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Saturday, July 11, 2015
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Kevin Morgan
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Cotopaxi
Cotopaxi, CO
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2179 (Add a Comment)
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Tennessee Pass (UP)
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Union Pacific
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Here is a depressing sight for railfan eyes! Evidence of the mainline and the siding at Cotopaxi is almost non-existent, covered by years of weed growth. "The siding?", you may ask. While the mainline isn't too hard to spot toward the right side of the picture, you may not have noticed the rail head for the siding, just barely visible on the far left side of the image.
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Saturday, July 11, 2015
|
Kevin Morgan
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Cotopaxi
Cotopaxi, CO
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2250 (Add a Comment)
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Tennessee Pass (UP)
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Union Pacific
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In the town of Cotopaxi, you will find this rather ironic sign at the grade crossing. No train has passed over these rails in over ten years, but because the line isn't officially abandoned, buses must still observe the standard safety rules at the crossing. The town of Cotopaxi was established by Jewish-Russian immigrants that sought to be farmers. With only four months of the year suitable for farming, most went on to work on construction of the rail line that now lays dormant. As of the 2010 census, there were 47 people living in Cotopaxi, named after the largest volcano in Ecuador.
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