This red brick house, now serving as a bed & breakfast, is the perfect companion to the general store plans added last week, or as a stand-alone jaw-dropping eye-stopper. Check out the plans.
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This red brick house, now serving as a bed & breakfast, is the perfect companion to the general store plans added last week, or as a stand-alone jaw-dropping eye-stopper. Check out the plans.
The red brick house, store, and bakeoven in Mc Alevy’s Fort, at the corner of Pennsylvania routes 26 and 305 are the remains of the 19th century iron industry in the state. There were many iron furnaces in the region, the largest two located nearby at Greenwood Furnace (now a state park). Replicating the red brick exterior would be an interesting challenge in plaster casting. Check out the plans.
Located at East Broad Top Railroad mile marker 24.3, one-half mile east of Coles Valley Road, near the town of Saltillo in Huntingdon County, the Coles Station, Pennsylvania, water tank is the last surviving enclosed water station along the coal-hauling narrow gauge railroad’s right-of-way. Enclosing the water tank made it possible to keep the water from freezing during Pennsylvania’s harsh winter months with nothing more than the heat of a small coal-fired stove.
We have free downloadable plans of the this historic Cole’s Station enclosed water tank that would be a perfect trackside structure to scratch-build for a steam-era model railroad layout, or even as an abandoned structure on a more modern era model railroad layout.