Hi everyone,
Map from 1911 showing the exact location of spur running from it's connection with the IC main line (now Southwest Commuter Path) to the Knickerbocker Ice Co. storage facility located on the site of present day Wingra Park. The spur runs through the SE corner of Section 21 on the map and down through the NE corner of Section 28. Zoom in for a closer look and compare it with modern day Google Maps like I did.
It's been a VERY long while-a LOT of water's gone over the dam
since I last posted. Am living in Jefferson now with an apartment and a job,
but my heart is still and I think always will be back over there in the Mad
City that I came to know and love in my 2 1/2 years of residency there. I keep
thinking that eventually I will be over to move back over there and this time
hopefully maintain a permanent residency in that beautiful gem of a city that
we Wisconsinites claim as our state capitol.
So anyhow, over the course of two days last week, I've found
myself back over there to have a stress test done at St. Mary's. This gave me
an excellent opportunity to re-visit some of my old haunts in the city and
with the hospital being right over on that end, I found myself in the
neighborhood of Monroe St.
During my residency in Madison, I spent much time over in this
part of town, bicycling through this area regularly, whether visiting the shops
or grabbing some coffee at Collectivo or just hanging out down in Wingra Park.
Wingra Park. The site of the Knickerbocker Ice Company warehouse,
where freshly cut ice from the lake bearing the same name as the aforementioned
park was stored before being shipped out. Shipped out by rail on a long-defunct
spur that connected with the Illinois Central main line, itself now defunct,
although it's right of way lives on in the form of the Southwest Commuter Path,
a mainstay of this neighborhood a few blocks to the north.
Looking around at the site now, one would never guess that once
upon a time, a huge storage facility once occupied the site of this lovely
little gem of a greenspace along the lake. During the winter, this facility
would have hummed with activity with blocks of ice right off the lake being
brought in for storage, packed in between thick layers of sawdust until such
time as it was loaded onto the outgoing rail cars, bound for locations all over
the United States.
A study of old plat maps of the city compared with the modern day
Google maps tells the story of where this spur line was located in the
neighborhood.
Leaving Wingra Park, a paved walking/bicycle trail within the park
follows the original alignment of the abandoned spur's right of way or so I
would assume. My hypothesis concerning this is strongly supported by the fact
that the driveway of the old firehouse which is now the home of the Madison
Theatre Guild is in direct line across Monroe Street with this path, it would
seem to me to be more than coincidence that these two alignments match perfectly
and the old maps of the spur appear to agree with and to bear out the truth of
this matter. Once again, using the two maps for comparison, the right of way
would have continued on north past the point where the current driveway ends on
the back side of the Theatre Guild, directly beneath the line of trees that now
marks the back property lines of the homes along Commonwealth avenue to the
west and W. Lawn Ave. to the east.
Following this line north and once again drawing from the old map,
one can see that this spur would have headed straight north through this line
of trees before passing directly through portions of both neighboring lots at
2431 and 2435 Commonwealth Avenue. This would put our spur directly onto the
route of Commonwealth straight north from this point to what is now the
junction of Commonwealth and the Southwest Commuter Path, which as I said in
railroad days was the IC's mainline connecting Madison to the rest of it's
system at Freeport, Illinois.
So there you have it. A ghost resurrected from the city's and the
Wingra Neighborhood's past. A former vital artery connection over which ice
from Lake Wingra was shipped to all parts of the country. Looking at where the
crossing would have been at Monroe Street between the park and the Theatre
Guild, one can almost imagine the whistling of the steam locomotives as they
crossed this busy West Side thoroughfare as well as the rumbling of the wooden
cars either full or soon to be full of ice passing back and forth through this
crossing.
Map from 1911 showing the exact location of spur running from it's connection with the IC main line (now Southwest Commuter Path) to the Knickerbocker Ice Co. storage facility located on the site of present day Wingra Park. The spur runs through the SE corner of Section 21 on the map and down through the NE corner of Section 28. Zoom in for a closer look and compare it with modern day Google Maps like I did.

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