Nevada County Narrow Gage
Railroad Museum
http://www.ncngrrmuseum.org/index.html?0.9417351981297181
Private Guided Tour, Sunday August 7, 2011
Posted August 10, 2011
| When Mary and I arrived at the museum only the souvenir
sales person and two other volunteers (Don Tallitsch and Al Dittmann)
were in the building. Don offered to give us a private tour and we
accepted immediately. The information in the captions below is from
Don and several visits to the excellent museum website given above.
Not given in the driving directions at their website is that the turns
onto Hollow Way, Bost, and Kidder Court are each well marked by black
on yellow RR signs and arrows to the museum. There are no street signs
(rustic Nevada City!).
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| The
narrow-gage railroad served Nevada City, Grass Valley, and Chicago Park
and their gold mines, and met with the transcontinental wide-gage railroad station in Colfax. |
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| Engine cab, with fireman's seat on left and engineer's seat on right. |
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| Firebox door and engineer's controls on Engine #5. |
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| The
center wheels of this 6-traction engine have no flange, so they can slide
across the track without binding as the engine goes around tight turns on the winding Colfax to Nevada City route. |
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| Don then took us to the maintenance shop behind the museum. |
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| Old
cars donated from here and there sit between the museum (in right background) and
maintenance shop (behind camera). Don said this car came from a desert town and was in good shape compared with others they've received. |
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| You can see the volunteer restoration crew has its work cut out. |
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| This engine, in the shop, was built from scratch by volunteers! |
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| Cab of museum-built engine. |
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| Streetcars also ran between Grass Valley and Nevada City. This one was built by volunteers to haul sightseers (see their website). |
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| Tools in the shop, in addition to a welder, lathe, shaper, wood and metal band saws, and other machines. |
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| Storage area for rebuilt RR cars. The platform and museum, on right, are designed so this is like a RR station. |
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| Jeffery steam car, designed and built in 1901 by Richard Edgar Jeffery in Nevada City, and claimed to be the first automobile in California (a more plausible claim). The engine (seen under the seat) is demonstrated with compressed air and runs very smoothly. |
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| Another carriage on display. |
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| A slightly reduced scale model of the narrow gage railroad station in Chicago Park. |
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| Scale model of Sarah Kidder's home in Nevada City. The railroad ran right past the home and a train could stop to pick her up. |
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| A representative movie in which engine #5 appeared. |
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| Wooden model of engine #5. |
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