It's been a while since I posted about my N-scale layout featuring the Milwaukee Road's C&E Line circa 1971. C&E stands for Chicago & Evanston and the Milwaukee Road once went all the way to Evanston. Its nicknames are the Lakewood line (north of North Avenue) and Kingsbury Line (south of North Avenue). I model two sections, the first on Lakewood from Wellington north to Belmont, and the second one from Eddy Street north to Waveland Avenue, crossing Clark and Addison with Wrigley Field modeled in part where it faces west.
They really are more dioramas than a true layout though trains can operate over them. I hope to fill the gap one day between these two sections with a new layout that features the CTA line crossing over the Milwaukee Road by Racine Avenue.
Everything is modeled from scratch and based on historic photos of the areas. Many of the buildings are now gone.
In this attached picture it looks south from Belmont Avenue and down along Lakewood. The structure on the right or west is a scrapyard which is long gone while the large complex farther south and across the street at the SW corner of Fletcher and Lakewood is the old Best Brewing. Both were rail served. I stretched it a little bit since Best Brewing went out of business in the early 1960s and my layout is set ten years later.
On the left or east at the SE corner of Belmont and Lakewood is a former factory that was rail served at one time though not by the early 1970s. Just past it to the south is the former Reed Candy factory which was rail served into the early 1980s by the Milwaukee Road. The buildings were torn down in the late 1980s and replaced by the "Sweeterville" condo complex. After the line was cut back once again the railroad saved enough track about a block north of Belmont to use as a tail track to back down the Reed spur-much as was the case when the track was cut back to Diversey a short time later and enough tail track was saved to access the Peerless spur. Reed received inbound shipments of corn syrup and sugar by rail. Wrigley acquired Reed and moved production to another facility.
The overhead and cross buck type grade crossing signals are operational. They were purchased from NJ International. The grade crossings road surfaces represent a mixture of simulated concrete slabs where the line crossed streets with heavier traffic like in Belmont or timbers for the more lightly used crossings.
I hope to post more photos soon to try to add fresh content to this site.