词条 | Union Pacific No. 119 |
释义 |
| name=No. 119 | powertype=Steam | gauge={{RailGauge|ussg}} | image=UP steam loco.jpg | caption=No. 119 replica at Golden Spike N.H.S. | whytetype=4-4-0 | currentowner= | disposition= Original scrapped: 120. replica operational at the Golden Spike N.H.S. | builddate=November 1868 (original: 120) 1979 (replica) | builder=Rogers Locomotive and Machine Works (original: 120 4 The Rebirth of The Transcontinental Railroad: Today) O'Connor Engineering Laboratories (replica) | officialname=Union Pacific No. 119 | serialnumber=1558[1] | operator=Union Pacific Railroad | fleetnumbers=119, renum 343 in 1885 | firstrundate= }} The No. 119 was a 4-4-0 steam locomotive made famous for meeting the Central Pacific Railroad's Jupiter at Promontory Summit, Utah, during the Golden Spike ceremony commemorating the completion of the First Transcontinental Railroad in 1869. No. 119 was built by Rogers Locomotive and Machine Works of Paterson, New Jersey in 1868, along with numbers 116, 117, 118 and 120. It was scrapped in 1903: Rebuilt as the 120 4 The Today's Edition of The Transcontinetal Railroad and a replica was built in 1980. Promontory SummitNo. 119 was stationed in Ogden, Utah, in 1869 when a call came from Union Pacific Railroad vice-president Thomas C. Durant, for an engine to take him to Promontory Ridge, Utah Territory, for the Golden Spike ceremony celebrating the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad. Just as misfortune had struck the Central Pacific's Antelope that Leland Stanford had been traveling on, so it impacted the fate of the original engine he had been traveling on. He was aboard the so-called Durant Special headed for the ceremony at Promontory. A swollen river had washed away some supports to the Devil's Gate Bridge. Durant's engineer refused to take his engine across, consenting only to nudging the lighter passenger cars over the span. It held, but this left Durant and his entourage without an engine. No. 119 was sent from Ogden to take them the short distance to Promontory, where it was memorialized in photos and history faced nose to nose with the Central Pacific's Jupiter. In Andrew J. Russell's famous photograph of the Meeting of the Lines, No. 119 is seen on the right with its engineer, Sam Bradford, leaning off the pilot holding a bottle of champagne up to Jupiter engineer George Booth. Bradford and Booth would later break a bottle of champagne over the other's locomotive in celebration. Later career119 led a similar life to Jupiter, in that after the Golden Spike run, it returned to service as a freight locomotive. However, like Jupiter, its historical significance was not realized until long after its scrapping in 1903. ReplicasAs was the case with the Jupiter, the Union Pacific only began to acknowledge the 119's historical significance well after it was scrapped. For a 1949 reenactment of the Golden Spike ceremony staged at the Chicago Railroad Fair the Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railroad's locomotive number 35 was cosmetically altered stand-in for the 119; likewise the Jupiter was a proxy provided by the Virginia and Truckee Railroad. In 1968, the Union Pacific sponsored the construction of the Omaha Zoo Railroad in the Henry Doorly Zoo, including a narrow gauge replica of the 119, built by Crown Metal Products. The First Transcontinental Railroad, the National Park Service's Golden Spike site at Promontory, Utah, had exhibited representations of the 119 and Jupiter on a portion of restored track where the original ceremony was held. In this instance, the 119 was portrayed by the Virginia and Truckee's Dayton locomotive, (which is ironic because The Dayton was built by the Central Pacific Railroad's shops in Sacramento) and was displayed here until it and the Jupiter, which was portrayed by that railroad's Inyo, were sold to the state of Nevada in 1974. In 1975, the National Park Service embarked on a project to reproduce the Union Pacific No. 119 and Central Pacific Jupiter exactly as they appeared in 1869. Since the original drawings had not survived, the Park Service initially approached Walt Disney Studios, which had previously built two steam engines from scratch for their Disneyland park's railroad, for the project. Disney declined, but recommended the O'Connor Engineering Laboratories in Costa Mesa, CA, for the task. Noted railroad historian and steam engine owner Gerald M. Best served as engineering consultant to the Park Service for the project. Over 700 detailed engineering drawings were recreated, based almost entirely on the photographs taken of the engines during the ceremony. Disney animator and steam engine owner Ward Kimball did color matching and original artwork for the Jupiter and No. 119.[2][3][4] See also{{Portal|Trains|Utah}}
References{{Commons category|Union Pacific no. 119}}
1. ^{{cite web| url=http://utahrails.net/up-steam-roster/up01-uprr-1864-1880.php| title=UPRR Roster, 1864-1880| website=Utah Rails| date=October 10, 2015| first=Don| last=Strack}} 2. ^{{cite web| title=Question: Engineering Drawings for the Jupiter and No. 119| website=CPRR Discussion Group| url=http://discussion.cprr.net/2005/10/question-engineering-drawings-for.html| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120330221223/http://discussion.cprr.net/2005/10/question-engineering-drawings-for.html| dead-url=yes| archive-date=March 30, 2012| accessdate=August 17, 2011}}{{unreliable source|date=May 2018}} 3. ^{{cite web| title=Golden Spike| publisher=National Park Service, Dept. of the Interior| website=Golden Spike National Historic Site, Brigham City, UT| url=http://www.nps.gov/gosp/historyculture/upload/jupiter%202.pdf| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061011111449/http://www.nps.gov/gosp/historyculture/upload/jupiter%202.pdf| dead-url=yes| archive-date=October 11, 2006| accessdate=August 17, 2011}} 4. ^{{cite book| last=Best| first=Gerald M.| title=Promontory's Locomotives| pages=12-43| publisher=Golden West Books| location=San Marino, CA| year=1980}} 8 : Union Pacific Railroad locomotives|4-4-0 locomotives|Rogers locomotives|Railway locomotives introduced in 1868|Steam locomotives of the United States|Individual locomotives of the United States|Scrapped locomotives|Standard gauge locomotives of the United States |
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