Neat article, Frank, & very helpful.......When I worked in Binghamton, the AGWAY had a large mill in YO yard. it was on the west side of the tracks near the North end of the yard & I believe before u went under the hiway bridge. I never really gave much thought to the reasoning behind that business, but this made it pretty clear. Walt Smith >From: Frank Mellott <fmellott_@_pa.net> >Reply-To: "EL Mail List" <erielack_@_lists.elhts.org> >To: EL Mail List <erielack_@_lists.elhts.org> >Subject: (erielack) 40' Box Car bagged feed loading-more info >Date: Wed, 01 Aug 2007 20:20:33 -0500 > > >Trying to answer Paul Brezicki & Mike Oravec's questions. > >Since you want your feed as fresh as possible, and it has a relatively >short shelf life, its bagged, regardless of era, as close the dairy farm >(Paul Brezicki's example) as possible. In the pre covered hopper (LO) era >in the Northeast, the farm would have bought form the closest mill. >Without transportation, the farm was limited to what it could grow or get >from neighbors. The railroad allowed the "neighbors" to be farther away. >Most feed was grown on the farm. When the farmer needed more, and >couldn't get it from neighbors, he could buy at the local mill. The mill >tried to buy all it could locally and minimize the amount it hauled in. > >I called my dad to see what ingredients were available in Bedford County, >PA in the 1950's. His answers will be appropriate for almost anyone >modelling the EL in NY, NJ, PA. Cows don't care for raw corn.. They >prefer it ground and mixed with other stuff. If the farmer didn't have a >grinder/mixer (very rare on 1950's farms) a portable one could come to the >farm, usually weekly or biweekly. More common was to haul his ingredients >to the local mill and buy supplement (primarily soybean meal with added >vitamins, minerals etc) to add to his corn and oats. If he didn't have >enough corn and oats he could buy corn, barley, and maybe wheat, or rye, >locally grown or brought in bulk (grain door boxcars). Depending on >location and season, cottonseed meal, dried brewers grains or beet pulp >(all bagged) could be brought in by rail. The mill would grind and mix >his ingredients and he'd take them home. He'd only get 1 week or less >(depending on how big his truck was) at a time. > >During the heyday of the coops in the 1930's, Eastern States and others >started centralized mills that would grind and bag the feed and ship it by >rail to the local dealer or their store. The dealer would take his truck >to the team track and probably "4 out of 10 times" have to hook a chain on >the car door and drag it open with the truck. The bagged feed was piled on >the floor, no pallets. He doesn't remember where the mills where though. I >know Agway had mills in Binghamton, Gettysburg, Syracuse and other places, >but don't know the territory each served. > >Large mills could also be used by Purina, Mastermix, Wayne, etc to sell >feed in areas where they didn't have enough volume for a local mill. The >car of bag feed (the same stuff the farmer could get ground locally) would >come to the team track and the dealer unload and take to the farm. Or the >farmer could drive to the car. Even a 40' box would take a couple days to >get unloaded. > >So in short...your bagged feed cars went from the mill to the local store >or team track. >The bulk cars went to the central or local mill. You could send a bulk car >to a team track to be unloaded by a milll not located on a siding directly. > >Either way gives you a perfect reason to send on line cars to the local >mill that were backhauled from the south or west with bulk grain or online >or connecting line cars with bagged feed from on line or near by central >mills. If the car records you are studying show the origin, it might help >us learn who's central mills were where and where the cars they loaded came >from. > >The farm got bagged feed. Bulk feed to farms was another late 60's >innovation that really didn't take off until the late 70's or mid 80's. > > >Frank > > > > > The Erie Lackawanna Mailing List > Sponsored by the ELH&TS > http://www.elhts.org > To Unsubscribe: http://lists.elhts.org/erielackunsub.html _________________________________________________________________ Messenger Café — open for fun 24/7. Hot games, cool activities served daily. Visit now. http://cafemessenger.com?ocid=TXT_TAGHM_AugHMtagline The Erie Lackawanna Mailing List Sponsored by the ELH&TS http://www.elhts.org To Unsubscribe: http://lists.elhts.org/erielackunsub.html ------------------------------
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