Very cool. Never seen a crane like that? Who would've operated it? Someone on the train crew?
Thanks! I thought they were called "jib" cranes, but modern equivalents by that name are only functionally similar. It might be considered a variety of derrick (but we are wa-a-ay out of my area here!) It may have been run by train crew, or maybe when it was active there was freight handling "staff" or teamster/rigger type folks there. Much rail and some old platforms have been pulled up from that yard, but at one time Boyertown was home to a carriage works and then an auto and truck body operation, as well as a casket company! So there was probably a fair amount of freight traffic.
The body works is
now a museum, and they have in early September an event called
Duryea Day with antique and classic cars all over a town park. Duryea built cars in Reading, about 15 or 20 miles to the southwest "back in the day." (Please pardon the alternate technology, although there is some output from my Ercona II in the Duryea stuff.)
I
visited the crane in the past, prior to the recent de-rusting and painting. Then it really appealed to my interest in old rust, though I realize the paint job was necessary if it's to survive for a long time to come. The crane was a product of the Phoenix Iron Company in Phoenixville, another nearby town in the Schuylkill River "rust belt." The firm's signature product was a ribbed tubular column made by riveting a bunch of rolled sections together (as in the center column of that crane. Phoenix products were used in the Washington Monument among other places. They also had a foundry and a bridge building division. I encountered a Phoenix Iron bridge in Seneca Falls NY on a trip last year. The whole 100+ acres sat as a brownfield for a couple of decades, but the former foundry is now an "event space" with catering kitchens that still has an iron and wood crane considerably larger than that one as a decorative centerpiece. An old office building is a restaurant. (The Phoenix rises again ...)
More of Phoenixville here (warning "mixed media"

)