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Truckee - Donner Historical Society, Inc.
P.O. Box 893, Truckee, CA. 96160 (530) 582-0893 |
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TRACKING
THE RAILROAD FROM BOCA TO LOYALTON |
A southbound freight train with a load of cordwood pauses on a sunny summer day on the Boca & Loyalton. |
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TRACKING
THE RAILROAD FROM BOCA TO LOYALTON
The highway from
The Boca Lumber Company had been logging the lower watershed of the
Little Truckee River since the Central Pacific Railroad had been built in
1868. It used river drives to move its logs to the mill at Boca. The demand
for lumber in the
The Lewis brothers had been operating a sawmill on the upper part of
Smithneck Creek, 17 miles north of Boca, 9 miles south of Loyalton, since
1886. They started by hauling their lumber from the mill to Verdi using
horses and wagons. They took it to Verdi rather than Boca because they had a
box factory there. Due do the slow pace of horses, they switched to steam
traction engines in 1888.
These huge machines weighed 29 tons, and were basically steam
locomotives on six foot diameter steel wheels. The steering was accomplished
by a single front wheel. They hauled four to six trailers loaded with lumber
behind them. The steam wagons were owned by their new partner, Captain
The monestrous smoke belching engines roared and clanked and scared
livestock and started fires along the route to Verdi. The only way to
appease locals was to run the steam engines at night. By 1899 the Lewis's
and Roberts had tired of the steam wagons. They determined that the time was
right for a standard gauge railroad to the Lewis Mill and the
A narrow gauge railroad, The Sierra Valley Railway had been
sporadically serving the northern
The Lewis's had purchased most of the ranch land surrounding Loyalton
and extended the town limits, so that they could control the saloon
businesses. Keeping a sober, family oriented workforce had always been a
problem in THE
RAILS ARRIVE
The Boca And Loyalton Railroad was incorporated on
The Boca & Loyalton Railroad reached Loyalton in the summer of
1901. Loyalton was now a boomtown, with sawmills springing up at a rapid
pace. Captain Roberts started his own sawmill and the Roberts Lumber
Company. The Horton brothers, who had a mill in Clover Valley, north of
Beckwourth, moved to Loyalton and added a box factory. The Turner brothers,
who had been lumbering in the
Other lumber mills were built along the railroad. At Pine, four miles
north of Boca, Porter and Bruhns built the Sunrise Mill.
Pine was at or near the location of the earlier Boyington Mill site.
They logged to the east, high up on
Lewellen Davies & Sons moved their lumber operations from Martis
Creek to the southwest corner of
Four foot fir cordwood was was cut and hauled to Boca, where it was
transferred to the Southern Pacific for the trip down to Floriston. Several
stacks of cordwood still remain in the forest north of
Loyalton had many advantages due to the location. Due to the climate,
lumber dried quickly. There wasn't the heavy snow of Boca or
The ranchers of the
The headquarters, engine house, and shops of the B.& L. were at
Loyalton. Boca didn't have the room. Loyalton wasn't the end of the line,
rather it was the beginning of a rail system that would reach sixty miles
further north and last until 2001.
The engine roster for the B. & L. varied from a low of two
engines to a high of seven when the Western Pacific was under construction
through
Between Boca and Loyalton there were 15 rail spurs into the forest
serving the logging camps of the various mills. The timber supply did not
last long, by 1908 most of timber south of Loyalton was cut over. A
SHORT LINE, A SHORT LIFE
The northern extension of the B. & L. continued northwest across
the
In 1905, the B.& L. was sold to a subsidiary of the Western
Pacific Railroad, then planning to build its tracks through the
The Clover Valley Lumber Company consolidated several of the smaller
lumber companies in Loyalton and built a spur off of the B. & L. east of
Beckwourth that ran up to Clover Valley.
Eventually they extended the tracks another 40 miles north. The
logging operations continued until 1957, using steam engines to haul the
logs to Loyalton.
Once the Western Pacific completed its tracks through
The route between Beckwourth and Loyalton continued in use, by the
Western Pacific, serving Loyalton's sawmill until it closed in 2001. The
lumber industry at Loyalton lasted 101 years.
Most of the route of the Boca and Loyalton can still be traced today.
A switchback at Boca is still visible, and the grade is visible up to Boca
Dam. When Boca Reservoir is low, the grade can be seen. It is a straight
roadbed on the east side of
Above Stampede Resevoir it follows along Davies Creek and along the
east side of
While the Boca and Loyalton Railroad didn't last long, it did
contribute to the
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Truckee - Donner Historical Society All Rights Reserved Created by Dale Dilts |
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