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词条 Cass Scenic Railroad State Park
释义

  1. History

  2. Current operations

     2015 transfer of operations 

  3. Locomotives

      Shay    Other  

  4. See also

  5. References

     Citations  Other sources 

  6. External links

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| photo = Cass Scenic Railroad State Park - Heisler 6 and Shay 11.jpg
| photo_caption = Cass Scenic Railroad Heisler #6 along with Shay #11 lead a loaded log train down the former C&O Greenbrier Division mainline.
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Cass Scenic Railroad State Park is a state park located in Cass, Pocahontas County, West Virginia.

It consists of the Cass Scenic Railroad, an {{convert|11|mi|adj=on}} long heritage railroad that is owned by the West Virginia State Rail Authority and operated by the Durbin and Greenbrier Valley Railroad. The park also includes the former company town of Cass and a portion of the summit of Bald Knob, highest point on Back Allegheny Mountain.

History

Founded in 1901 by the West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company (now WestRock), Cass was built as a company town to serve the needs of the men who worked in the nearby mountains cutting spruce and hemlock for the West Virginia Spruce Lumber Company, a subsidiary of WVP&P. At one time, the sawmill at Cass was the largest double-band sawmill in the world. It processed an estimated {{convert|1.25|e9bdft|cuft m3|sigfig=3|lk=in}} of lumber during its lifetime.

In 1901 work started on the {{Track gauge|4 ft 8 1/2 in|allk=on}} railroad, which climbs Back Allegheny Mountain. The railroad eventually reached a meadow area, now known as Whittaker Station, where a logging camp was established for the immigrants who were building the railroad. The railroad soon reached to the top of Gobblers Knob, and then a location on top of the mountain known as 'Spruce'. The railroad built a small town at that location, complete with a company store, houses, a hotel, and a doctor's office. Work soon commenced on logging the red spruce trees, which grew in the higher elevations.

The WVP&P originally had only been interested in the red spruce for the purpose of making pulp, which would be turned into paper. It was not until several years later that the company realized that the mountain held a fortune in hardwoods, such as maple, cherry, birch and oak. The company decided that it would build a mill in the town of Cass, which could process the hardwoods.

The railroad eventually extended its track to the top of Bald Knob, the third-highest mountain peak in West Virginia. The red spruce in that area was logged out, and the track was torn up in the early 1910s. The track was also extended to a valley near the town of Spruce, at a bend in the Shavers Fork of the Cheat River. The WVP&P set up a new town there, with about 30 company houses, a large company store, a school, and a pulp mill, where the red spruce trees could be processed on the spot. The new town was also named Spruce, and the former town received its current name of Old Spruce.

In June 1942, WVP&P sold the Cass operation to Mower Lumber Company, which operated the line until July 1, 1960, cutting second-growth timber off Cheat Mountain. The mill and railroad were shut down by Mower in 1960, due to the rapid decline of the timber industry in the region.

Following the 1960 closure, the rail line, land, and all equipment and rolling stock, were sold to a holding company named the Don Mower Lumber Company (no relation to the former Mower Lumber Company), and the railroad was conveyed to the Midwest Raleigh Corporation, which started to scrap the railroad and equipment. However, a group of local businessmen, led by Pennsylvania train aficionado Russell Baum, convinced the West Virginia state legislature to make the Cass Railroad a state park. In 1963, the first tourist excursion train left the Cass depot for Whittaker Station, {{convert|4|mi|0}} north.

In 1977, the Cass Scenic Railroad State Park took possession of the entire company town of Cass and the old hardwood mill there. In 2015, the Durbin and Greenbrier Valley Railroad assumed operation of the railroad under a lease agreement with the State of West Virginia.[4]

Current operations

Today, visitors ride on historic converted log cars (similar to flatcars), pushed along by a powerful geared logging locomotive. Traveling on {{convert|11|mi}} of standard gauge track laid in 1901 by immigrant workers, the line traverses the steep grades of Back Allegheny Mountain.

The railroad owns eight Shay locomotives, one Heisler locomotive, and one Climax locomotive, which is being restored by volunteers of the Mountain State Railroad and Logging Historical Association. The Heisler and the Climax, both made in Pennsylvania, were competition to Shay's geared locomotive design.

Three trips are available: a two-hour round trip to Whittaker Station, a five-hour round trip to the abandoned site of the ghost town of Spruce (no current trains to Spruce for now) (once the coldest and highest town east of the Rockies), and a five-hour round trip to Bald Knob, the third highest point in the state.

Former company houses have been refurbished and are available for rent through Cass Scenic Railroad State Park. A small cabin on Bald Knob is also available for rent, and cabooses can be reserved for private use as well.

Town and shop tours are available daily to visitors who would like to learn more about the town and its lumber industry, and see how the rare geared locomotives are maintained by the Cass shop crew. A tour of a recreated logging camp is available at Whittaker.

2015 transfer of operations

In October 2014, it was announced that the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources (WVDNR) was transferring their administrative responsibilities to another state agency, the West Virginia State Rail Authority (WVSRA). Under the new arrangement, the Durbin and Greenbrier Valley Railroad (D&GV) will assume day-to-day operations of the line as part of their existing contract with the WVSRA. D&GV will control scheduling of trains, staffing train excursions, and maintaining the railroad and its equipment. The takeover began in 2015.[5][6]

The WVDNR will maintain ownership of the right-of-way and equipment, as well as continue staffing and maintaining the non-railroad portions of the park, including the historic company town of Cass, the visitor's center, and the overnight cottage rentals that the park offers.[7]

Locomotives

Shay

  • Shay 2 - 93 tons - builder #3320 - Class PC-13
  • Shay 3 (not operational, on display at Cass Depot)
  • Shay 4 - 80 tons - builder number 3189 - Class C-70-3
  • Shay 5 - 90 tons - builder number 1503 - Class C-80-3 - built 1905 - WV state locomotive
  • Shay 6 - 162 tons - builder number 3354 - Class C-150-3 - Cass's biggest engine, largest Shay in existence
  • Shay 7 - 80 tons - builder number 3131 - Class-C-70-3 (not operational)
  • Shay 10/Brimstone Shay 36 (not operational)
  • Shay 11 - 103 tons - builder number 3221

Other

  • Climax 9 - builder number 1551 (undergoing restoration)
  • Heisler 6 - 100 tons - builder number 1591 - C-90-3

See also

{{Portal|National Register of Historic Places|Trains|West Virginia}}
  • Bald Knob
  • Leatherbark Run
  • List of heritage railroads in the United States
  • List of West Virginia state parks
  • Steam Railroad

References

Citations

1. ^{{cite web|title=Cass Scenic Railroad State Park|url=https://www.protectedplanet.net/cass-scenic-railroad-state-park|website=Protected Planet|publisher=IUCN|accessdate=30 April 2018}}
2. ^West Virginia State Parks Facilities Grid, accessed March 29, 2008 {{webarchive |url=https://www.webcitation.org/5Yr7moGpC?url=http://www.wvstateparks.com/recreation/WVSP_facilities_grid.PDF |date=2008-06-26 }}
3. ^{{cite book|title=Where People and Nature Meet: A History of the West Virginia State Parks|publisher=Pictorial Histories Publishing Company|location=Charleston, West Virginia|date=April 1988|isbn=0-933126-91-3}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=https://akronrrclub.wordpress.com/2014/10/24/durbin-greenbrier-to-run-cass-scenic/|title=Durbin & Greenbrier to Run Cass Scenic|date=24 October 2014|publisher=|access-date=23 April 2018}}
5. ^{{Cite web|title=POCAHONTAS TIMES: "State Rail Authority takes over Cass trains|url=http://pocahontastimes.com/state-rail-authority-to-take-over-cass-trains/|accessdate=2014-12-02}}
6. ^{{Cite web|title=WEST VIRGINIA DIVISION OF NATURAL RESOURCES: Press Release-Cass Scenic Railroad to join state-owned West Virginia Central Railroad|url=http://www.wvdnr.gov/2014news/14news221.shtm|access-date=2014-12-02}}
7. ^{{Cite web|title=THE CHARLESTON GAZETTE: "Durbin & Greenbrier Valley to take over Cass railroad"|url=http://www.wvgazette.com/article/20141027/GZ01/141029237|access-date=2014-12-02}}

Other sources

  • Core, Earl L., et al. (1967), Natural History of the Cass Railroad, 36 pg pamphlet.
  • Clarkson, Roy B. (1990), On Beyond Leatherbark: The Cass Saga, Parsons, West Virginia: McClain Printing Company.
  • Withers, Bob (August 25, 2005), Cass railroad line to mark birthday. Retrieved August 25, 2005.

External links

  • {{Official website|https://wvstateparks.com/park/cass-scenic-railroad-state-park/}}
  • Durbin & Greenbrier Valley Railroad
  • Mountain State Railroad & Logging Historical Association web site
  • WV Railfan website
  • {{HAER |survey=WV-87 |id=wv0539 |title=West Virginia Pulp & Paper Mill, Cass, Pocahontas County, WV |photos=4 |cap=1}}
{{Protected areas of West Virginia}}

11 : Heritage railroads in West Virginia|State parks of West Virginia|Railroad museums in West Virginia|Protected areas established in 1961|Logging railroads in the United States|Museums in Pocahontas County, West Virginia|Protected areas of Pocahontas County, West Virginia|Historic American Engineering Record in West Virginia|Historic districts in Pocahontas County, West Virginia|1961 establishments in West Virginia|IUCN Category III

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