Haliburton Subdivision chapter finished!
At a whopping 5,747 words, the Haliburton Sub chapter manuscript which I finished four days ago is about 3,000 words more than I planned for! It turns out that the postwar era lumbering industry in the Highlands was too doggone interesting to resist.
I have some modeling friends who are working on layouts depicting various aspects of the Haliburton Subdivision over the 1945-59 timeframe. Fellows, you are onto something; I trust that a number of other railway modelers will latch onto the possibilities of the late steam era Haliburton Subdivision when Steam Memories of Lindsay is published next spring.
I am now immersed in preparing background notes on the Lindsay-Peterboro section of the book, which at present is involving an exhaustive study of the industrial customers on the western portion of the Campbellford Subdivision, the Lakefield Subdivision and Peterboro itself.
I have some modeling friends who are working on layouts depicting various aspects of the Haliburton Subdivision over the 1945-59 timeframe. Fellows, you are onto something; I trust that a number of other railway modelers will latch onto the possibilities of the late steam era Haliburton Subdivision when Steam Memories of Lindsay is published next spring.
I am now immersed in preparing background notes on the Lindsay-Peterboro section of the book, which at present is involving an exhaustive study of the industrial customers on the western portion of the Campbellford Subdivision, the Lakefield Subdivision and Peterboro itself.

2 Comments:
Don't burn out doing this book. It can wait till the New Year. Enjoy your family. Its the season. Have a Merry Christmas and a hapy and prosperous New Year.
The Sanders Family
I'm really looking farward to the chapter on the Haliburton sub.
I used to go to camp in that area back in the seventies, and every year I spent some time in that part of the world. By then, the line was almost abandoned. We had a scare one night when we were walking back to camp along the tracks (which I thought already were abandoned), and saw what looked like a headlight coming towards us along the track. We scattered (into the surrounding wetland), only to find that we had been fooled by a headlight from a car on the parallel highway!
I'm looking forward to learning more.
Martin Keenan
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