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Robert Dollar #3

Technical Data

Builder ALCO, Schenectady, NY
Number 67544
Date November 1927
Type 2-6-2T
Cylinders 15 x 24 Inches
Drivers 44 Inches
Boiler Pressure 200 PSI
Gross Weight 65.5 Tons
Tractive Effort 20,900lbs

History

  • 1927, Built new for Walter A. Woodard Lumber Co., Cottage Grove, OR
  • 1942, Purchased by J.H. Chambers & Son, Cottage Grove, OR
  • 1946, Purchased by Lorane Valley Lumber Co., Cottage Grove, OR
  • 1951, Purchased by Robert Dollar Co., Cottage Grove, OR
  • 1959, Donated to San Francisco Maritime Museum Association, San Francisco, CA
  • 1978, Leased to Bay Area Electric Railway Association (BAERA), Rio Vista Junction, CA
  • 1985, Donated to BAERA
  • 1999, Donated, disassembled, to PLA, Fremont, CA
  • 1999 to 2007, rebuilt, NCRy Brightside Shops
  • 2007 (February), in service, NCRy, Sunol, CA

Note: Reportedly the last wood-burning locomotive built for use in the United States

The No. 3 was built for the Walter A. Woodard Lumber Company of Cottage Grove, Oregon, in November 1927 by American Locomotive Company (ALCO) of Schenectady, New York. It was built as a wood burner, and is reportedly the last wood burning steam locomotive built for service in the USA. Through various owners, amazingly the locomotive always retained its number 3.

In 1942, J. H. Chambers & Son acquired the No. 3 when they purchased the Cottage Grove, Oregon lumber mill from the Woodard Company. Lorane Valley Lumber Company bought the Cottage Grove mill in 1946, and the No. 3 along with it. No. 3 was sold yet again in 1951 to The Robert Dollar Company of Glendale, Oregon.

The locomotive was modified twice during its operational life. While working for W.A. Woodard, the fuel bunker was extended past the rear buffer beam, presumably to give more wood capacity. While working for Robert Dollar Company, the locomotive was converted from wood firing to oil firing and a welded steel fuel tank was added.

The No. 3 worked for the Robert Dollar Company until 1959, when it was donated to the San Francisco Maritime Museum Association for a proposed transportation museum. That museum did not materialize and today's Maritime Museum focuses only on ships and the maritime history of San Francisco. In 1978 the No. 3 was leased by, and later donated to, the Bay Area Electric Railroad Association (now called the Western Railway Museum) at Rio Vista Junction, California.

Restoration on the No. 3 at the Western Railway Museum began in 1979 and progressed to include completion of the boiler work. In 1999, with restoration incomplete, the Western Railway Museum donated the No. 3 to the Pacific Locomotive Association.

The No. 3 was moved to Niles Canyon piece-by-piece. All parts were loaded onto trucks for transport to the Niles Canyon Railway Brightside yard. Since the driving wheels had been removed for repair, the biggest effort was to move the boiler and frame out of the shop to where No. 3 could be loaded onto a truck. After the No. 3 arrived in Niles Canyon, restoration began to return the locomotive to her 1950s appearance in Robert Dollar Company lettering.

When restoration of the No. 3 is complete, she will operate along with the Quincy Railroad No. 2, hauling summer passenger trains on the Niles Canyon Railway.

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