radiomuseum.org
Please click your language flag. Bitte Sprachflagge klicken.
 

Keddie Wye Bridges

95952 Keddie, CA, United States of America (USA) (California)

Address
 
 
Floor area unfortunately not known yet  
 
Museum typ Exhibition
Railway
  • Bridges and Tunnels


Opening times

Admission
Status from 02/2017
Free entry.

Contact
eMail:info plumascounty.org   

Homepage www.plumascounty.org/default.asp?PAGE=46

Our page for Keddie Wye Bridges in Keddie, United States of America (USA), is not yet administrated by a Radiomuseum.org member. Please write to us about your experience with this museum, for corrections of our data or sending photos by using the Contact Form to the Museum Finder.

Location / Directions
N40.018440° W120.957600°N40°1.10640' W120°57.45600'N40°1'6.3840" W120°57'27.3600"

Keddie is a census-designated place in Plumas County, California, United States. The population was 66 at the 2010 census.

Description

Trains and Railfanning

Plumas County is rich in train history and is renowned for its unique railroad engineering along the Feather River. Magnificent bridges and tunnels, a unique railroad "Y"  and a section of track that crosses over itself in a one-mile loop in order to gain elevation are among the features that attract train buffs to the area.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
Keddie Wye

The Keddie Wye is a railroad junction in the form of a wye on the Union Pacific Railroad in Plumas County, California, United States. It is located at the town of Keddie and serves to join the east-west Feather River Route with a branch line (the "Inside Gateway") north to Bieber. The west and north legs of the wye are on bridges over Spanish Creek, and the southeast leg runs through a tunnel (Tunnel No. 32)] Just to the northwest, where the two bridged legs join, is Tunnel No. 31. The wye and the town are named for Arthur Keddie, who purchased the survey rights and the right to build a railroad through the Feather River Canyon from George Jay Gould I, the son of Jay Gould.

History

The Western Pacific Railroad (now part of the Union Pacific) built the tracks along the Feather River in 1909 to complete a route from the San Francisco Bay Area to Salt Lake City, Utah, competing with the Southern Pacific's route over Donner Pass.

The Feather River route was preferred by some over the Donner Pass route through the Sierra Nevada because the high point of the former (the Chilcoot Tunnel under Beckwourth Pass) is at a lower elevation — about 5,000 ft (1,500 m) as opposed to 7,000 ft (2,100 m) — and most of the route is at a gentler grade than the line over Donner Pass.

In 1931, the branch running north to Bieber was completed, along with the north and southeast legs of the wye. This allowed the Western Pacific to diverge from its east-west route (along the west leg of the wye) and go north to an interchange with the Great Northern Railway (now BNSF Railway) and its traffic from the Pacific Northwest.

Audio: A fright train passes the bridge.


Radiomuseum.org presents here one of the many museum pages. We try to bring data for your direct information about all that is relevant. In the list (link above right) you find the complete listing of museums related to "Radio & Co." we have information of. Please help us to be complete and up to date by using the contact form above.

[dsp_museum_detail.cfm]

  

Data Compliance More Information