Mohave and Milltown Railway

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Mohave & Milltown Railway
Locale Arizona; northeast of Needles, California
Dates of operation 1903–1904
Track gauge 3 ft narrow gauge (914 mm)
Headquarters Los Angeles, California

The Mohave & Milltown Railway was a narrow gauge private railroad built in 1903 to serve the Leland Gold Mine near Oatman, Arizona, USA. The railway was incorporated in 1903 and construction of the 17-mile (27 km) line was completed that same year. The railway started on the Arizona side of the Colorado River, across the stateline from Needles, California. From the Colorado River the railway went northeast through Milltown and terminated at the Leland Mine, Vivian Mine and the Midnight Mine (near Oatman).

The railway hauled ore from the mines near Oatman to the mill at Milltown.

The railway was operating for only one year when several washouts in September and October 1904 damaged six miles of the railway and led to its abandonment. The rails were removed in 1912, the same year that Arizona became a state.

Contents

[edit] The Mohave and Milltown Railroad Trails

Seven miles of the abandoned railway grade are preserved by the Bureau of Land Management as the Mohave and Milltown Railroad Trails. [1]

[edit] Historical timeline

[edit] Motive Power

Mohave and Milltown Railway #1 was a Porter (Builder No. 2970) 0-6-0T built in December 1903.

[edit] References

  • Myrick, David F. (1992). Railroads of Nevada and Eastern California Volume 2: The Southern Roads. Reno, Nevada: University of Nevada Press, 822, 854-857, 894. ISBN 0-87417-194-6. 
  • Robertson, Donald B. (1986). Encyclopedia of Western Railroad History - The Desert States: Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and Utah. Caldwell, Idaho: The Caxton Printers, 92. ISBN 0-87004-305-6. 
  • Walker, Mike (1995). Steam Powered Video's Comprehensive Railroad Atlas of North America: Arizona & New Mexico. Faversham, Kent, United Kingdom: Steam Powered Publishing, 7, 13. ISBN 1-874745-04-8. 
  1. ^ Trails within the Kingman Field Office. Kingman Field Office. Bureau of Land Management (2005). Retrieved on March 19, 2006.

[edit] External links

[edit] See also