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Riding the
rails of history
by
Joe
Gosen,Outpost
staff
We followed the
painted railroad tracks on Commercial Street to the Portola
Railroad Museum -- like Dorothy following the Yellow Brick
Road. But instead of OZ, we ended up at a former Western
Pacific Railroad locomotive servicing facility that now is
home to the museum.
I learned about
the museum prior to our trip by visiting its Web site. The
37-acre yard has 2.5 miles of track and a 16,000-square-foot
diesel locomotive service shop. It was an active service
yard from 1954 to 1974.
Nearly a decade
later, the Feather River Rail Society leased the inactive
facility from Union Pacific and established the museum,
which now includes more than 30 locomotives and 80 cars.
This Western Pacific #805-A locomotive, built in
1950, is one of the many trains that visitors can
climb around on at the Portola Train Museum.
Photo by Joe Gosen
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The society, a
non-profit educational and historical preservation, runs the
museum as a way to preserve several railroad history. The
group is espcially interested in the history of the Western
Pacific Railroad, rails in Northern California and the
diesel-electric locomotive of North America.
As with other
rail museums, visitors are encouraged to climb aboard and
explore the cabs, cabooses and passenger cars.
But what's
different in Portola is that visitors can actually drive one
of the locomotives. The museum's Run-A-Locomotive program,
allows enthusiasts to rent a locomotive and operate it on
the museum grounds -- under the close supervision of an
instructor -- for $95 and $125 per hour.
Income from the
rentals is used for restoration projects. There are no age
restrictions, and up to four people can share a rental.
Rentals are done year round by appointment, weather
permitting.
My friends and I
must have been visiting on one of those "weather permitting"
days. The gates were open, but we were the only ones around.
Must have been the weather: It was a cold day, somewhere in
the mid 50s, with some rain and high winds.
The shop, where
the snack bar, old photos and miniature trains are located,
was closed. But we were still able to climb around on the a
couple of locomotives and peek in some of the passenger
cars.
My friend, James
Ray of Reno, was disappointed that most of the museum was
shut down. "I was hoping some crusty old man would be out
here telling us all about the trains, and how everything
used to cost a nickel."
The trip to
wasn't as disappointing for my other friend, Brad Mangin,
though. "This museum took me back to the days when my
grandparents used to take me to the train museums in
California back in 1971, when I was 6," he said.
Mangin reminisced
about his enthusiasm for trains as a child. "I was into it
from age 4 to age 8. I was always wearing my engineer's hat,
and my grandparents would take me to the train museum at Rio
Vista, Roaring Camp in Felton in Train Town in Sonoma and
the mini train park at Tilden Park (in
Berkeley)."
An 1887 Union Pacific 737 Steam Locomotive on
display at the Portolas Railroad Museum is on
long-term loan from the Nevada State Railroad
Museum.
Photo by Joe Gosen
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The museum's
calendar of events include a Santa Train (Dec. 5 and 12,
1998), Feather River Railroad Days (Aug. 21-22, 1999),
Railfan Photographer's Day (Sept. 18, 1999) and various
locomotive maintenance clinics througout the operating
season.
The museum is
open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Memorial Day to Labor Day
with train rides running 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Train rides are
not available the rest of the year, but the museum is open
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., weather permitting. Admission is
free, but a $2 donation is suggested. All-day train ride
passes are $2 per person or $5 per family.
There's more to
Portola than just the railroad museum. The city puts on
annual events like Winter Holiday and the Plumas Sierra
Century bike ride. Visitors also can enjoy activities for
every season: golfing, dining, bird watching, fishing,
hiking, camping, horseback riding, winter sports and other
outdoor activities.
Posted
Dec. 11, 1998
Copyright 1998 Nevada Outpost
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