotted at the Villa Park Orchards orange packing facility at Villa Park, CA sometime in mid-May 1975.

Bob Chaparro

Moderator