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Interlocking: Forest Lawn Tower, Detroit, MI
Forest Lawn was an interlocking tower on the Grand Trunk Western main line (Detroit to Port Huron) where the Michigan Central Belt Line Extension and the Detroit Terminal railroad crossed the GTW at grade. This tower was just west of Forest Lawn Cemetery.
Photo info: Top, Forest Lawn Interlocking tower in March, 1985 [Neil Plagens]. 2nd and 3rd photos, Grand Trunk Western's Forest Lawn interlocking tower, at the junction of the GTW's Mt. Clemens Subdivision and the Detroit Terminal Railroad. Though these photos suggest that this is a rural location, they are actually in the middle of the City of Detroit. Both photos were taken in 1986. [Charlie Whipp]. 4th photo, a map of the Forest Lawn interlocker drawn from a blueprint in the State of Michigan Archives. [Dale Berry], 5th photo of the model board at Forest Lawn [Charles Geletzke Jr.] and the 6th photo is the interlocking plant in 1970, [Charles Geletzke Jr.]
Notes
MC trains left the Bay City Branch here crossing the GTW to get to their Belt Line Extension which went south to the Detroit river front and the Detroit Manufacturers Railroad. The Manufacturers Railroad, a MC operation, ran along the Detroit River between Dequindre and Mt. Elliott.
This was a GTW staffed tower.
The interlocker, tower, oil house, etc. is owned by the GT, MC and DT. The GT owns 30% of the plant, 22% of the tower. The MC owns 29% of the plant and 30% of the tower. The DT owns 40% of the plant and 48% of the tower.
The tower is maintained and operated by the GT, the expense being divided among the GT (35%), MC (35%) and DT 30%). The three diamonds in the MC tracks over the GT are owned and maintained by the MC. The crossing of the DT interchange track over the GT is owned by the DT and GT 50/50. These are maintained by the GT and the DT is billed. The diamond crossings (3) of the DT westbound track over the GT 3 tracks are owned and maintained by the DT and 50% of maintenance is billed to the GT. Covered by agreement between GT and DT dates January 5, 1915 and the MC March 1, 1920. [GT 1935 memorandum]
Location: 42o24.552'N / 38o02.098'W.
Time Line
1912. The railroad commission approves plans submitted by the Michigan Central proposing a full interlocking and derailing switch and signal system at the crossing of the Detroit Terminal railroad and the CF>J railroad (GTW) here. [MCR-1912]
1919. The interlocking at Forest Lawn is rebuilt. 54 mechanical levers. The distant signals are electrically controlled. [RSE-1920-01]
1935: Forest Lawn communicated on Grade Line No. 3 (1 long, 2 short). Also on this grade line were the Belt Extension Yardmaster (1 long, 3 short); Belt Line Junction (1 short, 1 long); and North Yard Tower (4 short). [MC Detroit Yard EE Timetable No. 76]
1984. From Charles Geletzke Jr. Looking north east towards the tower, the track on the far right was the GT East Lead and ran all the way to 6 Mile Road. To the left was the Westward (southbound) main track and to the left of that you can see where the connection to the Detroit Terminal Railroad was recently removed. We used to have yard jobs that took cars to the DT at Davison Yard until the DT was fully acquired by Conrail. 100 yards south of the tower, we had a set of hand-thrown cross-overs that went all the way across from one side to the other. Beyond the diamond was another set of cross-overs, which were controlled by the operator at Forest Lawn...thus, an eastward train (towards Mt. Clemens) could depart East Yard and not have to slow down or stop to realign the cross-overs. Interestingly, Forest Lawn was NEVER a train order office until late in the summer of 1968. All of the track to the left of the semaphore signal was former New York Central and was actually North Yard.
Bibliography
The following sources are utilized in this website. [SOURCE-YEAR-MMDD-PG]:
- [AAB| = All Aboard!, by Willis Dunbar, Eerdmans Publishing, Grand Rapids ©1969.
- [AAN] = Alpena Argus newspaper.
- [AARQJ] = American Association of Railroads Quiz Jr. pamphlet. © 1956
- [AATHA] = Ann Arbor Railroad Technical and Historical Association newsletter "The Double A"
- [AB] = Information provided at Michigan History Conference from Andrew Bailey, Port Huron, MI