Maybe I missed the tag, but I did not see Youngstown Sheet & Tube. They had steel mills in Youngstown Ohio and East Chicago Indiana on the shore of Lake Michigan. I worked at the East Chicago Plant in the 1970’s which had about 12 to 13 thousand employees at the time and I witnessed the downfall of the industries. YS&T also had a plant called Campbell works in Ohio. The shuttering of the Youngstown Ohio plant in I believe 1977 or 1978 was the beginning of the big retraction in the steel industry. When I quit in 1981 the plant was down to around 4500 employees. The plant finally closed a couple of years ago.
Our facility was primarily serviced by the Indiana Harbor Belt Line. If I recall correctly the Penn Central tracks ran through our plant. I will need to do some real digging to find some photos of that period. EJ&E also was a local railroad in our area. Railroads? Boy we had them here in Northwest Indiana which was the prominent gateway from the east into Chicago. I now ride my bike on the Erie Lackawanna, C&O, Monon, CS&T, and Pennsylvania, trails.
What you see in the 60’s in 70’s are blast furnaces, coal piles, ingots, slag, steel ladles, hot ladle cars, conveyors, smoke stacks with plenty of black smoke, draw bridges, ore boats, traffic jams, oil tanks, cat crackers, cooling towers, ore docks, viaducts, soot, plenty of TRAINS, red haze in the sky. Intense light from the forge. Many taverns, illegal basement bars that were quite busy when alcohol sales were prohibitive on Sundays. More TRAINS, Go Go joints, (a blue collar gentleman’s club). Packed bowling alleys. No McMansions. Thousands of 900 square foot ranch houses with unattached garages. Cigarette machines everywhere. Home exteriors stained from pollution. Junky cars specifically used for transportation to work. Plenty of TRAINS.