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Bodie and Benton Railway and Commercial Company
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Bodie and Benton Railway and Commercial Company : ウィキペディア英語版
Bodie and Benton Railway and Commercial Company

The Bodie & Benton Railway was a narrow gauge common carrier railroad in California, from the Mono Mills to a terminus in Bodie, now a ghost town, in Mono County. It was unusual among U.S. railroads in that it was completely isolated from the rest of the railroad system.
==History==
As the Bodie Railway & Lumber Company, the railroad was established in 1881 to link the gold-mining town of Bodie to the Bodie Wood and Lumber Company's newly built sawmill, Mono Mills, 32 miles south of Bodie along the eastern shore of Mono Lake.
The line was completed and operational on November 14, 1881. Temporary spurs into timberlands were built in 1882.
Initial operations proved so successful that plans were made to extend a rail line from the Warm Springs station to the Carson and Colorado Railroad, then under construction, at Benton, California. Consequently, the company changed its name to the Bodie and Benton Railway and Commercial Company to reflect this. Construction on this extension was begun in 1882 and approximately nine miles were graded before construction ceased abruptly. No tracks were ever laid upon this grade. While the railway never gave an official justification for abandoning the project, the prevailing theory held by locals (at least as late as 1908) was that the owners of the lumber company at Mono Mills feared that access to the wider rail network would cause competition with other lumber operations in the Tahoe area in which they had a financial stake. Although the extension was never completed, the railway kept the name. In an ironic footnote, when the railway ceased to be profitable in 1918, due primarily to a decline in mining activity in Bodie, the rails and all valuable equipment were pulled up and sold. The rails and equipment were trucked from the southern terminus at Mono Mills along what is today State Route 120, to the rail line at Benton for transport south.
With a ruling grade of 3.8%, steep for a common carrier but easy for a logging railroad, the line could be worked by rod engines, and rostered a selection of 2-6-0 "Mogul" types and tank locomotives.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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