
The site was on outlot 3, next to the Miami & Erie canal extention north. A saw mill was built on the site, with a tail race along Wayne to connect up with Seelys Ditch.
This saw mill was eventually owned by Ebenezer Thresher, a local industrialist. This mill was eventually shut down, after an incident involving members of a mob threatening to blow it up with gumpowder, and the tail race along Wayne and across 5th filled in and subdivided into town lots.

The line was to extend into the southeast Ohio coal fields and Hanging Rock iron region, as a source of coal and pig iron for Dayton's growing metalworking industrys. The Belpre terminus would be across the Ohio from Parkersburg, which had a branch of the B&O, connecting Dayton with the eastern seaboard.
The road never got past Xenia (right of way graded to Jamestown, track to Xenia), and was eventually taken over by the Pennsylvania RR. It was first sold in 1865 to the Little Miami Railroad.
A year later Thresher subdivided his mill land into six lots. The 1869 Titus map shows the lots, and some buildings on site, use unknown.

In 1875 the combination atlas map of this part of Dayton shows some land use. The buildings on site are ID'ed as a woodworking operation..planing mill, window sash, etc. The DX&B roundhouse and some coal and lumber yards (bulk goods hauled by rail) appear.





The haul routes would be the wider spaces between the sets of paired tracks. By the 1920s train movements had become so frequent that there was need to look at ways of avoiding the multiple grade crossings.
The city contracted with a consultant to come up with a grade seperation plan, where the railroad grade of the "Joint Tracks", AKA the Dayton Union Railroad", would be elevated through the center city, increasing rail traffic capacity while also mitigating grade crossing delays.
As part of the study a new freight house and team track set up was recommended for the Pennsy, which would have freed up the Thresher lots for other use. As one can see the old Pennys freight house was still standing.


The grade elevation was built, but the new freight house was not. Instead the team tracks remained in use as late as 1950, serviced by a littel freight office on the south side of the tracks.

One can see this old warehouse complex in the background in this pix. Maybe the topic of a later thread as this is so unusual, such an early metal building.

More on Ebenezer. Actually a whole book online. Thanks for the post, Jeffrey. I can't wait to see what the Dayton Circus has in mind. :)
ReplyDeleteJeff, there is a photo of the Pierce and Coleman factory alongside Wayne in the book New Dayton Illustrated.
ReplyDeleteDave
To Dave's comment (not the picture):
ReplyDeleteJune 3, 1889, Pierce & Coleman's Lumber Sheds on Dutoit Street, were set on fire. Loss $8,000.
This is wonderful! Thank you so much for the details! Where can I get copies of these maps? I`d love to laminate them and post them up in the new garden that will occupy the space.
ReplyDelete