Lamanda Park Tower Before Abandonment

Alan Weeks Photo, Alan Weeks Collection


Alan Weeks Photo, Alan Weeks Collection

The Pacific Electric Lamanda Park Tower is photographed by Alan Weeks months before the inevitable abandonment of the Sierra Madre Line. The date is September 10, 1950.

Alan Weeks Photo, Alan Weeks Collection

From Alan:

Sixty two years these pictures have sat in the same envelope that they came from the developers in. I had not seen these pictures since they were taken years ago. The reason that they are here now is because a friend, Roger Hill, asked me if I ever took pictures of the Sierra Madre Line. Seems as a child his father took him to see the these cars but he never got to ride the line. I promised him I would dig out what I had taken. I spent quite a bit of time with these negative scans in Photoshop. These were some of my earliest pictures and not my best effort but at least we have some thing to remember the line with.

In seeing these pictures now, I am struck with how rural this line was. This area did not get built up for a decade after these were taken. One regret was that I took so many of them dismantling the line and not more of the cars in service. But it is what it is.

Up until some time in 1938 there were five trains into Los Angeles in the morning and five trains from L. A. thru to Sierra Madre. The rest of the trips on the line were shuttle trips with one car from San Marino to Sierra Madre. After 1938 the thru trips were accomplished by coupling the Sierra Madre car on the rear of a Monrovia-Glendora train at San Marino. And the reverse in the PM.

The last car to operate on this line Was on Oct 7, 1950. The Motorman on this last car was a friend of mine and also a railfan. He had just become a Minister before the last trip. We left Sierra Madre in the early evening and came down on all nine points. The 1100s were not fast but going down hill they really rolled.

The first stop we made was at the Lamanda Park Tower where we had a Red Block Signal. Red was always the default aspect. Then we proceed to San Marino where the car was tied down for the last time. Bob Slocum soon left Los Angeles and I never saw him again.

Alan Weeks
August 21, 2013

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Showing 3 comments
  • Bob Davis
    Reply

    Unless the PE track was out of sight in the foreground, this photo was taken after it was lifted. During the mid-1950s, Santa Fe replaced some of the rail on the 2nd District route; I noticed rails and tie date nails for 1952 and 53 while exploring the line years ago. Even when the crossing line is abandoned, it takes a while for the signalling engineers to revise the circuits and equipment to reflect the new reality. Until all the revisions were planned and double checked, the tower had to remain, although it may have been unattended. When the ex-PE San Bernardino line through El Monte was abandoned in the early 1970s, the “home signals” protecting the crossing stayed in place for quite a while, even though the track had been gone for months, if not years.

  • Paul Kakazu
    Reply

    There was a surprising amount of space between the PE track and the tower. Check out the picture “Lamanda Park Tower” posted 8/4/12.

  • Dan MacPherson
    Reply

    quote: “unless the PE track was out of sight in the foreground, this photo was taken after it was lifted”.
    It may have been lifted but you cannot tell from the photo.
    The PE track is (was) to the right in the photo, out of view. The railroad track is behind the tower and visible. This was the interlock where the two tracks crossed. The view looks north across Walnut. PE tracks (only one track through the interlock) are just out of the picture to the right on Sierra Madre Street.

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