This April 26, 1987, view looks south from Melrose Avenue towards
Belmont Avenue and beyond. This view is taken from the other end of
the same tail track shown in the north to Belmont section. Note the
former battery box on the left for the battered grade crossing
signal on the right. This segment of track north of Belmont was
retained up to Melrose by the Milwaukee Road as a tail track for
backing cars down Reed Candy's spur just south of Belmont Ave.
after rail service was cut back around 1982 from Racine Ave. to
Melrose. In the distant background is the towering Best Brewing
Company complex, now a renovated rental property with upscale
apartments. Best Brewing was serviced by the Milwaukee Road into
the early 1960s when it went out of business. On the right are the
buildings of Lakeview Metals which was also serviced by the
Milwaukee Road at one time. Today a strip shopping center facing
Belmont Ave. occupies the foreground of this picture.
Looking north this time across Melrose Avenue at the same building across the ROW. These tracks are gone now. (June 1986)
Three views taken over time from the same position . This first picture dates from 1984 and looks south down the recently abandoned Milwaukee Road ROW towards School St. The building across the ROW was put up right after operations ended north of Belmont in the early 1980s, giving the appearance that they run into the structure. The grade crossing signal on the left is still in place. Note how toward the end of operations the Milwaukee Road was down to single track operation on the far left, using the former northbound main.
A view taken just three years later on April 26, 1987, from the same location.
Finally, the same location, Sep. 17, 2002, also looking south. The grade crossing is gone, even the raised ROW where it crossed School as been removed. This location is the second of two on the former Milwaukee Road where rails still exist north of Diversey. Condos have taken over the ROW to the north.
The Milwaukee Road traveled underneath a bridge carrying the CTA's
Ravenswood line. It won't be much longer until townhomes and condos
fill in the ROW. Until then the old ROW was used for Wrigley Field
parking on game days. This view looks north from about Racine Ave.
April 26, 1987. Piles of junk and abandoned cars will be a thing of
the past as well soon.
This view looks north from Cornelia towards Wrigley Field and shows the ROW as it bends gently to the east. (Sep. 17, 2002)
A pair of Milwaukee Road tracks appear in front of Wrigley Field at
Waveland Ave. almost three decades after service was ended past
Addison. One of only two locations where former Milwaukee Road
C&E line rails can still be seen north of Diversey Ave.! A coal
yard and a team track were once customers nearby. Even the Chicago
Cubs received carloads of bats in the spring from the Milwaukee
Road ages ago. (Sep. 17, 2002)
Ahead is the former location of the Buena Yard at Irving Park road where freight interchange took place between the CTA and the Milwaukee Road-and for a time, the North Shore Line interurban line used the yard for early piggyback service. Graceland Cemetary is on the left or west. According to crews, this could be a rough area to work at night. (March 1986)
Looking north at the ramp which led up to the L from the Buena Yard
and interchange with the Milwaukee Road's C&E line. (March
1986)
CTA freight tracks on the bridge over Montrose Avenue. Until 1973
this bridge served as the connection for freight service between
the "L" and the Milwaukee Road. This view looks north at the two
remaining interchange tracks. Overhead catenary support columns can
still be seen. The catenary system brought electrical power all the
way down to the lower Buena Yard for the CTA's electric freight
locomotives. The CTA's predecessor took over responsibility for
serving the Milwaukee Road's freight customers north of Montrose
Avenue through Evanston whenthe ROW was raised onto viaducts and
leased to the elevated lines by the Milwaukee Road decades before.
The original name of this Milwaukee Road line was the Chicago &
Evanston, and the "C&E" title was used by Milwaukee Road crews
to designate the tracks on Kingsbury and Lakewood into the Soo Line
era of ownership in 1986. (March 1986)