Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Coal Train Derails, Then Hit By Light Rail
More details available at 9news.com.
Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Review: Colorado's Mountain Railroads
There is no shortage of books on Colorado railroads but if I had to pick books that would be the best to have in any railfan's collection, Colorado's Mountain Railroads by Robert A. LaMassena would be near the top of the list. Covering roughly 100 years of Colorado railroad history, this book is an exhaustive listing of any and all mountain roads laying a rail in the Centennial State.
Having appeared as separate volumes dating from 1963, LaMassena consolidated and revised his work and Sundance Publications Limited printed it in 1984. It is still the most valuable in researching obscure railroads in Colorado. For example, most railfans know the Rio Grande and possibly the Colorado Midland, but not many know about the Midland Terminal or its use of rail buses to help with passenger traffic after World War I. Likewise, not much coverage has been done of the larger, out-of-state roads including the Union Pacific, Missouri Pacific and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe. Finally, every short line that laid rail (and even some that never did) get at least some treatment. Here’s a partial listing:
- Colorado Central
- Colorado Yule Marble Co., along with the Crystal River railroads.
- Coors Brewing Co.
- Denver, Boulder & Western
- Denver, Lakewood & Golden
- Denver Pacific
- Denver & Santa Fe
- Denver, Texas & Gulf
- Dolores, Paradox & Grand Junction
- Fairmount (yes, to the cemetery in Denver)
- Gilpin
- Golden Circle
- Grand River Valley
- Great Western (the sugar beet short line)
- Kansas Pacific
- Laramie, Hahn’s Peak & Pacific
- London, South Park & Leadville
- Magic Mountain (now Heritage Square in Golden)
- Montezuma Lumber Co.
- Northwestern Terminal Railway (Denver Union Terminal)
- Pagosa Lumber Co.
- Pueblo & Arkansas Valley
- Rio Grande & Pagosa Springs
- Routt Pinnacle Coal Co.
- Salt Lake & Eastern
- San Cristobal
- San Luis Southern
- Santa Fe Southern
- Silverton Northern
- Southern Colorado Power & Railway Co.
- Stone Mountain Railroad & Quarry Co.
- Texas, Santa Fe & Northern
- Treasury Mountain
- Uintah
- Union Pacific, Denver & Gulf
- Utah Central Railroad
- Wasatch & Jordan Valley
The photo illustrations are very illuminating as well. Rare photos abound including,
- Balwin’s 2-6-6-2 narrow-gauge, single expansion Mallets made for Uintah’s sharp curves
- Close-up shot of the Corkscrew Gulch turntable near the Red Mountain townsite
- A triple stub switch on the Rio Grande Southern outside of Rico
- A full color depiction of the travesty of RGS engine 42 painted like a circus train for the Magic Mountain railroad
- D&RGW 821, a 2-6-0T used by the Salt Lake shops in 1923
- Several pictures of Rio Grande’s affair with Fairbanks-Morse
- Denver & Salt Lake’s true (double expansion) 2-6-6-0 Mallets
- Colorado & Wyoming’s Ford truck with flanged wheels (a la RGS Galloping Goose)
This review also appears in its abridged form on Amazon.com since 2014-Dec-05. - SW
Christmas Trains
Here’s a list of the Christmas trains with runs remaining this season in Colorado. While some have already passed, there are still some good opportunities.
Dates | Railroad/Location | Website Details |
Dec 8, 9, 15, 16 | Rio Grande Scenic Railroad | North Pole Express, routes vary |
Dec 8, 9, 15, 16, 22, 23, 24 | Manitou & Pikes Peak (cog railway) | Santa Train, Two departures each day. Combine this with a visit to Santa's Workshop. |
Dec 7, 8, 9, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 27 | Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad | The Polar Express, two to three departures each evening |
Dec 8 | Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad | Antonito Cinder Bear Express |
Dec 15 - 24 | Royal Gorge Route | Santa train departs daily 12:30 pm |
Saturday, October 13, 2007
Gunnison DVD Shares Special Beauty of Marshall Pass Route
Culled from the footage of the Rocky Mountain Railroad Club, this DVD explores the Denver & Rio Grande Western (D&RGW) narrow gauge lines around Gunnison, Colorado.
Length: 59 minutes
Video: Black and white with some color
Audio: Synchronized
Locations: Gunnison, Ohio Creek, Crested Butte, Marshall Pass, Sapinero, Black Canyon of the Gunnison and Cerro Summit.
What makes this DVD special: Rare footage, especially of a flanger car in action as it plows the tracks clear of snow.
Otto Perry and Irv August both made trips to the Gunnison area in the 1940s and 50s to capture the narrow gauge action in and around this mountain town. Their efforts give us a glimpse into the final decade of operations over the Marshall Pass route, the original narrow gauge mainline of the D&RG to Utah. When the standard gauge route over Tennessee Pass was completed, the Marshall Pass line became a backwater with steam engines hauling livestock specials and the odd shipment between Montrose and Salida. A few fall aspens and gorgeous vistas form the backdrop for D&RGW 268 in Bumblebee livery (now on display in that livery in Gunnison) and her sister engine 278 (preserved at Cimarron) both make several appearances as do the Mikado-style engines that serve as the engines for today's Cumbres & Toltec and Durango & Silverton lines.
So much history comes alive on this DVD. Several locations shown are now beneath the waters held by dams on the Gunnison River west of Gunnison. Livestock extras and a flanger plow in action viewed from the caboose also separate this DVD from the pack. This film is a must for any serious narrow gauge modeler as well as the average enthusiast looking for an alternative to the ho-hum, standard-gauge fare. A worthy addition to your collection.
Friday, October 12, 2007
Coming Soon: Resource Reviews
As a fifth-generation Coloradoan, I have a passion for the mountains and the railroads that ventured through them. I envy the lives of William H. Jackson, Otto Perry and many others who saw steam working such places as Red Mountain Pass, Telluride, the Chili Line, Marshall Pass and Leadville. Places like Silverton, Durango and Antonito are magical to me. I've spent hundreds of hours perusing books, studying maps and physically following ghost railroads all over Colorado. Railroad DVDs and past VHS volumes have graced my screen on many a cold winter night. I simply love Colorado railroads.
With this in mind, I'm announcing that I will begin reviewing and recommending DVDs, books and assorted resources that I've found. Most often, you'll be able to get them through Colorado Railroads' relationship with Amazon.com, but a few will be hidden gems or just plain unavailable stuff that you might be able to find down at your local library or museum. I'll bring out the good stuff as much as I can. As always, you can chime in with your own reviews using comments.
I will roll out the first review soon. Until then, keep the fires banked and the glass full. Bring on the snow!
Sunday, September 30, 2007
Grande Web Photographers Craft Their Art
Meanwhile, CJ Lamas has been playing around with stuffed animals (or is the proper term "mascot" or possibly "character of dubious gender?") down in Antonito and Chama on the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic. The costume didn't interfere with these shots, as he picks some beautiful views of Colorado narrow gauge steam. The autumn rains really add to some of these shots too.
Congratulations to both photographers for excelling in their art!
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
RTD Fastracks Overview
More News at DRGW.net
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
Georgetown Restaurant Owner Seeing Red
- Will Railstar and CHS make the changes necessary to improve reliability and lessen or even eliminate downtime in 2008? I hope so.
- Will the businesses of Georgetown and Idaho Springs recover from this difficult season? Probably, but only if the point above is sufficiently resolved.
- Will Greska tack down a third rail and run narrow gauge through the Royal Gorge to Parkdale for the first time in nearly a century? Or will he sell them off and hope they don't end up in the hands of his rivals? There's only so many places that want Shays, and the Loop is one of them.
Taking a Garden Railway Seriously
Sunday, August 26, 2007
D&RGW 315 at Railfest
UPDATE 9/23: No such luck, but there's a rumor about it being available for a fall color special or two.
Colorado State Fair Express Chase
I still might post a few. I'll have to recover my ego first. In the meantime, I'm offering an editorial, although it will likely just add to the consensus of the railfan community at large.
I was reminded yesterday that mainline steam tends to bring out the very worst of railfans. I will spend little time citing what's wrong, but it's still worth noting that:
- Slowing traffic to a crawl on a major Interstate highway just so they can pace a train that is still 100 to 200 feet away from them causes active and thorough resentment from not only the general public, but other railfans trying to get to the next photo location
- Walking in front of the photo line to get their own shot reveals just how unprofessional and ridiculous some railfans can be, especially when the same person shows up in shot after shot after shot. His wearing a pale yellow T-shirt makes it all the worse
While it's not unique to railfanning the events, there is a great opportunity for connecting with others. Among railfans, you can easily spot loyalties and what sub-category of railfan they find themselves in. There's the big steam fan, the narrow gauger, the local historian, the obscure short-line fan, the camera geek and the dabbler, to name a few. One usually finds a mixture of two or three interests in a single railfan, but there is usually a chief love, proudly proclaimed somewhere about the person on their shirt, cap or jacket, making it easy to spot each other. Striking up conversation about such a love is easy and opens up roads to long and true friendships.
Speaking of great loves, I was gratified at the UP's surprising good taste in letting the Rio Grande Heritage unit, UP 1989, assist the 844 over the Palmer Divide. It's always a beautiful sight to the eyes to see the flying Grande in gold and black on home rails, especially the joint line. It was 136 years ago, before Colorado was even a state in the Union, that the Rio Grande's founder directed the Grande to build south from Denver. When so many "& Pacific" railroads were going east-west, Palmer was the true entrepreneur, defying convention and running north-south to tap the riches of the Colorado piedmont on the way to Mexico City. That he never made it past Raton is dwarfed by the fact that his work still survives today.