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Sunday, June 5, 2016

What you will see at Lakes Regional Park & Train Museum🚂🚂🚂 Fort Myers, Florida


Locomotive 143
Locomotive 143
The Baldwin Locomotive Works of Philadelphia built #143 for the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad in 1905. #143 was used to switch freight cars in rail yards around Charleston, South Carolina. The Atlantic Coast Line Railroad was the first railroad to serve the Ft. Myers area beginning in 1904. Similar steam engines worked A. C. L. tracks in the Ft. Meyers area. 

Agrico Chemical Company purchased #143 in 1944 for use in Florida’s phosphate mining industry around Mulberry. The locomotive hauled cars to and from the mines for interchange with mainline railroads. #143 was retired from service in 1959 and placed on display at Agrico’s offices at Pierce. In the early 1970s, #143 was moved to Webster, FL, and displayed at the short-lived Orange Belt Railroad. 

Number 143 was eventually moved to Tampa and stored on a short piece of track near a cement plant. Its condition deteriorated over the years. Before being scrapped, it was obtained by the Railroad Museum of South Florida in Ft. Myers. Number 143 was moved to Ft. Myers in August 1992, then to Lakes Park in 1995. Restoration work started in 1999 and was completed in April 2001. 

Seaboard served Ft. Myers from 1926 to 1952 
The Seabord Air Line Railway came to Ft. Myers during the Florida land boom of the 1920s and directly competed with the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. The extension to Ft. Myers originated off the Seaboard line to Boca Grande at Hull, FL, near Ft. Ogden, and terminated in Naples. 

At Punta Rassa Junction, where Six Mile Cypress Parkway crosses. Ten Mile Canal, a branch departed the main line and ran through what is now Lakes Park. The right of way entered the southern end of the Fragrance Garden and continued to a point about where this marker stands. The railroad grade then ran just south of the present-day boardwalk and causeway across the lake and then curved to the southwest exiting the present park boundary along the West Trail. Therefore the line ran beside and south of present-day Summerlin Road to a farming area called Truckland, in Iona. The branch never reached Punta Rassa. 

Large amounts of produce and gladioli were once shipped from this area. Late in 1952, the Seaboard abandoned its Fort Myers Extension and the Coast Line resumed its monopoly. 

At a later date, the Atlantic Coast Line constructed a short spur track off their main line to serve the lime rock mining that created the present lakes in the park. On June 1, 1967, the SAL merged with the ACL to form the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad.
Paddle Boats 
Lakes Park offers a variety of ways to enjoy the park train rides, bicycles, surreys, kayaks, pedal boats, fishing, and walking trails. 
The park has over 279 acres of wonder to explore. 
Scurry
Bicycles
Paddle boats & Double Kayaks
Miniature train ride








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