The Alton & Pacific Railroad was 2 ft (610 mm) gauge tourist railroad[1] at Alton, California, that ran from 1969 until 1989.
Overview | |
---|---|
Headquarters | Alton, California |
Dates of operation | 1969–1989 |
Technical | |
Track gauge | 2 ft (610 mm) |
Length | 3/4 mile |
History
editIn 1966, Frank Bayliss purchased the site of a burned out lumber mill near Alton.[2] He spent three years clearing the site and laying narrow gauge track. The railroad included a roundhouse, a turntable and a water tank.[1][3]
In 1968, Bayliss acquired a 1935 Orenstein & Koppel steam locomotive. It had been taken to the US from Germany after World War II. He made some cosmetic changes to the locomotive and added a home-built tender.[4]
The railroad opened on 4 July 1969.[1]
After the railroad shut down in 1989, Bayliss sold the railroad to an entrepreneur who planned to use the equipment at an island resort he wanted to create in the South Pacific. In 2007, Peter Nott acquired the two locomotives for the Bitter Creek Western Railroad. They then moved to his private Norgrove Railway in Arroyo Grande CA.[4]
Rolling stock
editNumber | Builder | Type | Works number | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
5 | Orenstein & Koppel | 0-4-0T | 12676 | 1935 | Fired on local wood |
Fowler | 0-6-0T | 9460 | 1903 | Built for Colonial Sugar Refining Co, Lautoka Fiji.[5] This locomotive was apparently never operated on the A&P | |
Plymouth[6] | 8-ton diesel | Acquired in 1972 from a clay pit in Lincoln, Nebraska |
Bayliss built two yellow 4 wheel passenger cars: an observation car and a combine.[1] There were also a couple of flat cars.[4]
External links
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d Knapp, Willie (14 June 1979). "Alton-Pacific Railroad Begins 10th Year". The Humboldt Beacon.
- ^ Driscoll, John (30 July 2018). "Alton asbestos property cleaned up, official says". Times Standard.
- ^ Genzoli, Andrew (10 August 1968). "Alton & Pacific Railroad". The Times Standard. Eureka, California. Retrieved 15 November 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c "Alton & Pacific Railroad". PacificNG.
- ^ Kean, Randolph (1973). The Railfan's Guide to Museum & Park Displays. H. E. Cox.
- ^ "Alton & Pacific Railroad, Alton, California". The Western railroader. Vol. 35. 1972.