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Railtown 1897

            Railtown 1897 State Historic Park is located in Jamestown, Tuolumne County.  It is here that reality and fantasy merge.  The park is a love letter to the railroad and to Hollywood.  The park is only 26-acres, but its cultural range is huge.  The location is the roundhouse and shops for the Sierra Railway, a functioning line that has been in business since 1897.  It still supplies lumber companies and delivers rock, gravel and wood chips.  The company was instrumental in providing building materials for the string of dams built along the Stanislaus and Tuolumne Rivers.  In 1902, Sierra Railway assisted in the construction of the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir in Yosemite. In 1982, the site was purchased by the state for use as an historic park.
            However, it is not commerce or park standing that makes the railroad famous.  It is movie magic.  Beginning in 1919, the Sierra Railway has furnished the equipment and location for hundreds of motion pictures, television productions, and commercials.   Among the movie productions are “High Noon,” “The Virginian,” “Bound for Glory,” “Duel in the Sun,” “Dodge City,” “Thomas Edison,” “Go West,” “The Gambler,” “Unforgiven,” and “Back to the Future III.”  Television shows such as “Gunsmoke,” “Bonanza,” and “Little House on the Prairie” all used Railtown extensively.  The yard’s most famous steam engine, Locomotive No. 3, even became a TV star in its own right as the Hooterville Cannonball on “Petticoat Junction.”
            The park is dominated by the roundhouse and a fully equipped repair facility still used by the railway.  One fascinating stop is the side of one building upon which hangs the identification signs used by motion picture companies on their sets -- Dodge City, Coffeeville, and other historic locales are represented.  Guided tours inside the roundhouse are conducted most days or you can just wander around the outside of the structures and peer in the open doors. A special attraction is the steam train excursions occasionally offered on weekends. The trip is forty minutes and six miles long.  The memories last forever.

SNVM – Railtown Images and credits

Credits:  SNVM Staff; Railtown 1897 State Historic Park, California Department of Parks and Recreation, Sacramento, California

Files-captions:

Railtown 1.jpg --  Railtown 1897 today

Railtown 2.jpg --  Railtown 1897 today

Railtown 3.jpg --  Railtown 1897 today

Railtown – Bonanza-Cartwrights.jpg – The TV series “Bonanza” utilized Railtown in the 1960s.

Railtown – Bound for Glory movie.jpg – The movie “Bound for Glory” (1976) used Railtown

Railtown – Dodge City. Jpg -- – The movie “Dodge City” (1939) used Railtown

Railtown – Gunsmoke.jpg -- The TV series “Gunsmoke” utilized Railtown in the 1960s

Railtown – Hetch Hetchy Engine – The Sierra Railway’s Hetch Hetchy transport. 

Railtown – High Noon.jpg -- The movie “High Noon” (1952) used Railtown

Railtown – Little House on the prairie.jpg -- The TV series “Little House on the Prairie” utilized Railtown in the 1980s

Railtown – Marx bros.- go west.jpg – The Marx Brothers’ movie “Go West” (1940) used Railtown

Railtown – Petticoat Junction -.jpg -- The TV series “Petticoat Junction” extensively utilized Railtown in the 1960s

Railtown – The Virginian.jpg --  The Gary Cooper movie “The Virginian” (1929) was one of the first productions to use Railtown

Railtown – unforgiven.jpg -- The movie “Unforgiven” (1992) used Railtown

Rawhide2.jpg -- The TV series “Rawhide” utilized Railtown in the 1950s

Rawhide.jpg --  The TV series “Rawhide” utilized Railtown in the 1950s

 



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