Virginia and Truckee Railway Locomotive No. 27

Coordinates: 39°9′0″N 119°46′2″W / 39.15000°N 119.76722°W / 39.15000; -119.76722
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Virginia and Truckee Railway Engine #27
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
BuilderBaldwin Locomotive Works
Serial number39453
Build dateMarch 1913
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte4-6-0
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Driver dia.56 in (1 m)
Adhesive weight100,000 lb (45 t)
Loco weight121,000 lb (55 t)
Fuel typeOil
Boiler pressure190 psi (1,310 kPa)
Cylinder size18 in × 24 in (0.46 m × 0.61 m)
Performance figures
Tractive effort22,400 lbf (100 kN)
Career
OperatorsVirginia and Truckee Railroad
Numbers27
DeliveredMarch 14, 1913
Last runMay 31, 1950
Retired1948
DispositionOn static display
Virginia and Truckee Railway Engine #27
Virginia and Truckee Railway Locomotive No. 27 is located in Nevada
Virginia and Truckee Railway Locomotive No. 27
LocationCarson City, Nevada
Coordinates39°9′0″N 119°46′2″W / 39.15000°N 119.76722°W / 39.15000; -119.76722
AreaTransportation
Built1913
NRHP reference No.04001198
Added to NRHPOctober 27, 2004

Virginia and Truckee Railroad Engine No. 27 is a historic standard gauge steam locomotive. It was on display at the Nevada State Railroad Museum in Carson City, Nevada, but was traded with The Dayton and is currently on display at the Comstock Historical Center in Virginia City. It was the last locomotive acquired new by the Virginia and Truckee Railroad, and pulled the last commercial train for the V&T on May 31, 1950, the date that freight and passenger services officially terminated for the company. The locomotive was placed on the National Register of Historic Places[1] due to its association with the Virginia and Truckee Railroad and transportation development in Nevada.

History[edit]

Locomotive #27, also known as Baldwin Locomotive Works #39453, was built in 1913 by Baldwin. It weighs 121,000 pounds, 100,000 of this is weight on the driving wheels. Its 56-inch drivers provide 22,400 pounds of tractive effort.[2]

A 4-6-0 “ten wheeler”, it was the last locomotive delivered new to the Virginia and Truckee Railroad (V&T), and the third ten-wheeler delivered, behind its twin #26 in 1907, and the so-called "Second #25" in 1905.[3]: 69–74  #27 served the V&T dependably and without incident throughout its operational life.

Retirement[edit]

In 1948, #27's boiler permit expired, and the locomotive was retired by the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC),[4] leaving only #26 and a giant Alco 75-ton 2-8-0 known as the "Second #5" (due to its numbering with its previous owner) in service with the bankrupt V&T Railroad.[3]: 19  In 1949, #27 was granted a one-day operating permit to serve as a special train for the California-Nevada Railroad Historical Society, before being put back into its engine house to resume retirement.[3]: 74 

1950 saw the V&T approaching abandonment as an operating railroad. #26 was the workhorse of the railroad by this time, with Second-5 seldom being used due to its much greater weight causing damage to the rails and ties. #26 was intended to run the last revenue routes for the V&T when, on May 2, 1950, it was destroyed by a fire in its engine house.[3]: 72  The V&T executives requested special authority from the ICC to bring #27 back into service for the remaining weeks of V&T operations. This request was granted and, on May 31, 1950, locomotive #27 pulled the last revenue train from Minden to Reno.[3]: 74 

After V&T[edit]

Following the V&T ceasing passenger and freight operations on that date, #27 was used to pull the remainder of the railroad's own equipment into Carson City on June 1, as well as some ancillary clean-up duties until June 3. That summer it was used in the 1951 serial movie Roar of the Iron Horse before the Purdy Company, which now owned #27, scrapped the remainder of the V&T railroad.[3]: 74 

The Purdy Company presented the locomotive to the governor of Nevada with the intent that it be preserved. It was displayed near Carson City starting in 1955, where it stayed until 1963, when it was moved to the airport for display. It was later moved to Mound House in 1971[5] with some other V&T equipment. #27 was moved to Virginia City later in 1971 at the former site of the passenger depot.[6] It remained there until at least 1993 when it was moved to Gold Hill,[7] before finally being housed in the Nevada State Railroad Museum. In 2018, #27 traded places with Virginia and Truckee 18 Dayton, being moved to the Comstock History Center, which coincidentally is built in the same parking lot that it was stored from the 70's until the 90's.[3]: 74 

References[edit]

  1. ^ "National Register of Historic Places, NEVADA, Carson City County".
  2. ^ "Virginia & Truckee, Locomotive 27".
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Koenig, Karl R. (1980). Virginia & Truckee Locomotives. Chatham Publishing Company. ISBN 0-89685-102-8.
  4. ^ Beebe, Lucius; Clegg, Charles (1963). Virginia & Truckee: A Story of Virginia City and Comstock Times (5th ed.). Howell North. p. 54. LoC Catalog Card 63-14279.
  5. ^ "V&T Locomotive #27 in Mound House". Western Nevada Historical Photo Collection. May 1971. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  6. ^ "Western Nevada Historical Photo Collection".
  7. ^ "Western Nevada Historical Photo Collection".