翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Oregon Pacific Railroad
・ Oregon Pacific Railroad (1880–94)
・ Oregon Pacific Railroad (1997)
・ Oregon Park
・ Oregon Parks and Recreation Department
・ Oregon Penutian languages
・ Oregon Performance Reporting Information System
・ Oregon Petition
・ Oregon PHL/DEQ Laboratories
・ Oregon Pine (schooner)
・ Oregon Pioneer
・ Oregon Pioneer Association
・ Oregon pioneer history
・ Oregon Poet Laureate
・ Oregon POINT
Oregon Pony
・ Oregon Portage Railroad
・ Oregon Portland Cement Building
・ Oregon Potters Association
・ Oregon primary election, 2006
・ Oregon Primate Rescue
・ Oregon Progress Board
・ Oregon Progressive Party
・ Oregon Public Broadcasting
・ Oregon Public Employees Retirement System
・ Oregon Public Library
・ Oregon Public Utility Commission
・ Oregon Quarterly
・ Oregon Raceway Park
・ Oregon Racquetball


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Oregon Pony : ウィキペディア英語版
Oregon Pony

The ''Oregon Pony'' was the first steam locomotive to be built on the Pacific Coast and the first to be used in the Oregon Territory.〔Port of Cascade Locks. Cascade Locks Historical Museum & Oregon Pony. Port of Cascade Locks. 2010-05-29. URL:http://portofcascadelocks.org/historical-museum-oregon-pony/. Accessed: 2010-05-29. (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/5q5SawX3A)〕 The locomotive, a geared steam 5' gauge locomotive with 9"X18" cylinders and 34" drivers,〔Other Geared Steam Locomotives - Page STUV. Geared Steam Locomotive Works. 2010-05-30. URL:http://www.gearedsteam.com/other/other_stuv.htm. Accessed: 2010-05-30. (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/5q6gIByh1)〕 was used in the early 1860s to portage steamboat passengers and goods past the Cascades Rapids, a dangerous stretch of the Columbia River now drowned by the Bonneville Dam. Steamboats provided transportation on the Columbia between Portland, Oregon and mining areas in Idaho and the Columbia Plateau. Portage was also necessary at other navigation obstructions, including Celilo Falls.〔Kathy Tucker. Oregon Pony. Portland State University. 2010-05-29. URL:http://www.oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/oregon_pony/. Accessed: 2010-05-29. (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/5q5SzspQw)〕
San Francisco's Vulcan Iron Works built the wood-burning engine in 1861 for $4,000.〔 Weighing only 8 tons and only 14.5 feet long, the ''Oregon Pony'' arrived in Oregon in 1862〔 and made her initial run on May 10, 1862 with engineer Theodore A. Goffe at the throttle. It replaced flat cars running on rails, equipped with benches for passengers and pulled by mules for 4.5 miles over iron-reinforced wooden rails for the Oregon Portage Railway. Shortly after the ''Oregon Pony'' was put into service, canopies were added to protect the passengers and their goods from the hot, sooty water that rained down on everything as the locomotive operates. The engine moved nearly 200 tons a day between the Cascades and Bonneville.〔
The railway was bought by Oregon Steam Navigation Company (OSN). The company consolidated its Cascades rail portage monopoly on the Washington side of the Columbia River and moved the ''Oregon Pony'' to The Dalles, where it may have been used for portages around Celilo Falls.〔
In 1866, OSN sold the locomotive and it was returned to San Francisco for work filling and grading the streets of that city. After the ''Oregon Pony'' was damaged in a 1904 fire, the owner partially restored it and donated it to the Oregon Historical Society in Portland, Oregon. It was displayed at the 1905 Lewis and Clark Exposition and afterward at the Albina Railyard. In the 1930s, the ''Oregon Pony'' was moved to Union Station; it was returned to Cascade Locks in 1970. The Port of Cascade Locks funded a 1981 restoration and built a permanent, covered display.〔
The ''Oregon Pony'' is currently owned by the State of Oregon and is preserved in a climate controlled exhibition chamber next to the Cascade Locks Historical Museum at the Marine Park, Cascade Locks.〔
==Further reading==

* Gill, Frank B. “Oregon’s First Railway.” Oregon Historical Quarterly 25:3 (September 1924): 171-235.〔
* Schwantes, Carlos. Long Day’s Journey: The Steamboat & Stagecoach Era in the Northern West. Seattle: University of Washington Press 1999, 129-32.〔
* Staehli, Alfred. “The Oregon Pony.” Association for Preservation Technology International (APT) 19:3 (1987): 10-18.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Oregon Pony」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.