Railroad interlocking towers are rare and getting even more so. So when I finally was able to visit one of the most storied towers in the land, it was with a heavy heart that I learned it was closed and I missed it by just a little more than a month. There has been a tower here since the 1890's with the present one built circa 1917. Built by the Milwaukee Road it's duty was controlling the former EJ&E (now CN) crossing that is seen here plus the junction behind the photographer of the Milwaukee (now Metra) North Line suburban line to Fox Lake Illinois. In it's glory days it was a favored site to witness the high speed Hiawatha passenger trains pulled by glorious Atlantic and Hudson steam locomotives that consistently, famously ran over 120 MPH. Now the closed tower, whose fate is unknown, can only haplessly watch as some MOW critters putter by in the rain.
For the train and storm chaser. Trains with thunderstorms, dark clouds, rain, lightning, hurricanes - tropical storms, funnel clouds, storm light, rainbows, and snow storms.