Visiting the ruins of the Batsto trestle

M1 Abrams

Explorer
May 4, 2023
245
560
67
Burlington County
When I saw Sunday night's post by Old Halfway in the Exploring The Mines Spung Fire Area thread, my heart sank. Hoping to be proven wrong as to the location, on Monday morning I traveled to East Stokes Road and walked down the tracks toward the Batsto trestle.

No mistake.

One of the first pictures that I posted after joining NJPB was of me lying down on the trestle as the sun set. Later, there were a couple of threads about exploring the area around the trestle. It was one of my favorite places to visit. It's a shame to see its demise, but I feel blessed to have had the chance to see it before its destruction.

I could have discovered the fate of the trestle last week. I was checking out some of the fire area west of Carranza, and walked down the tracks toward the trestle. Before getting there, though, the way forward seemed to be greening up. I was hopeful that the fire hadn't reached the trestle. One way or the other, though, it did. It seemed surprising that while the trestle was burnt up, the surrounding area was quite green.

Until one of our gifted photographers can come and properly document the ruins of the trestle, here are a few pictures taken by yours truly:


20250707_0945_1st view B trestle ruins looking E.jpg

Both literally and figuratively, this sight produced a sinking feeling. I thought of "Sherman's neckties," the Union Army tactic employed during the Civil War of heating and twisting Confederate railroad tracks to make them unusable.


20250707_0958_Looking S downstream from trestle.jpg

This green, tranquil view downstream gives little hint of the calamity that befell the trestle.


20250707_1036_Looking SW back down the tracks.jpg

The rails are flipped over on their sides.


20250707_0951_Tree seen between the two rails.jpg

No offense is meant to the distinguished tree visible between the rails, but I wish the trestle was still blocking this view.


20250707_0956_View of damage at a distance.jpg

Here's a view of the damage from downstream.


20250707_1202_Downstream view of trestle ruins.jpg

Some of the debris will need to be cleared to allow safe passage for canoes and kayaks.


20250707_1045_Split level RR tracks.jpg

Split level railroad tracks are not a good thing.


20250707_1104_Looking down S RR track.jpg

Looking down what was the southern track.


20250707_1027_Small heart-shaped bit of debris.jpg

Amongst all of the gross carnage, there was this little heart-shaped bit lying in the mud.
 
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M1 Abrams

Explorer
May 4, 2023
245
560
67
Burlington County
Thursday afternoon, I went back to the remains of the Batsto trestle, to check out the area on the other side of the river.


20250710_1745_Batsto trestle ruins NE end.jpg

From any angle, this is a painful sight.


20250710_1807_Looking back toward Carranza.jpg

Looking back up to the northeast.


20250710_1746_Some burnt ground N of tracks by trestle.jpg

There was at least some degree of burning in the woods by the bank of the river to the north.


20250710_1833_Looking upstream at remains of trestle.jpg

Looking upstream from this angle, the river navigation issues are easier to see.


20250710_1841_Trestle remains through trees.jpg

Bent rails arching across to the opposite side.


20250710_1755_Spider on charred beam by water.jpg

The thought of finding company here seemed plausible, but I was thinking about the two-legged variety, not eight-legged! Manumuskin thought it likely this was a fishing spider.
 

bobpbx

Piney
Staff member
Oct 25, 2002
15,091
5,474
Pines; Bamber area
It is a bygone era now, and our memories will recall it fondly. But now, it's important for the authorities to remove all trace of it and the tracks all the way to the ecotone were the cedar swamps border the river. Far better that than to leave the hulking remant there to mar the landscape for the next hundred years or more.
 
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bobpbx

Piney
Staff member
Oct 25, 2002
15,091
5,474
Pines; Bamber area
Can the state find the money to clean up the trestle site? Cameras and plastic stakes don't grow on trees, after all. Priorities. :smug:
By the way, I'd go for a footbridge that people can visit, with one of those old time wrought iron(?) signs giving a very brief history of what was there.

Of course, the dirt bikers could not resist........
 
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Rooftree

Explorer
Mar 24, 2017
421
674
79
Haddon Township
I've always marveled at the structure of that bridge, either just visiting it or using it as a route to an area I'm exploring. I always stop and look thoughtfully for a long time thinking about the hard work and pride of the men who built it many years ago. It's a gem, a piece of history, deep in the middle of the pinelands not widely known to many people. I'm heartbroken. It's ashame that it wasn't saved in the fire.
 
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