Skip to main content

Train Museum in Douglas Wyoming

Train Museum in Douglas Wyoming

Most of the pictures in this Blog Post are self explanatory 




Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Railroad Passenger Depot










Bar area and entrance to kitchen













I would call this a 1st class sleeper as it has toilet, sink and storage plus the bed.  The curtain can be pulled and makes this two compartments.  Door on the toilet closes to hide this feature.



Hallway with sleeping berths on both sides


Economy Class.  The shelf looking thing on the left behind the door is a pull-out bed.



Going between train cars was usually inside flexible walls when allowed.














Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Early Mining on Mackay Peak

Early Mining on Mackay Peak Mackay Peak (10273 ft ) Ore was first discovered in what is called the Alder Creek mining district in 1879.   However the prospectors who discovered the ore were too poor to develop their claims.    In 1884, additional discoveries,  including  one in the area of what would become the Darlington Shaft of the Empire mine, created a boom in the area.   NOTE:  The Darlington Shaft (700 feet in depth) is located at the top of the the current open pit mine. . A 50-ton smelter was built at Cliff City on Cliff Creek  This smelter was build by Wayne Darlington as an experiment to see if it would be economically feasible to recover copper from the ore by smelting.  Wayne Darlington NOTE:  I t could be said that Wayne Darlington was the visionary who saw the potential for the mining of copper in the Alder Creek Mining District.   The Office of State Engineer was establ...

Jesse McCaleb

Jesse McCaleb Jesse was born on Christmas Day, (December 25) 1837 in Roane County, Tennessee (west of present day Knoxville) to James Newton McCaleb and Susannah Hope.   Jesse was one of 7 children.   There is not much information about his childhood except for census records showing that the children may have been deserted by their parents and their being raised by close family members.   Jesse left Tennessee (at the age of 20) in 1857/8 going to Camden County, Missouri (southeast of present day Kansas City).   The 1860 census records list Jesse as living with the James Vernon family (James' wife Harriet was Jesse's first cousin).   It was here that Jesse met his second cousin and future bride, Anna Boyd Vernon (Harriet's daughter, who in 1860 was 13 years old). Jesse was working as a clerk in the mercantile owned by James W. Vernon, but when the Civil War broke out, he enlisted in the Confederate Army at Camden County, Missouri and ...

Wayne Darlington Mining Visionary

  WAYNE DARLINGTON MINING VISIONARY It could be said that Wayne Darlington was the visionary who saw the potential for the mining of copper in the Alder Creek Mining District. “Mr. Wayne Darlington, one of the most successful and experienced mining engineers in America, was for five years in charge of John William Mackay’s mining properties.” (Harper’s Weekly – 1907) Wayne MacVeagh Darlington was born on March 3, 1862 in Pennsylvania.   The early 1880s found him in Idaho.     Idaho State mine records show that Darlington had a theory that smelting rock containing the copper ore would be an effective way of recovering the copper.   Darlington persuaded some New York investors to help finance his operation.   Upon securing financing, a 50 ton per day through put smelter was built and operated from late 1890 to February 1891. Darlington would have been about 28 years old at that time. The smelter produced about 200,000 pounds of base copper bullion by di...