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« on: November 16, 2025, 12:14:57 AM »
In October of 1965, I got permission from Virgil Starbird to go to Boston with his truck delivering finished lumber milled at Starbird Lumber to customers in Boston. Virgil's long time driver, Everett, did not talk much but we had a pleasant trip down from Strong Maine and delivered the finished lumber to two customers, and then went to Whitinsville, MA to let me dicker for two-foot gauge trucks from the recently abandoned two-foot gauge railroad at the Whitin Machine Works. I was also offered the three two-foot gauge locomotives at $1000 each. With money from Virgil and my own stash, I was able to buy 6 sets of trucks and bring two of them to Strong for one of the six (6) Sandy River and Rangeley Lakes box cars in Starbird's lumber company yard. These cars were used to store lumber and saw mill parts. In that yard there was also a standard gauge Rail Bus that the SR&RL shops had built for the MEC Oquossoc Branch. He used the bus to move lumber on a few hundred feet of standard gauge track within the mill area.
The other four sets of trucks where offloaded in Avon Maine on original SR&RL Right-of-Way in a field just south of Phillips where Bob Beal and I had built two or three hundred feet of track for some of the freight equipment from Phillips to be displayed. We had cut the ties from a wood lot Bob owned just north of Phillips, and two-sided these after hours at the lumber mill just outside of Phillips on the bypass. This was the beginning of Sandy River Railroad Museum.