In the first half of the twentieth century, the years went
up, but the mileage of the C&S kept going down. Minus the Climax to Leadville line, the last
narrow gauge C&S-owned rail to be pulled would be from Chatfield to Denver
completed by December 1942, leaving the route standard gauged and finally the
narrow gauge rails at Union Terminal and the yards at Denver, finished by the
15th of April in 1943.
The big finale, of course, was when the narrow gauge rails
were uprooted from the now standard gauged Climax to Leadville route after the
final narrow gauge run on August 25th, 1943.
Technically speaking, C&S rails still held on from Gunnison to the
Baldwin Mines, albeit under the "new" ownership of the D&RGW, but
were eventually gone by the 1950s.
It struck me, however, that there is more C&S narrow
gauge trackage today than over fifty years ago.
The mileage of this lost railroad has actually increased since the mid
twentieth century as tourist routes have sprung up and historical displays and
re-creations have dotted the Colorado landscape.
I don't have exact amounts in terms of mileage, but I thought it would be
curious to recount the number of places that now (or still) sport C&S
narrow gauge track.
Original track still in place
Length of Alpine Tunnel
Reconstructed track on original roadbed
Silver Plume to Devil's Gate Viaduct
Wye on Kenosha Pass
Rocky Point on Boreas Pass
Snowplow park, Breckenridge
Como
Sherrod Curve
Display Parks
Tracks are on or in the vicinity of former C&S roadbed
Boreas Pass
Silver Plume (The caboose is now indoors under restoration, so I'm not sure the status of the track at present)
Central City
Idaho Springs
Reconstructed track that was later removed
Central City towards Black Hawk-twice rebuilt and removed
First time
Second time
Georgetown depot
(I don't recall what is still here. At one point Central American Railways #44 was displayed on track outside the old Georgetown depot. I know #44 is gone, but I am not sure if track remains)
And the great news is: the mileage keeps growing! Especially in Como this year!
Reference:
Poor, Mac. DSP&P pp. 412-3
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