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Truckee - Donner Historical Society, Inc.
P.O. Box 893, Truckee, CA. 96160 (530) 582-0893 |
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DEATH BY INCHES |
The snow sheds above Donner Lake mark the path of the Central Pacific Railroad. Ed Marsh's wild ride occurred in this area above the west end of Donner Lake. |
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DEATH
BY INCHES--WORKING ON THE RAILROAD WAS A DANGEROUS OCCUPATION IN 1876
In today's modern world we seldom think of the dangers faced by
workers in
The old wooden snow sheds above
The railroad maintained a telegraph system along the tracks, but it
was on the outside of the sheds and tunnels. This telegraph controlled train
movements, so it had to be
maintained during even the worst snowstorms. Men on snowshoes
patrolled the line repairing breaks in the telegraph wire. At the
time, what were called snowshoes were actually ten foot wooden skis.
The Truckee Republican newspaper reported on the close call of one of
these brave men. In early January of 1876, telegraph troubleshooter Ed Marsh
was on his route east of
The ground was sloped at a forty degree angle so he could not work on
his skis. His job was to string a new wire across the break and reconnect
it. As he started across the avalanche chute he noticed that not all of the
cornice above had slid down.
Just as Marsh got to the other side of the smooth, hollow track, the
overhanging cornice and the upper slope broke loose. Tearing itself loose
from a spur of
He was tossed and turned, head over heels, upside down much of the
time, and saw stars most of the time. When the avalanche stopped, Marsh was
on top of the snow. He landed on top of one hundred feet of snow from both
slides that covered Donner
Creek. No other people were within several miles, and no one else knew what
had happened.
After catching his breath and his finding his bearings, he thought
about what to do next. He didn't have any broken bones, or serious injuries.
He also didn't have his skis, they were up at the railroad, a thousand feet
up. Recent storms had left up to ten feet of loose powder snow on the old
wagon road to Summit Station and to
There was only one way to go, back up. Marsh slowly, painfully
climbed up the mountain. He stayed mostly on the hard packed surface just
inside the edge of the avalanche path, praying that no other slides would
come down and bury him. Foot by foot he kicked in steps to keep moving
uphill.
It took him less than a minute to come down, but half a day to climb
back up. When he finally reached his skis, he was the happiest man on earth.
After that experience Ed Marsh vowed to have his skis with him in case he
was called into the canyon again. He went on to repair the telegraph line
and continue his duties. That was the type of men that battled the winter
storms for the railroad in the 1870's.
Today, the concrete snow sheds do not have rail traffic in them. A
two mile long tunnel under A
DIFFERENT OUTCOME
A few days later,
Carney resigned his position and came to
At Summit Station, a brakeman saw Carney riding on top of a box-car.
Carney told him that the ride through the tunnels and snow sheds was
terrifying, due to the icicles hanging from the ceilings. To keep from being
swept off of the top of the car, he moved to the side of the car, hanging
onto the ladder. The brakeman
told him this was even more dangerous, and to get back on top.
At the Cascade siding, another train was passed, and that engineer
saw Carney hanging onto the side of the car again. The train picked up speed
on it's downhill run towards
In an instant, the train was into another snow shed, totally
enveloped in darkness, so Forsythe couldn't stop right then. At the next
siding, Forsythe stopped his
engine, took a lamp and looked over the box-car for blood. He found that
grease had been wiped off of one the wheels, and feared that Carney might
have been injured. Forsythe flagged down an eastbound passenger train, and
told the conductor to be on the lookout for the injured man at the east
bridge.
As the passenger train's engineer moved on, he did not expect to see
Carney for at least another mile and a half. Just a half mile up the track,
he spotted something dark and round on the tracks, and put on the brakes.
Unfortunately, it was the body of
Carney had not made a clean leap, but had hung onto or been caught on
part of the moving train. He was dragged a half mile, before his body fell
off the train. A Truckee Coroner's inquest ruled the accident was not the
fault of the railroad. Alcohol was not believed to be a factor either.
If
The dangerous occupations in
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Truckee - Donner Historical Society All Rights Reserved Created by Dale Dilts |
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