Difference between revisions of "Ash Meadows Clay"

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==History==
==History==
<div style="float:right;"><span style="border: 1px solid rgb(50, 39, 39); padding: 4px; background-color: #E9DFD1; font-size:14px; color:black; display:block;">'''Reference Data'''<br />United Death Valley Clay Company<br />  
<div style="float:right;">__TOC__<br /><span style="border: 1px solid rgb(50, 39, 39); padding: 4px; background-color: #E9DFD1; font-size:14px; color:black; display:block;">'''Reference Data'''<br />United Death Valley Clay Company<br />Coen Companies Inc.<br />Gauge: 36in.<br />Length: 8 miles.</span></div>
Coen Companies Inc.<br />Gauge: 36in.<br />Length: 8 miles.</span><br />__TOC__</div>
Long time well known desert resident "Dad" Fairbanks found the clay deposits at Ash Meadows in 1916, with others quickly following in his footsteps.
Long time well known desert resident "Dad" Fairbanks found the clay deposits at Ash Meadows in 1916, with others quickly following in his footsteps.



Latest revision as of 09:07, 7 June 2021

Nevada / Mining / Ash Meadows Clay Railroad / Amargosa Valley

History


Reference Data
United Death Valley Clay Company
Coen Companies Inc.
Gauge: 36in.
Length: 8 miles.

Long time well known desert resident "Dad" Fairbanks found the clay deposits at Ash Meadows in 1916, with others quickly following in his footsteps.

By 1925 General Clay had operations in the clay pits, trucking the dried clay to the Bradford siding of the Tonopah & Tidewater Railroad. In 1927 the mechanization of the mining began and they laid a (36”) “baby gauge” to the pits from Bradford Siding where the clay was loaded on standard gauge cars.

In 1928 the Pacific Coast Borax company was moving its operations out of Death Valley, with only limited operations on the Death Valley Railroad to Ryan for tourist service, and the current clay pit operator G. Ray Boggs, convinced the T&T (DVRR) to lay a third rail from Death Valley Junction to Bradford siding. This would allow the now unneeded DVRR equipment to be used for the clay operations. The roasting plant was converted into a clay drying and packaging operation. The peak years were 1927 through 1929 with over 30,000 tons shipped.

As of June 1928, the company was using two gasoline powered shovels, each capable of handling 75 tons in an 8 hour shift. At that time they were considering larger shovels.

In May 1931, the DVRR equipment, rails, and other material were removed, and shipped to Carlsbad New Mexico, for the U.S. Potash operations. In preparation for the change, the clay railroad was converted to standard gauge, and shipments were now made directly via standard gauge cars provided by the Tonopah & Tidewater. Reportedly, T&T locomotive no. 1 was kept available to switch the clay spur. By 1933 the output was down to 4,000 tons.

When the T&T ceased operations in 1940, the clay railroad was scrapped, and the ties sold to the T&T who used them to maintain the that railroad while they waited for authority to scrap the railroad.



Bibliography
R H Hehmuth, Fate-Root-Heath Co., Plymouth Locomotive, 1914- 2002 (by the author, St George UT, 2015)
Richard E. Lingenfelter, Death Valley and the Amargosa: A Land of Illusion (University of California Press, Berkeley, 1986)
David Myrick, Railroads of Nevada and Eastern California, Vol 2, (Howell North Books, Berkeley, 1963)
Southern Nevada Clay Industry Expanding, Reno Gazette-Journal 26 Jun 1928
Stephen B. Castor, Brett T. McLaurin, Steve Ludington, and Kathryn S. Flynn, Mineral Resource Assessment of Selected Areas in Clark and Nye Counties, Nevada, U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5197 Prepared in cooperation with the Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Chapter F. Mineral Resource Potential of the Ash Meadows and Amargosa Mesquite Trees Areas of Critical Environmental Concern, Nye County, [1]

Reference Material Available Online

Equipment Roster

Locomotives

Photo No. White Builder Class Engine C/N Date Remarks
Png photo notavailable 150px.png
0-4-0PE Plymouth FL-2 Buda KTU 2439[1] 9/20/1926 36in gauge, 4-ton, gas/friction.
Sold by H C Collins Co (dealer) Los Angeles CA
To United Death Valley Clay Co., Bradford Siding, Inyo County CA, 10/31/1927
Returned to H C Collins as trade in on c/n 2751.
Png photo notavailable 150px.png
0-4-0PE Plymouth DLC-6 Climax TU 2751[1] 11/1/27 36in Gauge, 7-ton, gas/mechanical.
Sold by H C Collins Co (dealer) Los Angeles CA
To United Death Valley Clay Company, 10/23/1928
To Coen Companies Inc, Death Valley Jct. CA
Disposition after 1931 unknown.
  1. 1.0 1.1 R H Hehmuth, Fate-Root-Heath Co., Plymouth Locomotive, 1914- 2002 (Published by the author, St George UT, 2015)

Compiled by Randy Hees.

Rolling stock

The company owned 12, narrow gauge 4-wheel side dump “steam shovel cars”, likely built by the Western Wheeled Scraper Co., for use in the clay fields. Between 1928 and 1930, the Death Valley Railroad provided 12 narrow gauge hoppers. After the third rail was removed, the Tonopah and Tidewater provided 5, 55-ton gondolas to move the clay from Bradford Siding to Death Valley Junction.


Photographs

All found at the Nye County History Project

Crew gathered around Plymouth Locomotive

Plymouth Locomotive with train

Shovel used in Clay pit


Nevada / Mining / Ash Meadows Clay Railroad / Amargosa Valley