tg626 wrote:I know 19 went back to Yreka (how ever you spell it), and then got "grounded" by financial issues, did she move on?
The OC&E was the Oregon, California & Eastern, which ran east from Klamath Falls to Bly, Oregon. The OC&E started out as an independent, then came under control of the SP and GN, and then was sold again to Weyerhaeuser in 1975. The OC&E closed in 1990 and was scrapped around 1993.
The OP&E was the Oregon Pacific & Eastern, which ran from Cottage Grove to Culp Creek. This was the road that Emporer of the North was filmed on. The filming used the two active steam locomotives that were on the OP&E at the time, 2-8-2 #19 and 2-8-0 #5. The #19 was built in 1915 for an Arkansas lumber company, and it spent some time working for United Mining & Smelting in Mexico before coming to the McCloud River in 1924. The #19 went to the Yreka Western in 1953 after the McCloud dieselized, and worked there off and on until it was transferred to the OP&E in 1970. Ownership of the locomotive remained with the YW, and it was leased to the OP&E. Kyle Railways at the time owned the YW outright, but only held a 51% stake in the OP&E...the other 49% belonged to Bohemia Corp, which owned the sawmill complex at Culp Creek that provided most of the OP&E's freight traffic. The other locomotive used in the movie was 2-8-0 #5, which came to the OP&E from the Magma Arizona. The #5 did have three different numbers painted on it for the filming, one each on the front and both sides.
As noted, the #19 is back in Yreka and is currently undergoing repairs to bring it into compliance with the new FRA boiler regulations. The work has been slowed down due to the financial crisis on the little road caused by the fire and collapse of Tunnel 13 on the connecting Central Oregon & Pacific, which eliminated most of the railroad's freight business. The #5 was sold in 1978 to the Moody Foundation along with a lot of other historical and surplus equipment for a railroad museum in Galveston, Texas. It is still there today.
Kyle sold his interest in the OP&E to Bohemia around 1988, and Bohemia was not interested in keeping the passenger operations going. The railroad continued operations until Bohemia closed the Culp Creek sawmill in September 1990. The OP&E struggled on for another couple years, with it's mainline used to store freight cars. As late as early spring 1995 the OP&E was still operating a mile or so of track within Cottage Grove itself to serve a small sawmill. All operations ceased within a short time later, and the railroad was scrapped, with the right-of-way turned into a linear state park.
JDLX
Elko, NV
It may be another loco that I was thinking of... I don't know if the YW finally got 19 repaired, there are pics of it in operation.