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Author:Bruce A. MacGregor
Title:Narrow Gauge Portrait
Subtitle:South Pacific Coast
Publisher:  Glenwood Publishers
Country:USA
Date:1975
Format:Hardcover
Genre:Transport, History, Reference
ISBN-10:0911760237
Rating:Rate
Collection:  I Own It     I Want It 
Community: 2 Own
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WPLives
17th Dec 2021
 Detailed history of the South Pacific Coast Railroad.

The South Pacific Coast Railroad (SPC) was a 3 ft. narrow gauge steam railroad running between Santa Cruz, California and Alameda, with a ferry connection in Alameda to San Francisco.

The railroad was created as the Santa Clara Valley Railroad, founded by local strawberry growers as a way to get their crops to market in San Francisco and provide an alternative to the Southern Pacific Railroad.

In 1876, James Graham Fair, a Comstock Lode silver baron, bought the line and extended it into the Santa Cruz Mountains to capture the significant lumber traffic coming out of the redwood forests.

The line was later acquired by the Southern Pacific and converted to standard gauge.

SPC was incorporated in 1876 to purchase the unfinished Santa Clara Valley Company railroad at Dumbarton Point.

Dumbarton Point was then a landing to transfer agricultural produce from the Santa Clara Valley onto sailboats for transport to San Francisco.

Railway shops were built in Newark and a 3 ft narrow gauge line to San Jose was completed in 1876.

The SPC ferry Newark offered connecting service from Newark to San Francisco in 1877.

In 1878 the SPC was extended from San Jose to Los Gatos; and the subsidiary Bay and Coast Railroad completed a line of trestles and fill along the eastern edge of San Francisco Bay from Newark to Alameda.

The ferry connection to San Francisco shifted to Alameda as SPC ferrys Bay City and Garden City increased the frequency and reliability of connecting service.

Two years and eight tunnels were required to extend the SPC through the Santa Cruz Mountains from Los Gatos to California's third busiest seaport at Santa Cruz in 1880.

SPC leased the San Lorenzo Flume and Transportation Company to acquire their subsidiary Santa Cruz and Felton Railroad as a route through the city to Santa Cruz municipal pier.

The big lumber transport flume was replaced by a 7 miles logging branch in 1883.

In 1886 another branch line was built to the New Almaden mercury mine; and the SPC main line was extended from Alameda to Oakland.

Additional horsedrawn branch lines served Centerville (now Fremont) and Agnews State Hospital.

Commuter trains fed the San Francisco ferries from east bay communities, two daily trains served Santa Cruz, and four daily locals served the logging branch to Boulder Creek.

Excursion trains ran from the ferries to resorts of the south bay and Santa Cruz Mountains.

Freight trains carried redwood lumber, mercury, sacked lime, gunpowder from the California Powder Works, and local agricultural produce.

Southern Pacific control

By 1887 SPC was a major California transportation concern; and Southern Pacific paid six million dollars to merge it into their California transportation system.

An 1893 winter storm caused a landslide in the Santa Cruz Mountains requiring major reconstruction to restore service.

The Alameda ferry terminal burned in 1902 and was replaced with the modern terminal which survived until ferry service was discontinued by the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge in 1939.

The 3 ft gauge line had 23 locomotives, 85 passenger cars and 500 freight cars before the conversion to standard gauge began.

The transition to standard gauge was interrupted by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.

The line through the Santa Cruz Mountains suffered major damage including a lateral slip of 5 feet in the tunnel where it crossed the San Andreas fault.

The bridge across San Leandro Bay was damaged and abandoned.

Conversion to standard gauge was completed in 1909.

3 ft narrow gauge locomotives numbered 9, 23, and 26 were eventually acquired by the Ilwaco Railway and Navigation Company.

Other SPC 3 ft gauge equipment was sold to the Carson and Colorado Railway, the White Pass and Yukon Route, the Nevada County Narrow Gauge Railroad, the Pacific Coast Railway, the Lake Tahoe Railway and Transportation Company, and the Northwestern Pacific Railroad.

Standard gauge operation
The track in Alameda could only be used for local service after being isolated by the 1906 earthquake.

It was electrified in 1911 and operated as part of the SP's East Bay Electric Lines until 1941.

The remaining line from San Jose to San Leandro Bay became part of the Southern Pacific coast division main line; but the southern end of the system from San Jose to Santa Cruz had become a branch line by 1915 useful only to lighter locomotives, but requiring two or three of them to move trains over the grade.

Beginning in 1927, it was used by SP's "Suntan Special" excursion trains which came down the San Francisco Peninsula every summer Sunday and took passengers right to the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk.
 


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See Also

Book
Bruce A. MacGregor - South Pacific Coast - Howell-North Books - Hardcover - USA (1968)
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