I just noticed today, with surprise, that a nice website that I relied on for the last few years, "Keystone Crossings," is no longer up and running. It was pretty informative, telling us detailed info on locomotives like this:
...which was interesting to me on multiple occasions, most recently after I had bought this picture of a Pennsylvania Lines #7836 on eBay:
Maybe I'm the only nerd who loved all that detail, what class, when built, construction number, disposition (usually telling when it was scrapped). I don't believe the Staufer/Pennsy Power books had that level of detail.
The owner of Keystone Crossings website posted the following:
All good things must come to an end. The bell has tolled for Keystone Crossings. It's been a great run, but it's time to shutter the doors. A lot of factors drove the decision, but the primary reason was financial. While most costs have stabilized, advertising revenue has dried up, and donations are as prevalent as Bigfoot and UFO sightings.
I did confirm that when the website went down, the steam roster/database went with it.
So, does anyone know of a good source of a (detailed) Pennsy steam roster (similar to what Keystone Crossings had)? I know Railroad magazine in the 1950's-60's would post various railroads steam rosters. A railroad like the Pennsy could easily need at least 4-6 issues to cover its steam program.
If anyone knows the years Railroad magazine may have posted the Pennsy's steam roster, I guess that would be a good place to start.
Tom