Roaring Camp & Big Trees Narrow Gauge Railroad


The Roaring Camp & Big Trees Narrow Gauge Railroad is a narrow-gauge tourist railroad in California that starts from the Roaring Camp depot in Felton, California and runs up steep grades through redwood forests to the top of nearby Bear Mountain, a distance of.
The railroad runs most trains using steam locomotives, several dating from the 1890s. They are some of the oldest narrow-gauge steam locomotives still providing regular passenger service in the United States.
The American Society of Mechanical Engineers designated three of the railroad's locomotives as Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark #134 in 1988.

History

The Big Trees Ranch was bought in 1867 by San Francisco businessman Joseph Warren Welch to preserve the giant redwood trees from logging. It was the first property in the state acquired specifically for that purpose. In 1930, the Welch family sold part of the property to Santa Cruz County, which eventually became part of Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park.
Roaring Camp Railroads operations began in 1963 under the guidance of F. Norman Clark, who was the founder and owner. His purpose was to keep a family tradition of constructing railroads and to "bring the romance and color of steam railroading back to America". In 1958, Clark found the engine Dixiana abandoned near a coal mine in the Appalachian Mountains; he described it as looking like a " rusty pile of junk". Dixiana was reconditioned and began service in 1963 on rails that had been shipped around Cape Horn in 1881. The railway route was laid out so that as few trees as possible would have to be cut on the Clark acquired with a 99-year lease of the larger Big Trees Ranch.
Originally, two large trestles formed a "corkscrew" loop at Spring Canyon, but these were destroyed by a 1976 fire, the smoke from which could be seen from San Francisco. Within six months, a switchback was constructed to bypass the severed loop and the line was returned to service. The switchback has an estimated 10.5% grade. The length of the tail tracks in the switchback restricts the trains that may be operated to six cars or fewer; longer trains require a diesel switcher to run at the rear and bring the excess cars up and down the switchback separately.
Clark's wife, Georgiana, Vice President of Operations assumed the ownership and management responsibilities following his death on December 2, 1985. In 2003, the first "Day Out with Thomas" special event was held. The event was the single largest in the 40-year history of Roaring Camp, with an estimated 25,000 participants over a three-day period. On December 28, 2015, a train collided with a stop block on part of the switchback, injuring six people. The cause was a combination of driver error and a mechanical issue with the locomotive's throttle valve.

Locomotives

The railroad owns several locomotives in various states of repair. Regular service is typically handled by the railroad's two Shay locomotives, with occasional appearances by the Heisler. "Kahuku," the oldest locomotive on the roster, is used in shuttle service on special occasions, as it is not capable of hauling trains up the mountain due to its small size.
NumberNameImageBuilderTypeWorks numberBuiltAcquiredNotes
#1DixianaLima Locomotive WorksClass B 42-2 Shay#25931912October 1962Ex-Coal Processing Corp. #3 at Dixiana, Virginia. Operable and in regular service.
#2TuolumneHeisler Locomotive Works2-truck Heisler#104118991963ex-West Side Lumber Company #3. Operable
Restored 2001 and 2010.
#3KahukuBaldwin Locomotive Works#1075618901966ex-Kahuku Plantation #1 "Keana." Operable, and used on special occasions.
#4WaipahuBaldwin Locomotive Works1532118971977Sold to Western Village theme park, Nikkō, Japan, in 1988. Ex-Oahu Sugar #1.
#5BloomsburgClimax Locomotive WorksClass B Climax#169219281975Ex-Elk River Coal & Lumber Company #3. Acquired from Carroll Park & Western Railroad, Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. Inoperable, rebuild planned as funds & shop space allow. As of 2017, the locomotive's engine set can turn over on steam.
#6DaisyLima Locomotive WorksClass B 32-2 Shay#251919121988ex-W.M. Ritter Lumber Company #7. Last operated and retired at Daisy, Kentucky. Inoperable.
#7SonoraLima Locomotive WorksClass C 60-3 Shay#246519111986ex-West Side Lumber Company #7
Inoperable, under overhaul. Restored 2007–2009 and 2018-present.
#40Plymouth Locomotive Works14-ton Diesel ex-Kaiser Steel, Fontana, California
Operable
#50Davenport Locomotive WorksDiesel#ex-D&RGW #50
Operable
sold, now at Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden, Colorado
#50 General Electric25-ton Diesel Electric#15816ex-Bethlehem Steel #14, Los Angeles, California
Operable,
sold to Kauai Plantation Railway, Kauai, Hawaii
#60General Electric56-ton Diesel Electric#33250ex-Bethlehem Steel #12, Los Angeles, California
Inoperable
sold to Georgetown Loop Railroad, Georgetown, Colorado
#?? Whitcomb Locomotive Worksex-Kauai Plantation Railway #10, Kauai, HI
Obtained 2010, sold March 2013 to Redwood Gulch Shortline
#10Milwaukee Locomotive Manufacturing CompanyMotorcar ex-West Side Lumber Company.
Operable

Historic mechanical engineering landmark

The American Society of Mechanical Engineers collectively designated Roaring Camp's Shay, Climax and Heisler engines National Mechanical Engineering Historical Landmark in August 1988, as examples of small, slow-speed 19th century geared locomotives.
Other Trivia
  • Locomotive #7 was out-shopped on the same day as another shay locomotive which operated in the Santa Cruz Mountains, the Class B SN-2461. It was acquired by the Santa Cruz Lumber Company in 1930 and hauled lumber along the Pescadero Creek until 1950. The shay would be stored until it was scrapped in 1954. Her sister would arrive at the Santa Cruz Mountains some 30 years later.