Storyteller, Author, Publisher, Photographer, Human Rights Activist, Social Justice Campaigner and sometime poet
'Pa Joe's Place' Reviews
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13 January 2020 - ABANDONED RAILWAY TUNNEL IN ARIZONA
ABANDONED RAILWAY
TUNNEL IN ARIZONA
G'day folks,
A partial tunnel blasted into a steep ridge is all that remains of a failed railway across Arizona.
In 1881, businessman James Eddy was struck by inspiration. Northern Arizona
was connected to the rest of the country by transcontinental railways
and was dense with ponderosa pine forests and a burgeoning timber
industry. Southern Arizona, meanwhile, was even more populated, and the
isolated mining boomtowns in the deserts were home to some of the
richest silver and copper veins in the world. If he could connect the
south to the railroad network in the north, he would stand to make a
fortune.
The benefit of connecting the two halves of the state would be
twofold: sending much-needed lumber and supplies to the communities in
the south, and freighting mined minerals back north where they could
more easily be shipped to the industrial centers on the coasts. Only one
thing stood in the way of Eddy’s plan: the Mogollon Rim.
The southern boundary of the Colorado Plateau, an elevated region
that crosses into four states, is the Mogollon Rim, a massive ridge of
steep slopes that cross much of Arizona. When Eddy formed the Arizona
Mineral Belt Railroad company, his engineers calculated that to run a
railway across the Mogollon Rim at a gentle enough grade for trains he
would need to create a tunnel 3,100 feet long and 16 feet wide.
In 1883, work on the tunnel began. Over 40 men spent all summer
blasting a passage through the rock. Only 70 feet of the tunnel had been
completed, however, when the company ran out of funds and the work came
to a halt. Eddy spent the next several years finding investors and
hyping the railroad project, managing to get another 35 miles of track
laid when the money ran dry and the work stopped again, this time for
good.
Over the subsequent years, the 35 miles of track south of Flagstaff
were torn up by locals who reused the scrap. Today, the only remaining
evidence of Eddy’s ambitious but failed project is the partially
completed tunnel deep in the Tonto National Forest. Other than some
graffiti near the entrance, it still looks more or less exactly as it
did when the Arizona Mineral Belt crews left it in 1883. The crumbling
structure to the right of the tunnel entrance is the remains of the
powder house where the workers stored their explosives while blasting
through the ridge.
Clancy's comment: Ah ... Men of vision, eh? We don't seem to have too many of them today.
Very useful information for people, you have a Best Tourist Attractions in Arizona & list of places that anyone can visit in Arizona. I think this is what everyone needs. Thank you for this useful information, I think it will be useful for me in the future.
Well, at least it provides shelter for the rattlesnakes! Love this region of Arizona, but hadn't heard of this. Very interesting. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteYou are probably right, Jo.
DeleteCT
Very useful information for people, you have a Best Tourist Attractions in Arizona & list of places that anyone can visit in Arizona. I think this is what everyone needs. Thank you for this useful information, I think it will be useful for me in the future.
ReplyDeletePlaces To Visit in Arizona