Ex-Boyne City RR "Ladybug" caught in Indiana Museum Dispute
Posted: Sun Jul 01, 2018 10:47 am
Former Boyne City/Boyne Valley RR GE 44-ton switcher #70, nicknamed "Ladybug" is one of the pieces of the Indiana Transportation Museum (ITM) collection that is at risk, now that the ITM has been ordered to clear out of its home in Noblesville, Indiana by July 12.
First, a short and simplified synopsis of the situation to date. ITM has been at odds with the City of Noblesville and its parks and Recreation Department for a number of years over continuing its lease at Forest Park, where the Museum has resided since 1973. Over the years, ITM has accumulated a collection of railroad equipment on the site, including various interurban and mass transit cars, a number of diesels, and a number of passenger cars and freight cars. The most highly visible piece in its collection is NKP 2-8-2 #587, which was restored to service a few decades ago, and has been down for repair for over fifteen years. ITM has, in previous years, run diesel-powered excursions on a former NKP line running both directions from Noblesville.
For several years, among other complaints, the City has been unhappy with the condition of much of the equipment at the park, and ITM's maintenance of the site, in general.
Other interests have been pressuring local governments to remove the trackage that ITM used to run trains from the park down to the Indiana State Fairgrounds on the north side of Indianapolis. Those tracks have no freight customers, and have been disconnected from the national rail system at both the north and the south ends for a number of years. Further, another party has expressed interest in running dinner trains on the line to the north.
The latest round in the ongoing legal saga in this case is a June 29 order by the Hamilton County Circuit Court (see http://www.rypn.org/forums/download/file.php?id=14650), which gives ITM until July 12 to remove all of its equipment from the premises. While ITM has already begun trying to re-establish itself in Logansport, it has not moved any of its own equipment there, to date, and has already scrapped some of the equipment in Noblesville.
Should the equipment not be moved by July 12, its fate is in question, as nobody knows what the city is likely to do with it. Sale and/or scrapping is among the likely options.
The whole saga is a bit more complicated than I've laid out here, and my assessment is that ITM bears a good deal of responsibility for its predicament. The Railway Preservation News "Interchange" forum (http://www.rypn.org/forums/viewforum.php?f=1) has a more complete rundown of the situation over the years in several threads.
The Boyne City locomotive has been part of the ITM collection for a number for years, painted to resemble the Nickel Plate's sole 44-ton switcher, #90, but numbered as #91. The "Ladybug" as it was known during its time in Northern Lower Michigan, was built in 1950 to dieselize the Boyne City Railroad, and ran on it until the first iteration of successor Boyne Valley Railroad folded in the mid-1970s. From there it was sold or leased to a switching concern in Chicago, after which it ended up at ITM. It is currently not in use.
First, a short and simplified synopsis of the situation to date. ITM has been at odds with the City of Noblesville and its parks and Recreation Department for a number of years over continuing its lease at Forest Park, where the Museum has resided since 1973. Over the years, ITM has accumulated a collection of railroad equipment on the site, including various interurban and mass transit cars, a number of diesels, and a number of passenger cars and freight cars. The most highly visible piece in its collection is NKP 2-8-2 #587, which was restored to service a few decades ago, and has been down for repair for over fifteen years. ITM has, in previous years, run diesel-powered excursions on a former NKP line running both directions from Noblesville.
For several years, among other complaints, the City has been unhappy with the condition of much of the equipment at the park, and ITM's maintenance of the site, in general.
Other interests have been pressuring local governments to remove the trackage that ITM used to run trains from the park down to the Indiana State Fairgrounds on the north side of Indianapolis. Those tracks have no freight customers, and have been disconnected from the national rail system at both the north and the south ends for a number of years. Further, another party has expressed interest in running dinner trains on the line to the north.
The latest round in the ongoing legal saga in this case is a June 29 order by the Hamilton County Circuit Court (see http://www.rypn.org/forums/download/file.php?id=14650), which gives ITM until July 12 to remove all of its equipment from the premises. While ITM has already begun trying to re-establish itself in Logansport, it has not moved any of its own equipment there, to date, and has already scrapped some of the equipment in Noblesville.
Should the equipment not be moved by July 12, its fate is in question, as nobody knows what the city is likely to do with it. Sale and/or scrapping is among the likely options.
The whole saga is a bit more complicated than I've laid out here, and my assessment is that ITM bears a good deal of responsibility for its predicament. The Railway Preservation News "Interchange" forum (http://www.rypn.org/forums/viewforum.php?f=1) has a more complete rundown of the situation over the years in several threads.
The Boyne City locomotive has been part of the ITM collection for a number for years, painted to resemble the Nickel Plate's sole 44-ton switcher, #90, but numbered as #91. The "Ladybug" as it was known during its time in Northern Lower Michigan, was built in 1950 to dieselize the Boyne City Railroad, and ran on it until the first iteration of successor Boyne Valley Railroad folded in the mid-1970s. From there it was sold or leased to a switching concern in Chicago, after which it ended up at ITM. It is currently not in use.