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Silverton, Gladstone and Northerly Railroad

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Silverton, Gladstone and Northerly Railroad was incorporated in 1899 after Otto Mears and associates were unable to procure financing to build a branch of the Silverton Northern Railroad to the mining area around the town of Gladstone. The railroad was chartered in 1899 by the Gold King Mining Co. to haul ore from the mines on Cement Creek to the Silverton smelters. It was 7.5 miles long and had .5 miles of spurs. It was leased by the Silverton Northern in 1910. (Mears leased the Silverton Northern in the same year and purchased the SN outright in 1915, although traffic was discontinued soon thereafter.)

Construction began from the mainline of the SN on the north side of Silverton, and followed Cement Creek northward to the town of Gladstone. At one time, an extension to the Silver Lake Mine was proposed, but no further construction ever was accomplished.[1] The line served the Kendrick and Gelder (or Gilder) smelter, later run by the Ross Mining and Milling Co., the McKinley sawmill, the Boston & Silverton Milling and Reduction (Yukon Mill) site, the Anglo Saxon mine, the Mammouth Mine, the Henriette(a) mine, Fisher's sawmill, the Gold King mine and the Mogul mill.[2]

Following the ups and downs of the metals markets, the SG&N was finally absorbed by the Silverton Northern Railroad in 1915, being operated as the Gladstone Branch. The line was dismantled between 1938 and 1942.

The railroad had connections with both the Denver & Rio Grande and also the Silverton Northern at Silverton.

Roster

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Locomotives
Number Builder Type Serial Number Built Acquired Retired Disposition/Notes
32 Baldwin Locomotive Works 2-8-0 5185 1880 1889 1911 Built as Denver & Rio Grande #78. Sold to Rio Grande Southern #32 in 1891. Sold in 1900 to SG&N#32. Scrapped in 1911.
33 Baldwin Locomotive Works 2-8-0 5225 1880 1900 1923 Built as Denver & Rio Grande #79. Sold to Rio Grande Southern #33 in 1891. Sold in 1900 to SG&N#33. Scrapped in 1923.
34 Baldwin Locomotive Works 2-8-0 24130 1904 1904 1915 Built and Acquired New. Sold in 1915 to Silverton Northern #34. Sold in 1942 to White Pass & Yukon #24. Scrapped at Skagway, AK in 1951.
Passenger Cars
Number Builder Build Date Notes
Combination Car #1 Unknown 1899 Retired at an unknown date.
Combination Car #2 American Car and Foundry 1905 Sold to the Silverton Northern Railroad in 1915. Retired at an unknown date.
Boxcars
Number Builder Build Date Notes
#1000 Unknown 1899 Sold to the Silverton Northern Railroad in 1915 and became #2000. Retired at an unknown date.
#1001 Unknown 1899 Sold to the Silverton Northern Railroad in 1915 and became #2001. Retired at an unknown date.
#1002 Unknown 1899 Sold to the Silverton Northern Railroad in 1915 and became #2002. Retired at an unknown date.
#1003 Unknown 1899 Sold to the Silverton Northern Railroad in 1915 and became #2003. Retired at an unknown date. Converted into a storage shed after the Silverton Northern was abandoned. The shed was moved south of Silverton near the Champion Mine where it still remains today.
#1004 Unknown 1899 Sold to the Silverton Northern Railroad in 1915 and became #2004. Retired at an unknown date.
#1005 Unknown 1899 Sold to the Silverton Northern Railroad in 1915 and became #2005. Retired at an unknown date.
#1006 Unknown 1899 Sold to the Silverton Northern Railroad in 1915 and became #2006. Retired at an unknown date.
#1007 Unknown 1899 Sold to the Silverton Northern Railroad in 1915 and became #2007 (photos contradict that the car was ever renumbered to #2007). Retired at an unknown date. Converted into a storage shed after the Silverton Northern was abandoned. The shed was moved south of Silverton near the Champion Mine where it still remains today.
#1008 Unknown 1899 Sold to the Silverton Northern Railroad in 1915 and became #2008. Retired at an unknown date.
#1009 Unknown 1899 Sold to the Silverton Northern Railroad in 1915 and became #2009. Retired at an unknown date.

References

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  1. ^ For detailed maps of the SG&N's route, see Blazek, Mike, "Narrow Gauge Workbook No. 16: Modeling the Silverton, Gladstone & Northerly."
  2. ^ See Blazek.

Sloan, Robert E. and Skowronski, Carl A. (1975). The Rainbow Route. Denver, Colorado: Sundance Publications Ltd. ISBN 0-913582-12-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)