Trains, trains, trains
It is said that as a baby, one of the only ways to calm me down was to drive over to the Santa Fe switching yards in Richmond, Calif., and let me hear the trains.
I’ve had something of a love affair with trains since then, though I prefer working steam trains to diesel-electrics. Since the late 1990s, I’ve been involved with small-scale live steamming, where we run real steam locomotives on track that is about 1¾-inch wide; they scale down to about 1 inch equalling 20 inches.
Below are some links that I’ve encountered in my quest for more train information. Emphasis is on steam or Northern California. Don’t forget to visit our specials page.
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- Amtrak
- The National Railroad Passenger Corp. (the name Amtrak is drawn from the words American travel by track) has a Web site that lists the railroad’s routes and provides maps, timetables and things (reservations are now available on-line too).
- RailPage Australia
- Nice listings of not only Australian rail info, but also stuff world-wide.
- Wes Barris’ steam page
- Computer programmer by day; train buff by night. A wonderful compendium of steam train info; Barris’ table of existing steam trains seems to be thorough, though it’s a good thing all we were looking for was California listings, as the table was too large to completely download.
- Bay Area Garden Railway Society
- My local model railroad group sponsors open houses every month in the spring, summer and fall, exhibiting the finest in garden railroads throughout the greater San Francisco area. The group also sponsors a portable modular railroad that visits train shows and the like, as well as a portable live steam layout.
- Billy Jones Wildcat Railroad
- A very nice park train in the Los Gatos (San Jose) area.
- California Trolley and Railroad Corp.
- The merger of the San Jose Trolley
Corp. and the Santa Clara Valley Railroad Association has produced a group that plans to build a museum and excursion railroad in the South Bay. The core of the museum will be a roundhouse built on the Santa Clara County Fairgrounds. Steam will be provided by Southern Pacific 2479 Baldwin P-10 heavy Pacific (4-6-2), which is currently under reconstruction.
- California State Railroad Museum
- Certainly one of the best railroad museums in the United States, the CSRM also runs two railways -- the Sacramento Southern and the Sierra Railroad. The former is based right there in Old Sacramento alongside the museum; the latter is in the Sierra foothills in Jamestown. At the museum, the dioramas of California-oriented steam engines are powerful; at the railroads, real steam powers both lines. The Railtown 1897 shops are something to behold and the equipment has been in many movies and TV shows ("Petticoat Junction").
A 1996 visit to the Railtown produced some poor-quality photos.
- Carolwood Historical Society
- Dedicated to those who Believe in Magic (well, Magic Kingdom, anyway), the Carolwood keeps the memory of Walt Disney, backyard railroader, alive. It also focuses on the existing steam engines at the various Disney parks.
- Golden Gate Live Steamers
- One-and-a-half-inch scale railroad group in the Berkeley hills, the group has a small 45mm ground-level track.
- Golden Gate Railway Museum
- As with many restoration projects, GGRM started with a retired steam loco in a park (or in the case of SP 2472, at the San Mateo County Fairgrounds). Following almost a decade of work (and eviction by the fairgrounds), the GGRM has four diesels, 11 passenger cars and a flatcar and caboose stored at San Francisco’s Hunters Point (formerly the Naval Shipyard) in addition to 2472, which is fully restored and runable.
- Motive Power Review
- Really good lists (surviving E and F units, rotary snowplows) as well as some articles from newsgroups that might be interesting. Also, the main page offers naval and aviation documents.
- Napa Valley Wine Train
- One of our problems with doing the wine tasting thing in the Napa Valley is that of inebriation and transportation – it’s easy to get drunk if you hit enough wineries. The Wine Train solves this (though you don’t get to stop at the wineries) providing a nice meal as well. Also, it’s E-7 motive power and 1915 Pullman carriages.
- National Summer Steamup
- Put 100 guys and gals into a 50,000-square-foot hotel ballroom in Sacramento, give them two huge layouts and three or four smaller ones, add some butane, meths, coal and distilled water and you have the National Summer Steamup for small scale (1:13.7-1:32) live steamers. I help organize this event, so I’m undoubtedly prejudiced, but everybody sure has a lot of fun, not only running trains, but at the social events (Saturday night BBQ, door prize drawing), clinics and the dealer room. (And don’t miss the Interesting Links web page).
- Nevada State Railroad Museum
- There are interesting things happening at the NSRM, details of which are provided by this “Friends of” site. The main goal of the NSRM is the preservation of much of the Virginia & Truckee equipment. The lastest project at the NSRM is the preservation of what is one of the last McKeen Motor Car in the world; I’ve only been able to put my finger on this one and one in Anchorage, Alaska, though there are rumors of one in Australia and/or maybe Utah. Why do McKeens intereset me? A McKeen ran on the Santa Fe tracks from Richmond to Oakland in the Teens and ’20s. Also see Official Nevada State Railroad Museum site.
- The Orange Empire Railway Museum
- Certainly one of the largest collections of equipment anywhere (225 pieces, including city and interurban streetcars (horse, cable and electric), locomotives (electric, steam and diesel), passenger and freight cars. A couple of San Francisco Municipal Railway PCC cars are on the site (though not restored). The organization runs a “demonstration railway” that includes a half-mile loop of dual-gauge (both standard and 3-foot-6-inch) as well as 1.5 miles of main line. Trolleys run weekends and holidays on the loop; interurbans and locomotives on the main line. It’s out in the middle of nowhere (about a two-hour drive from Disneyland), but well worth the visit.
- Pacific Locomotive Association
- The PLA – which operates the Niles Canyon Railway – was my first introduction to steam preservation. The group ran its equipment on the Castro Point Railway at Point Molate in Richmond from the late ’60s to the mid-’80s and as a teenager, I stood in awe of the men and equipment. Relocated to Niles Canyon (southeast of Oakland), the PLA has expanded its rolling stock and has more than six miles of track. The PLA is also building a roundhouse and is moving the original Niles Train Station to its original site. Excursions are run the first and third Sundays of every month; the Canyon is lovely any time of year and this is a good way to ride steam in the Bay Area.
- Golden Gate Live Steamers
- One-and-a-half-inch scale railroad group in the Berkeley hills, the group has a small 45mm ground-level track.
- Portola Railroad Museum
- The official site of the Feather River Railway Society and Western Pacific Railroad History Society, a museum dedicated to preserving the FRR shops and equipment in Portola, Calif. (it’s about two hours west of Reno). Along with an extensive collection of diesel-electric equipment and rolling stock, FRRS offers tours of the shops, weekend excursion trips and the ability to rent an F7 and run it yourself (here’s a site where the author relates his experience at the F7 controls).
- Redwood Valley Railway
- The park railroad of the Berkeley hills, Redwood Valley supports two-foot gauge equipment.
- Roaring Camp & Big Trees
- As the PR says, the RC&BTNGRR (that’s for “narrow gauge railroad") is “nestled in the Santa Cruz Mountains” and provides an interesting steam experience, just 90 minutes from downtown San Francisco, weekends and holidays December through March and seven days a week the rest of the year. A tourist railroad running through the redwood trees, the RC&BTNGRR essentially goes up to the top of a mountain and comes back down. But the staff intreprets the activities as well as most railway museums and if you need a steam train fix, it’s an easy trip.
- Sacramento Northern On-Line
- A good site about the electrified railway that once ran throughout the Sacramento Delta and Valley areas. Histories, pictures and associated links are all provided. There are also bibliographies as well as a good roster of existing SN equipment.
- Santa Cruz Lumber Co.
- This is a wonderful site that takes you on a tour of Dwight Ennis’ truly great garden railroad (steam-powered, natch) in Silicon Valley (just over the hill from the real Santa Cruz Lumber Co., whose history Dwight doesn’t neglect). Not only does Dwight give you pictures of his layout, but he explains the origins of many features (be sure to visit Mick-elangelo Falls).
- Society For The Preservation Of Carter Railroad Resources
- Most of the narrow-gauge railroad infrastructure in the Northern California of the late 1800s – bridges, trestles, cars – was built by the Carter Brothers, who set up shop in what we know today as Fremont, Calif. This group has preserved some cars and has done extensive work in recreating Carter Bros. trucks, having built patterns and had many cast.
- Swanton Pacific Railway Society
- The Pan-Pacific Exposition of 1914 in San Francisco boasted a 19-inch gauge live steam railway as its transportation system. As the years passed, so did the equipment, which was eventually brought together at a ranch in Santa Cruz County. This group, which is an adjunct to the California Polytechnic University at San Luis Obispo (long story), maintains the equipment and runs it about a dozen times a year.
- Union Pacific
- As the page used to say, “Photos! Photos! And more photos!” From 1866 to today, more than 500,000 pictures of not only UP rolling stock and locos, but also of historical and scenary interest. No on-line ordering, but they do provide forms to buy prints (+/- $10). Superceding the old museum-only pages, this site now has full Union Pacific information.
- Western Railway Museum
- Called “a project of the Bay Area Electric Railroad Association,” the WRM of Sonoma County, Calif., is really devoted to streetcars. Nonetheless, it has a fully functional trolley system (runs out about three miles from the museum grounds) and offers diesel excursions on a frequent basis. The new visitors’ center opened in late 1999.
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