T he Old Mission Portland Cement Company, with its cement plant and railroads, was originally a project of the San Juan Cement Company, and the San Juan Pacific Railway (SJPRy). Both of these companies shared board members, directors, and investors with the management of the Ocean Shore Railroad 1 (The SJPRy railroad was originally proposed as an electrified line, much like the Ocean Shore) and the Davenport Cement plant. The narrow gauge quarry railroad was originally planned to be 23 5/8” gauge.2
Construction of the SJPRy, and the San Juan Cement Company plant began in 1907. The standard gauge SJPRR opened in 1907, but work on the cement plant was suspended in November. A new company, Old Mission Portland Cement, took over the project in May 1912, restarting construction of the cement plant, including a 3’ gauge quarry railroad, by 1916. The first carloads of cement were shipped on July 18, 1918.3 On August 21, 1918, the contractor, Hunt Engineering, of Kansas City, declared the plant complete and turned it over to the cement company.
The Old Mission Portland Cement Company was notable for being in opposition to the “cement trust,” an association of cement companies and patent holders who tried to control the cement business, allotting territories and setting minimum prices.4
A 1919 report stated the Old Mission Portland Cement Company had two Marion steam shovels and two “Dinky” locomotives in service. In 1921, two new quarries were opened, each with a 1,200’ gravity tramway, delivering limestone to the narrow gauge railroad. The narrow gauge railroad was extended 1 ½ miles to serve the new quarries. 5
The cement plant and its railroads were sold to Pacific Portland Cement in 1927. In 1929, the new owners announced that they were extending the narrow gauge railroad three miles to a new quarry and a larger 20 ton Plymouth was purchased. By 1930, with the onset of the depression, the facility was closed. The standard gauge line was removed in 1938. The narrow gauge line was gone by the time that the cement plant reopened in 1941 as Ideal Cement, a division of Pacific Portland Cement. The plant was finally closed and dismantled in the 1970’s.
Collected Old Mission Portland Cement Company Photographs.
Images collected from private collections, libraries and historical societies.