Narrow Gauge Railroads of Nevada
Common Carrier Railroads.
Arcata & Mad River Railroad.
45.25in Gauge. Incorporated July 16, 1881, the 12.9 mile long Arcata and Mad River Railroad provided access to the timber lands along the Mad River between Arcata and Korbel. Prior to the A&MR railroad the Union Plank Walk & Rail Track Company, incorporated December 15, 1854, had provided service along the 2.5 mile long wharf in Arcata. The two companies operated narrow gauge service for a total of 88 years being both the oddest gauge and earliest railroad in California. The A&MR continued on for an additional 50 years as a standard gauge railroad.
Arcata to Korbel, Humboldt County. 1854-1942
Bodie & Benton Railway & Land Company.
36in Gauge. Mining activity entered a boom in the Bodie area in the 1880s, the Bodie and Benton Railway was constructed in 1887 to meet the demand for timber by logging the forests South East of Mono Lake. The B&B's main line stretched from Bodie navigating steep grades and two switchbacks down to Mono Mills and the company sawmill.
Bodie to Mono Mills, Mono County. 1887 - 1918
California & Nevada Railroad.
36in Gauge. Projected to build 250 miles from Emeryville to the Nevada state line. During 21 years of operation it remained under the control of several contractors and never ceased being under construction. Between 1885 and 1900 only 22.4 miles was completed and trains operated irregularly. After seven years of litigation the C&N ceased to exist in November 1902.
Emery(ville) to Bryant(Orinda), Alameda and Contra Costa Counties. 1881 - 1902
Carson & Colorado Railroad.
36in Gauge. Constructed by the Virginia and Truckee railroad to tap the southern mining booms. The line was projected to connect to the Colorado river, a feat it never accomplished, ending construction in Hawley, CA (later called Keeler). The line remained barely profitable until it was finally sold to the Southern Pacific in 1900, becoming the Nevada & California RR in 1905.
Mound House, NV to Hawley (Keeler), CA. 1882 - 1905
Colusa & Lake Railroad.
36in Gauge. Constructed in 1885 as the Colusa Railroad to connect with the Central Pacific at Colusa Junction (now Cortena). The 9.7 mile line reincorporated a year later as the Colusa & Lake and expanded 12.3 miles to Sites and the neighboring sandstone quarries. By 1913 the quarry output had declined and competition from the Southern Pacific and Northern Electric railroads forced the road to abandon in May, 1915.
Colusa to Sites, Colusa County. 1885 - 1918
Death Valley Railroad.
36in Gauge. Connected the Pacific Coast Borax Company mines around “New” Ryan with their concentrator at Death Valley Junction on the Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad. At Ryan, a 2’ gauge operation dubbed the “Baby Gauge” brought borax from the mines for transshipment. In 1927 the mines became unprofitable and a branch (dual gauge) laid north to service a clay pit in Ash Meadows.
Death Valley Junction to "New" Ryan, Inyo County. 1914 - 1931
Hetch Hetchy & Yosemite Valleys Railway.
36in Gauge. Incorporated by the West Side Flume & Lumber Co. to service the timber lands owned by the company and provide transportation to Yosemite National Park. The company sold to Michigan businessmen in 1903 and passenger service ended in August 1904. Operated as a private logging railroad as the West Side Lumber Co, the common carrier charter expired in 1943.
Tuolumne to Thompson's Meadow, Tuolumne County. 1899 – 1904
Iron Mountain Railway.
36in Gauge. Built by the Mountain Mines Syndicate LTD of England to move copper ore from the mine down to their smelter near Keswick. Later consolidated into the Mountain Copper Mining Company, it would become the largest copper producer in the state of California. By the 1920s the mine output began to decline and the line was abandoned in 1927.
Keswick to Mines, Shasta County. 1895 - 1927
John Harford's Railroad.
30in Gauge. Horse drawn tramway constructed by John Harford beginning in 1871 to service the wharf at Point San Luis. Construction proceeded slowly from wharf inland to the People's Wharf Co. warehouse in San Luis Valley (Later Avila). Operation of freight and passengers over the line began in 1873. In mid-1874 John Harford sold the operation to the San Luis Obispo & Santa Maria Valley Railroad.
Point San Luis to San Luis Valley (Avila), San Luis Obispo County. 1871 - 1874
Lake Tahoe Railway & Transportation Company.
36in Gauge.
Truckee to Tahoe City, Nevada and Placer Counties.
Monterey & Salinas Valley Railroad.
36in Gauge. California's first narrow gauge common carrier railroad. Constructed by local farmers upset by the Southern Pacific's tariff rates and seeking to establish their own railroad and port in Monterey bay. Within 4 years Nature and the Southern Pacific ultimately drive the line to bankruptcy. In 1879 the line is purchased and scrapped by the Southern Pacific with the equipment and rails sold to the newly formed Nevada Central Railway.
Salinas to Monterey, Santa Cruz County. 1874 - 1879
Mount Diablo & San Jose Railroad.
36in Gauge. A mythical railroad that operated from from Antioch to Livermore in the south utilizing the route of the Empire Coal Mine railroad. The line primarily hauled coal from the Mount Diablo mines and the occasional picnic train. A branch was planned to connect with the California and Nevada railroad, but the line was heavily damaged in the 1906 earthquake and construction ceased thereafter.
Antioch to Livermore, Contra Costa County. 1900 – 1907
Nevada - California - Oregon Railway.
36in Gauge.
Reno, NV to Alturas, CA. 1883 - 1928
Nevada County Narrow Gauge Railroad.
36in Gauge. Constructed to connect the booming mining region around Grass Valley and Nevada City with the Central Pacific in Colfax, the line has the distinction of being the longest operating narrow gauge common carrier in California.
Colfax to Nevada City, Placer and Nevada Counties. 1875 - 1942
North Pacific Coast Railroad.
36in Gauge. Constructed between 1874 and 1876 the NPC was constructed to reach valuable Redwood holdings of its financiers. Stretching from their ferry terminal in Sausalito to the vast logging country around Duncan's Mills the NPC was an important lifeline to the region and to San Francisco.
Sausalito to Duncan Mills, Sonoma and Marin Counties. 1874 - 1908
Pacific Coast Railway.
36in Gauge.
San Luis Obispo to Santa Maria & Los Alamos, San Luis Obispo & Santa Barbara Counties. 1882 - 1941
Pajaro Valley Consolidated Railroad.
36in Gauge. Owned and operated by the Claus Spreckels family, the main purpose of the Pajaro Valley Consolidated Railroad was to move sugar beets from farmers' fields to Spreckels beet sugar mills in Watsonville and Spreckels, California. The December 1897 incorporation of the PVCRR was a consolidation of the Pajaro Valley Railroad (incorporated January 1890) and the Pajaro Extension Railway (incorporated April 1897).
Watsonville to Buena Vista, Santa Cruz and Monterey Counties. 1890 - 1929
Redondo Railway Company.
36in Gauge.
Redondo to Los Angeles, Los Angeles County. 1889 - 1896
San Joaquin & Sierra Nevada Railroad.
36in Gauge.
Incorporated in 1882 to connect the growing population of Calaveras County and its farmers with the deep water ports of San Francisco. The line was completed in 1885 from Brack's Landing in the Sacramento River Delta with Valley Springs in the foothills, sold to the Southern Pacific in 1888 parts of the line surved late into the 20th century as the Southern Pacific's "Kentucky House Branch".
Brack's Landing to Valley Springs, San Joaquin County. 1882 - 1904
San Luis Obispo & Santa Maria Valley Railroad.
36in Gauge.
San Luis Obispo to Santa Maria & Los Alamos, San Luis Obispo & Santa Barbara Counties. 1875 - 1882
Santa Cruz Railroad.
36in Gauge.
Conceived by Frederick A. Hihn to bring railroad service to Santa Cruz. The line prospered only briefly, by 1880 the South Pacific Coast began competing service to Santa Cruz. By 1882 Hihn sold his interest in the company to the Southern Pacific Railroad and the line was standard gauged in 1883 becoming their Santa Cruz Branch. In 2012 the branch was sold to the Santa Cruz County Regional Transit Commission.
Pajaro Junction to Santa Cruz, Salinas and Santa Cruz Counties. 1873 – 1883 (NG)
Santa Cruz & Felton Railroad.
36in Gauge. Built to move lumber to Santa Cruz, this 8 mile line began operation in October 1875. Alfred E. Davis purchased a controlling interest in the SC&F in 1879 and leased it to the South Pacific Coast Railroad. The SC&F retained its corporate identity until 1887 when it was merged with the SPC and other subsidiaries to become the South Pacific Coast Railway. Most of the railroad exists today as part of the standard gauge Santa Cruz, Big Trees and Pacific Railroad.
Felton to Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz County. 1875 - 1887
Sonoma Valley Railroad.
36in Gauge. Constructed from the route of the Sonoma Valley Prismoidal, the Sonoma Valley Railroad was the answer to Sonoma's desire for a railroad. With extensions to Glen Ellen and later Ignacio, for several years the line was a subsidary of Peter Donahue's San Francisco and North Pacific Railroad. In 1889, the Sonoma Valley Railroad merged with the SF&NP and was standard gauged in 1890.
San Pablo Bay to Glen Ellen, Sonoma County. 1878 - 1890
South Pacific Coast Railroad.
36in Gauge. Incorporated March 20, 1876 from an original concept of providing transportation to sell real estate in Newark, California, it became one of the most successful narrow gauge railroads in California. In May 1887 it and its leased lines were consolidated into the South Pacific Coast Railway and sold to Southern Pacific interests.
San Francisco, Alameda, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz Counties. 1876 - 1887
South Pacific Coast Railway.
36in Gauge. Consolidated May 21, 1887 from the South Pacific Coast Railroad and its leased lines it operated as a narrow gauge until 1908 with the completion of widening to standard gauge. The corporation continued until 1937 when its 50 year bonds became due.
San Francisco, Alameda, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz Counties. 1887 - 1937
Southern Pacific Narrow Gauge.
36in Gauge. In 1912 the Nevada & California RR was reorganized into the Central Pacific Ry and operated as the Keeler Branch of the Southern Pacific system. Over the years the line would shorten as sections were abandoned until the Keeler to Laws portion remained. Affectionately known as the "Slim Princess".
Mina, NV to Keeler, CA. 1912 - 1960
State Harbor Belt Railroad.
Dual Gauge. While not fully a narrow gauge, the State Harbor Commission constructed and operated an expansive dual gauge system along the harbor in San Francisco. The railroad served the Atcheson Topeka & Santa Fe, Central/Southern Pacifc, North Pacific Coast Railroad and South Pacific Coast Railway switching incoming freight cars from the ferries to industries and yards along the waterfront.
San Francisco, San Francisco County. 1890 - 1915
Stockton & Ione Railroad.
36in Gauge. Proposed to build from Stockton to the liginite fields near Ione. The project was beset with trouble from the start and managed to grade 12 miles to Linden, constructing 5 miles of track to the eastern edge of Stockton. An economic downturn forced the line into bankruptcy and the company's assets were sold at Sheriff's auction in July, 1876.
Stockton to Ione (Proposed), San Joaquin & Amador Counties. 1874 - 1876
Watsonville Transportation Company.
36in Gauge. Constructed by local interests to bypass Claus Spreckles and the Southern Pacific freight monopolies in their region. Initially profitable, the line struggled in the face of competition until the wharf at Port Rogers was destroyed by unforseen circumstances and needed replacement, forcing the line to suspend operations.
Watsonville to Port Rogers, Salinas County. 1903 - 1906
Watsonville Railway & Navigation Company.
36in Gauge. After laying dormant and tied up in court proceedings for several years, the Watsonville Transportation Co. was revived in 1911 and operated until 1913 when the wharf at Port Watsonville was destroyed by a storm.
Watsonville to Port Watsonville, Salinas County. 1911 - 1914
Yosemite Short Line Railroad.
30in Gauge. Incorporated in 1905 the Yosemite Short Line was proposed to connect Jamestown on the standard gauge Sierra Railway with Yosemite National Park and the Hetch Hetchy Valley. Construction was disrupted by the April 18, 1906 earthquake in San Francisco. Portions of the route would later be used in construction of the standard gauge Hetch Hetchy Railroad.
Jamestown to Yosemite (Proposed), Tuolumne County. 1905 - 1906
Logging Railroads.
A. M. Leach Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. Constructed by Andrew Martin Leach to bring timber from the woods to his mill in Challenge. Finished lumber from the mill was then sent by flume down to Honcutt on the Southern Pacific. The railroad was later extended to a new mill at Beantown. In 1892 Leach moved his railroad to the end of the flume at Owl Gulch.
Challenge Mills to Beanville, Yuba County. 1884 - 1894
American River Land & Lumber Company.
36in Gauge.
Pino, El Dorado County. 1892 - 1899
Birce & Smart Lumber Company.
36in Gauge.
Smart Station, Nevada County.
Brookings Box & Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. The Brookings Box & Lumber Co. owned 6000 acres of timberlands in the San Bernadino Mountains near Fredalba. Between 1901 and 1911 the company was generating 10,000,000 board feet of lumber per year. The company ceased operations on in June 1914.
Fredalba, San Bernadino County. 1900 - 1914
Butte and Plumas Railway.
36in Gauge. Originally owned by the Truckee Land and Lumber Company this railroad spent most of its life moving logs from the forests of Butte County to the sawmill at Oroville for the Swayne Lumber Company.
Butte County. 1910 - 1938
Diamond and Caldor Railway.
36in Gauge. Constructed as a subsidiary of the California Door Company in 1904 to connect their mill in Caldor with the standard gauge Southern Pacific at Diamond Springs. In 1923 a fire destroyed the mill at Caldor which was replaced with a new sawmill in Diamond Springs. When the line failed to comply with ICC common carrier regulations, operations ceased on April 10, 1953.
Diamond Springs to Caldor, El Dorado County. 1900 - 1953
Donner & Tahoe Railroad.
36in Gauge. Built by the Pacific Wood & Lumber Company on contract to operate a railroad over land owned by the Truckee Lumber Company. The railroad hauled logs from Truckee Lumber Co. and Pacific Wood & Lumber Co. timberlands down to the Truckee Lumber Co. mill on the western side of Truckee. The Pacific Wood & Lumber Co. was purchased by the Truckee Lumber Co. in 1901 and the railroad was dismantled.
Truckee Area, Nevada County. 1893 - 1901
D. H. McEwen Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. Operated a six-mile long railroad from the mill near Cazadero, up the South Fork of the Gualala River on what is now the Bohan-Dillon Road. Lumber from the mill was hauled by wagon team down to Fort Ross - Cazadero Road, where it was transferred to the Northwestern Pacific Railroad.
South Fork of the Gualala River, Medocino County. 1906 - 1917
El Dorado Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. Acquired the American River Land & Lumber Company railroad from Pino Grande to the log chute on the American river. The El Dorado Lumber Co. invested in the operation and constructed a cable tramway across the river allowing loaded cars to be shipped to a new mill in Camino
Camino to Pino Grande, El Dorado County. 1900 - 1911
Empire City Railway.
30in Gauge. Constructed by Sierra Railway interests using the equipment and workforce from the failed Yosemite Short Line project. The operation was purchased by the Standard Lumber Company in 1907. Operations ended in 1913 after the mill and lumber were destroyed by fire.
Empire City, Tuolumne County. 1906 - 1913
Greenhorn Railroad.
36in Gauge. Built by Charles W. Kitts to connect his mill on the Greenhorn river with the Nevada County Narrow Gauge. Cars of the NCNG would travel to mill by way of horse teams and later a small locomotive, there they were loaded and returned to Greenhorn Junction for shipment to Grass Valley, Nevada City or Colfax.
Greenhorn Creek Area, Nevada County. 1891 - 1912
Greenwood Railroad.
36in Gauge.
Elk, Mendocino County
Hume-Bennett Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. Thomas Hume and Ira Bennett gained control of the Sanger Lumber Company in 1905. Operations were expanded and a large mill was constructed at Hume. After the Hume-Bennett partnership dissolved in 1912, Operations retained the name until it was renamed back to the Sanger Lumber Company between 1917 and 1927.
Tulare County. 1905 - 1917
Johnson - Pollock Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. Incorporated in 1912 to harvest timber from the northern slope of Mt. Hebron. The company operated several miles of track from Jerome up the mountain and utilized a Shay locomotive. In 1919 the mill at Jerome burned down and the railroad equipment sold to the nearby Mt. Hebron Lumber Company.
Jerome, Siskiyou County. 1912 - 1920
Kings River Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. Constructed by the Moore & Smith Lumber, San Francisco, oprtsyion began in the vicinity of Sequoia Lake and Converse Basin. The operation utilized two sawmills, a rough cut mill above the snow line and a larger mill with drying yard below the snow line. Both operated independent rail systems. The upper mill utilized a horse tramway, while the lower mill operated a 2 mile railroad called the “Sequoia Railroad”.
Tulare County. 1888 - 1894
Louis Voss' Railroad.
36in Gauge.
Little York Township Area, Nevada County. 1883 - 1891
Marsh Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. The Marsh Lumber company acquired the Horton Brothers Lumber Co. assets in 1907. During 1910 seven miles of narrow gauge were built out of Horton Landing on the Boca & Loyalton. Financial trouble in October 1917 saw the operation sold to the Clover Valley Lumber Co. and the grade subsequently standard gauged in 1920.
Sierra County. 1906 - 1917
Michigan - California Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. Formed from the merger of the R. E. Danaher Lumber Co. and Michigan lumberman John Blodgett's timber holdings on the Georgetown ridge. The company operated a unique cable tramway over the American river gorge and an expansive mills in Pino Grande and Camino. A fire destroyed the southern tower of the tramway and the operation switched to trucks in 1949.
Camino to Pino Grande, El Dorado County. 1918 - 1949
Molino Timber Company.
30in Gauge. The Molino Timber Company was incorporated in 1911 as a subcontracting company of the Loma Prieta Lumber Company. Operating an incline with an elevation of 657 ft and a maximum grade of 67 percent the line operated a few years before its equipment was sold to the Loma Prieta Lumber Company.
Molino Station to Camp #3, Santa Cruz County. 1911 - 1920
Pacific Lumber & Wood Compoany.
36in Gauge.
Clinton, Nevada County.
Sanger Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. In 1895 the creditors of the failed Kings River Lumber Co., reorganized the company as the Sanger Lumber Company. Operations were moved 5 miles east of the former mill site at Millwood, to the Converse Basin. The company operated in the red over the next 10 years and was ultimately sold in 1905 to Thomas Hume and Ira Bennett, becoming the Hume-Bennett Lumber Company.
Converse Basin. Tulare County. 1895 - 1905
Sierra Lumber Company.
39.5in Gauge. Formed through the consolidation of 3 different logging interests, the Sierra Lumber Company constructed and operated several horsedrawn tramways. In 1880 a tramway near Lyonsville was converted to a strap iron railroad and by 1900 the operation was profitable enough to build a second line along Chico Creek. In 1907 the company became part of the Diamond Match Company.
Operations Near Lyonsville and Chico Creek. Butte, Tehama and Plumas Counties. 1881 - 1907
Sierra Nevada Wood & Lumber Company: Hobart Mills.
36in Gauge and Standard Gauge. After exhausting their timber holdings at Incline on Lake Tahoe, the Sierra Nevada Wood & Lumber Co. constructed a new railroad along Upper Prosser Creek at Overton, later called Hobart Mills. The company operated narrow gauge logging lines through 5000 square miles of forest. The company was dissolved, becoming part of the Hobart Estate Company in 1917.
Hobart Mills to Sierraville Summit, Nevada and Sierra Counties. 1896 - 1917
Sloat Lumber Company.
30in Gauge. Constructed from Sloat to the Poplar Valley and Peoria Creek area utilizing second hand equipment from the Empire City Railway. In 1918 the Sloat Lumber Co. and Quincy Lumber Co. were purchased by the F. S. Murphy Lumber Company of Utah. From 1926 to 1936 it was operated as part of the Quincy Lumber Co.
Sloat, Plumas County. 1917 - 1936
Spanish Peak Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. Incorporated by O.C. Hassett and Duane L Bliss Jr. in 1917, the company initially used trucks to haul logs to Quincy for shipment to the company mill at Gray's Flat (later called Twain) on the Feather River. A 36" gauge railroad was constructed in 1925 to move logs down to a mill near Spanish Ranch. From there a 5 mile long aerial cable tramway carried logs north to the mill at Gray's Flat.
Spanish Ranch (Mill) to Camp 4, Plumas County. 1925 - 1935
Swayne Lumber Company
36in Gauge, The original sawmill was constructed on a bluff above the Feather River with an incline down to the Western Pacific Railroad. A railroad moved material between the mill and the incline and logs from the forest. After its mill burned in 1916 the Swayne Lumber Company relocated its operations to the Truckee Lumber Company mill in Oroville and took control of the Butte and Plumas Railway.
Butte County. 1909-1938
Towle Brothers Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. Constructed during the 1880s the Towle Brothers operated a vast narrow gauge system out of Towle station along the Central Pacific. By the late 1890s the lumber supply began to dwindle and the Towle Bros relocated their operation to Fulda. In 1902 shortly after George Towle's death the family sold the operation to the Reed Lumber Co. of Canada.
Towle to a point near Omega, Nevada County. 1885 - 1902
Truckee Lumber Company.
42in Gauge.
Truckee, Nevada County.
West Side Lumber Company.
36in Gauge. Reorganized by Michigan businessmen from the Hetch Hetchy & Yosemite Valleys Railroad. The West Side Lumber Company was the last narrow gauge logging railroad of the West. At it's peak the company operated 250 miles of track including 72 miles of mainline. Trucks replaced the railroad in 1961 and operations ceased in 1962.
Tuolumne to Camp 44 (Near Cherry Creek), Tuolumne County. 1903 - 1962
Mining Railroads.
Cortez Mining Company.
30in Gauge.
Near Tenabo Eureka County. 1890 - ca. 1930
Dayton Sutro & Carson Valley Railroad.
36in Gauge. Initially constructed as the Lyon Mill & Mining Company, J.M. Douglas purchased the line from Fred Birdsall who had become interested in the San Joaquin & Sierra Nevada in California. The line operated a single locomotive, a Porter 0-4-2 named "Joe Douglas" until some time in the 1890's when operations ended, the exact date currently unknown.
Dayton, Lyon County. 1881 - ca. 1900
Eureka Mill Railroad.
30in Gauge. Short by even shortline standards, this line was built by the Union Mill Compnay in 1872 due their Eureka Mill being in a location unreachable by the Virginia & Truckee along the Carson River. Initially horse drawn, a Porter 0-4-0T was purchased later. The mill burned down in 1892, leaving the railroad abandoned. Sometime after 1906 the equipment was sold.
Santiago Canyon (V&T) to Eureka Mill. 1872 - 1906
Eureka & Ruby Hill Railroad.
36in Gauge. Constructed to connect the Eureka Consolidated Mines with their smelter operations in Eureka, in 1875 the line was purchased by the Eureka & Palisade Railroad. Under E&P control, trackage was expanded to the Richmond Consolidated Mine and associated Smelter. In 1893 operations were abandoned after the mines shut down. In 1902 operations resumed on a smaller scale until the flood which wiped out much of the E&P in 1910.
Eureka to Ruby Hill, Eureka County. 1874 - 1893 and 1902 - 1910
Lyon Mining & Milling Company.
36in Gauge. Initially constructed as the Lyon Mill & Mining Company, J.M. Douglas purchased the line from Fred Birdsall who had become interested in the San Joaquin & Sierra Nevada in California. The line operated a single locomotive, a Porter 0-4-2 named "Joe Douglas" until some time in the 1890's when operations ended, the exact date currently unknown.
Dayton (C&C) to Rock Point Mill (Dayton, NV). 1881 - ca. 1900
Pacific Tungsten Company.
24in Gauge.
Mill City, Pershing County. 1918 - 1947
Quartette Mining Company.
36in Gauge.Hauled gold ore from the Quartette mine near Searchlight to their stamp mill 16 miles away on the Colorado river. Discovery of a water source close to the mine lead to the construction of a new mill near the mine in 1906. Operations ceased on the railroad shortly thereafter, the remaining equipment and rails were sold between 1910 and 1915.
Searchlight, Clark County. 1902 - 1908
United Clay Products
36in Gauge.
Near Death Valley Jct Nye County. 1927 - ca. 1931, Standard gauge 1931-1940
Yellow Pine Mining Company.
36in Gauge.Constructed to tap lead and manganese deposits west of Jean. The railroad hauled ore from the mines down steep grades to the smelter in Goodsprings for processing. The final product was then shipped down to Jean for transloading on the Los Angeles & Salt Lake Railroad (now Union Pacific). Ore shipments ceased by 1930 and the railroad was scrapped in 1934.
Jean to Goodsprings, Clark County. 1911 - 1934
Industrial Railroads.
Sutro Tunnel Company.
18in Gauge.
Near Dayton, Lyon County. 1865 - ca. 1890