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Ensuring a Future For Our Past
Welcome to the home page of the Oregon Coast
Historical Railway in Coos Bay, Oregon. As our motto suggests, we're working to
preserve an important part of the region's history by providing a place to
restore and display vintage railroad and logging equipment.
Our signature piece is the 1922 Baldwin steam
locomotive No. 104, which served in the region's logging industry until
the 1950s. We are in the process of restoring it to historically-accurate
condition, and it can be viewed at our display area and museum at 766 S.
First St., (US 101 northbound) in Coos Bay. (Read more about No. 104
here.)
We've also restored a 1949 Alco S-2 diesel
switcher engine that was used at the International Paper sawmill and paper
plant up the coast in Gardiner. Members and volunteers cleaned and painted
engine No. 111 in its Gardiner shed before it was moved to our Coos Bay
display area on Nov. 17, 2006. (Read more about No. 111 here.)
In the summer of 2007,
we acquired former Southern
Pacific caboose No. 1134, which was used on the Coos Bay-Eugene and
Eugene-Klamath Falls runs. Restoration continues on the 1942-era steel caboose
in our display area.
(More photos and
information here.)
Our latest acquisition
in the summer of 2009 was former Burlington Northern caboose No. 11269,
purchased from a private collector in the Hood River area. The 1946-era
wooden caboose was placed on the display area's tracks behind the former
SP caboose, and renovations are under way.
Other equipment and
large artifacts have been donated to our group, along with hundreds of photographs, newspaper articles
and other material known in train fan lingo as railroadiana. Even two
conductor's uniform!
The display area was provided by the City of
Coos Bay, and our group obtained several grants and a great number of
donations to install an 800-ft hand-crafted steel fence around the site,
and to install utilities and landscaping. In keeping with the historical
railroad theme, the fence incorporates weathered, rusted rails from local
tracks as corner posts and fence posts. The walkway to our temporary
museum is cleverly designed to look like a stretch of railroad track,
complete with vintage rails at the edges
A former storage shed on the site was given a
remarkable makeover by members and volunteers -- using mostly donated
materials -- into a mini museum to display some of our photos and
artifacts. Admission to the museum and display area is free.
Next on the agenda is to construct shelters to
protect the two locomotives, tender and two cabooses. Engineered plans have been
completed, and we're hopeful that grants and donations will provide
construction funding.
Long-term plans
may involve building a new museum on the site, offering excursions and
acquiring more equipment.
We continue to seek support from local civic
and service organizations, federal and state agencies, private and public
corporations, local and regional businesses, granting agencies and private
foundations, and from individuals.
All of these things - from huge locomotives to
old rusted railroad spikes, from grants to donated artifacts - are a vital
part of our program, but our most valuable resource is people. We need
more people involved to properly care for, display and interpret this
important part of our region's history.
You can read more about our projects at this
site, but most of all, we need your help. All of our members work on a
voluntary basis; we have no paid staff. Join our group, help with a
project, make a donation or just stop by and say hello when you see
activity. Call Dick Jamsgard, (541)297-6130 for more information, or find out
more on the Contacts page.
Welcome aboard! |