OpenHistoricalMap/Projects/Railways

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This project covers an effort to recreate railroads and railways throughout history. The invention of Locomotive engines and the development of Train technology on Railway track as a form of Rail transport resulted in the construction of an innumerable distance of railways by both public and private entities (operator=*). Common carrier railways are often described structurally using terms such as Main line (railway), Branch line, Siding (rail) or Rail yard (see OpenRailwayMap/Tagging). In the United States, Railroad classes are used to categorize railways. Common carrier railways are generally longer tenured than specialized railways such as Military railways, Industrial railway and Forest railway and often undergo many changes in operator, alignment, and extent. The fine details of these changes over time, leading up the current status of railways, is of particular interest to mapping in OpenHistoricalMap as a potential resource for Industrial archaeology, Transportation plannigng, Regional planning, and other areas of study.


Historic maps

- Old original settlers maps - Sanborn maps - LoC, etc. - Baist maps - Time Tables - Plot Maps - Track Charts - operations maps - TOPO


Tagging

See Tagging from OpenRailwayMap/Tagging

Contact

The mappers for this project include: Natfoot

Starting Out

Use a number of sources to pique an interest in a particular line. Usually starting out by looking at TOPO for basic alignment of a railroad. It is not guaranteed this is exact but is a good starting point for the lines.  Access aerial imagery or if available in your area, USGS 3DEP Elevation Data to identify exact alignment, embankments and cuttings. Then use Wikipedia and other local historic sources to provide dates. Follow up by adding detail from historic photos, Plot Maps, Track Charts, Timetables and operational diagrams.  

How to Map

When mapping railroads add the railroad structure as railway=rail and then add the date that it was laid in sections of the line. If you know the details of the railroad as in days of the railroad add that in all small sections if you know it as year list a section to the year of it's completion. If the railroad line is pulled up place the end_date as such. Just like in OSM if the corridor persist after rail is pulled list railway=abandoned to the new line, road, or trail.

When mapping ownership, operator and name changes add the data as a relation. This will allow date information to be added to the line many times over.

Resources

United States

US National Archives

  • Railroad Right-of-Way Maps (Department of Interior, General Land Office, 1872-1875)[1]

Pacific Northwest Railroad Archive

Great Northern and Northern Pacific Joint Archive

Northern Pacific Railroad Historical Association research

Other PNWRRA Links

Multi Modal Ways

Multimodalways

Michigan

MichiganRailroads.com

Contributors

Natfoot