NEB&W Guide to Chester, VT

Last Update: 2009-01-08

Layout Photo Gallery Table of Contents

Overview

Across The Field

Section House

Coal Dealer

Stock Pens

Diner

Grocery Store

Milk Platform

  • Looking across the tracks on the prototype. The milk platform was on the right (gone by the modern day photo), but other than that, the scene looks pretty much as it did in 1950.

    Freight House

    Old Box Car

    • An old Rutland 40 foot box car was added just north of the freight house in post-steam days - we probably will include it in our model anyway. (In the days before we knew much about freight cars, this specific car was our first introduction to the Rutland steam-era fleet. The inward Murphy ends, which due to the cars position on the ground we could study up close, really caught our attention.)

    Eskine Feeds

    Pole Yard

    • Bob Nimke mentioned that the local power company set up a "pole yard" in Chester late in the steam-era. I believe this was where creosoted poles were set out and stored until they could be used - not a source of poles being shipped out from the surrounding woods.
      • [Photo c. 1974 of the rear of Eskines.]

    Hardware Store

    • The hardware store was a unique mix of Greek Revival and Italianate. The building was basically Greek Revival - most notably the overall proportions, the full returns in the gable, and the columns built into the the corner posts. But the brackets in the cornice were such a hallmark of Italianate that it was often called the bracketed style. Greek Revival was on the wane on the eve of the Civil War, so this use suggests the store was built c. 1850, right when the railroad came through.

    • Just behind (north) of the hardware store were two sheds.

    The House

    • Further down the tracks is this Greek Revival house and barn. We started to model the house in this yellow and white color scheme of this c. 1972 photo, only to hear from a club alumni who actually grew up in this house. In the '50's, he said, it was all white. (We repainted the model.)

    North Industries

    • Across from the house and just north of the freight house were several industries, a talc plant, a machine works, and a grain store. Maybe some day we will try to squeeze one or more of these industries into our scene, although it would crowd the farm scene from Gassetts next to it.

    See our Layout Guide for Chester.