Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Tanana Valley Railroad

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Locale
  
Fairbanks to Chatanika

Track gauge
  
3 ft (914 mm)

Headquarters
  
Fairbanks

Predecessor
  
Tanana Mines Railway

Length
  
72,420 m

Tanana Valley Railroad wwwalaskaorgphotosgallery3varalbumsFairbank

Dates of operation
  
1904/1905–1917 AEC purchased TVRR assets and operated the Chatanika Branch line until decommissioning it in 1930

Successor
  
Alaskan Engineering Commission Railroad, a.k.a. Alaska Railroad

Visiting the tanana valley railroad museum fairbanks alaska


The Tanana Valley Railroad (TVRR) was a 3 ft (914 mm) narrow gauge railroad that operated in the Tanana Valley of Alaska from 1905 to about 1917. A portion of the railroad later became part of the Alaska Railroad.

Contents

Tanana valley railroad coach part 2


History

The TVRR was incorporated as the Tanana Mines Railway in 1904, construction on the first section started and completed in 1905. The main speaker at the gala golden spike ceremony was Judge Wickersham and Mrs. Isabelle Barnett accepted the golden spike. The builder was Falcon Joslin who was called the "Harriman of the North". It was renamed the Tanana Valley Railroad in 1907. The company declared bankruptcy and was liquidated c. 1917. The U.S. government purchased the railroad in June 1917, and the section between Fairbanks and Happy was converted to dual gauge by the Alaskan Engineering Commission Railroad, in order to complete a 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge railroad line from Seward to Fairbanks. This line became the Alaska Railroad in 1923. The Alaska RR continued to operate the former TVRR narrow-gauge line as the Chatanika Branch, until decommissioning it in 1930.

Preservation

In 1922, the railroad's Engine No. 1, the first steam locomotive in Fairbanks and the Yukon, was retired. Its restoration was begun in 1997 and completed in 2000. As of 2011 it is still being steamed up several times a year. A small museum for the engine was built in 2005 in Pioneer Park.

References

Tanana Valley Railroad Wikipedia