Wrapping up my
trip back to the Salt Lake region for Great Basin Getaway, I had an opportunity
to take in some “12 inches to the foot” (full-sized) rail equipment. On Friday afternoon after we had completed
operation on Rob Spangler’s excellent WP 8th Sub layout, we did some
railfanning around Ogden. We caught the
Utah Central Railway switching a mill and then doing some street running.
Utah Central
Railway is a shortline that has the switching contract with BNSF to service
industries along the Wasatch Front. BNSF
gained the right to serve these industries as part of the UP purchase of the
SP-DRGW in 1996.
That truck
running along the street beside the track is driven by the roving
conductor. That is the way it is done
these days.
Later that Friday
afternoon and then again on Sunday, after the conclusion of major Great Basin
Getaway activities, several of us visited the Ogden Depot Museum. The museum has quite a collection of rail
equipment.
UP 833 is one of
the feature attractions.
Alongside is a
UP “Centennial.” These big diesel
locomotives were delivered to UP in 1969—the Centennial of the Golden Spike.
SP is
represented by a rebuilt SD45. Ogden was
the exchange point between the SP and UP—the Transcontinental Railroad
partners.
A Cargill SW1
represents the many other rail activities in the region.
The museum has
quite a collection of railroad cranes.
This former UP
steam switcher likely served the Ogden Depot once upon a time.
Finally, my
four-person carpool on Sunday decided to cap our experience by going out to
Promontory—the Golden Spike site. We got
there just in time for the “1 pm show,” wherein the National Park Service
reenacts the meeting of the steam locomotives featured in the famous photograph
of the joining of the rails.
The Golden Spike
site at Promontory, Utah.
The National
Park Service has functioning steam-powered replicas of the two locomotives—the
Central Pacific Jupiter and the Union Pacific 119—that they use for daily
reenactments.
I look forward
to returning to Utah for future model railroad operating events. I also look forward to the joint Southern
Pacific Historical and Technical Society and Union Pacific Historical Society
convention at Ogden in May 2019—the sesquicentennial of the Golden Spike!
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