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  2. Death Valley Railroad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_Valley_Railroad

    A map of the Death Valley Railroad running from Death Valley Junction all the way up to the mines at Ryan near Colemanite. The Death Valley Railroad (DVRR) was a 3 ft (914 mm) narrow-gauge railroad that operated in California's Death Valley to carry borax with the route running from Ryan, California, and the mines at Lila C, both located just east of Death Valley National Park, to Death Valley ...

  3. Ryan, California - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryan,_California

    The Death Valley View Hotel operated full-time from 1927 until 1930, the year the Death Valley Railroad ceased to function. After 1930 the hotel was used as overflow accommodations for the Furnace Creek Ranch and Inn through the 1950s. [9] [3] The Death Valley Conservancy is the current caretaker of Ryan Camp. [10]

  4. Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonopah_and_Tidewater_Railroad

    The Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad (reporting mark T&T) was a former class II railroad that served eastern California and southwestern Nevada. [1]The railroad was built mainly to haul borax from Francis Marion Smith's Pacific Coast Borax Company mines located just east of Death Valley, but it also hauled lead, clay, feldspar, passengers and general goods across the desert to a connection with ...

  5. Burma Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burma_Railway

    Map of the Death Railway. A railway route between Burma and Thailand, crossing Three Pagodas Pass and following the valley of the Khwae Noi river in Thailand, had been surveyed by the British government of Burma as early as 1885, but the proposed course of the line – through hilly jungle terrain divided by many rivers – was considered too difficult to undertake.

  6. Corporate history.—The Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad Company undertook to extend its Ryan branch as an outlet for the borate mined on the east side of Death Valley, Calif., but the California Railroad Commission refused the company a bond issue for that purpose.

  7. Borate and Daggett Railroad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borate_and_Daggett_Railroad

    The Borate and Daggett Railroad was a 3 ft (914 mm) narrow gauge railroad built to carry borax in the Mojave Desert. The railroad ran about 11 miles (18 km) from Daggett, California , US, to the mining camp of Borate, three miles (4.8 km) to the east of Calico .

  8. Twenty-mule team - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty-mule_team

    Twenty-mule-team wagons on display in Death Valley, California The vehicles The carriage assembly. In 1877, six years before twenty-mule teams would be introduced in Death Valley, Scientific American reported that Francis Marion Smith and his brother had shipped their company's borax in a 30-ton load using two large wagons, with a third wagon for food and water, drawn by a 24-mule team over a ...

  9. Pacific Coast Borax Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Coast_Borax_Company

    It then transferred to the narrow gauge Death Valley Railroad to meet up with the Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad (T&T) which ran from the Amargosa Valley south to the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway railhead in Ludlow, California. The Borax Museum, located in Death Valley National Park, has a locomotive on display from the Death Valley ...