The Wellsville Addison and Galeton [WAG] was known as "The Sole Leather  
Line" and indeed served several Tanneries including Elkland PA. until 1973. I  
can remember the smell of the hide cars that came through Conway Yards in 
the  60's and 70's. Usually their were 3 or 4 a day. We always hoped they 
were  coupled together so a minimum amount of time was spent around them.
 
    Gary Carmichael  
 
 
In a message dated 4/20/2011 2:36:20 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

 
 
 

The local festival goes well back into the nineteenth century, the  Viola 
(MN) Gopher Count each June;
the town clerk is a member of my  congregation and they still pay for every 
set of paws (I believe it
is now  several dollars per).

The WAG boxcars (mostly ex-B&M) were often  labeled "For Hide Loading 
Only"; I'm not sure of the
source for the  hides--could well have been from the midwest--but a major 
industry in  northwestern
Pennsylvania was leather tanning, especially at Elkland PA,  which got 
started with the abundant hemlock
bark from the lumbering  industry.

Jace Kahn

General Manager 
Ceres & Canisteo RR  Co./Champlain County Traction Co.

> Pieter had posted a series of  links a few days ago to several RR's 
> boxcars--the Soo line being one  (maybe had something to do with the SAL 
> car's many discussions). I  had seen the photo before and liked the 
> effect. I won't scrape off  the clean lading (grain service) sign, just 
> perhaps weather it a bit  more and then apply the hide service decal to 
> show the recycling of  the car's purpose (once they went into hide 
> service, they never  left). In small towns normally junk dealers and 
> many of the grain  elevators would purchase hides to be shipped to a 
> tannery.
>  
> Your's truly and another renegade friend, made a dollar or two by  
> trapping gophers. Collecting the tails and getting 2-3 cents each  
> wasn't a way to a college fund but it did buy a bottle of Orange  Crush 
> assuming you got at least five tails in an afternoon. Obviously  the 
> bounty for fox, mink, badger and rabbit was considerably more  
> productive--but not for a 9 year old kid.
> 
> My local  town had two 'slaughter houses' which were just old barns a 
> short  ways out of town. Two competing grocery stores owned them to 
> provide  locally raised meats to the community. The hides were bundled 
> and  stacked outside of the building during the winter. I don't think 
> the  local economy would have provided for boxcar loadings of hides, but 
>  larger situations surely did.
> I'm not certain how the bones were  handled.
> 
> Bob Werre
> PhotoTraxx.com
>  

> > > Thanks Pieter, but I really wasn't trying to duplicate  the car so 
> > >much but just the weathering.
> > > I  would like to find a decal
> > > indicating the car had been  designated for hide loading. Just imagine
> > > the smell of a car  load of hides in the summer heat on some siding in
> > > North  Dakota waiting for a local to pick it up.
> >
> > Haha,  probably should scrape off that clean loading only lettering 
then?
>  > The weathering looks great, do you have a photo of the prototype that  
> > you were trying to copy posted somewhere so we can see what it  looked 
like
> > I'll look thru my decals and see if any have hide  loading only 
> > lettering, can't recall seeing it offhand  though....dave



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