I have been working on several railroad write ups for the site… Mostly railroads found in the Mojave Desert, the Daggett lines, with an occasional trip to cement hauling railroads… It has been fun but also frustrating… In general we know a bit about each of the lines, either via Myrick, or a Western Railroader… There is likely something on locomotives owned in the various manufacturer’s lists… The advent of the digital newspaper movement has helped… or not…
It seems as I research each line, there is a piece of information missing, or some piece of “common knowledge” that just doesn’t work… and more research is required… likely something either hard to find or only found off line in a remote archive with limited hours of operation…
Most recently (as in the last two days) I have been trying to write up Old Mission Portland Cement… It has long been on my radar… It’s covered in a 1964 Western Railroader, as well as in Rich Hamman’s California Central Coast Railways… (it appears that much of Hamman’s information was derived from the Western Railroader) The Western Railroader article included a roster of the narrow gauge equipment… one of their Plymouths is in the collection of the SPCRR at Ardenwood… I keep clipping files on the various railroads… Old Mission included… in that file was a note about a 2nd less known Plymouth… a locomotive not included in the published rosters, which is later used at Plaster City on the US Gypsum railroad.
This second locomotive was purchased in 1936… the issue being that the generally published sources say the plant shut down in 1929, then only reopened in 1941, without the quarry railroad… I suspect that our common sources have confused the cement plant and its quarry railroad with the California Central Railroad, a standard gauge short line owned by the cement plant and operated by them… a railroad that did shut down about 1931… via Google I have found a history of cement in California that says “The plant operated intermittently”… So now I am planning a trip to the a archive in Hollister which may have local papers and business directories which hopefully will better document the plant’s presumed on again, off again operations…
A write up for the Mahave & Milltown is similarly waiting a trip to the Needles/Kingman area in search of copies of the Needles Eye… the local paper… Research beyond Myrick suggest the railroad had a much longer life than the generally reported 9 months… Most of the exisiting information comes from the Arizona side of the Colorado River… the view from Needles, the railroad’s effective western terminus is missing…
By the way, Myrick is not the villain here… he writes about the railroad twice, originally in 1963 in Railroads of Nevada & Eastern California, then again in his 2010 Railroad’s of Arizona, Vol 6… the later information is much expanded… but the earlier reports seem to better reflect the “common knowledge”
Trips are planned, research continues… comments and thoughts are always welcome.
Randy