The rails come up in the B&ML yard in Belfast, METrackmen Mack Page, Jr., (left) and Casey Leach (right) help remove the more than century old rails from the B&ML's Belfast yard after the venerable 135-old short line lost its lease on the City owned waterfront property which had been continuously occupied by the railroad's main yard since construction began on the line in 1868. The road's 33-mile grade across Mid-Coast Maine's Waldo County from Belfast to the Maine Central's main line at Burnham Junction was originally tracked during construction (1868-70) with 56lb iron "pear" rail imported by ship from Wales to Belfast harbor. That was eventually upgraded by the MEC (which operated the B&ML under lease as its Belfast Branch from1871 to December 31, 1925) with 67lb rail and finally with the 75lb steel rails being removed here all of which are branded as having been rolled by Lackawanna Iron & Steel Co. between 1890 and 1906. (Mack Page, Jr., is the fifth generation member of the Page family to have worked on the B&ML.)
Photographed by Bruce C. Cooper (DigitalImageServices.com), July 10, 2005.
Added to the photo archive by Bruce Cooper, July 10, 2005.
Railroad: Belfast & Moosehead Lake.
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