(This page printed from UtahRails.net, Copyright 2000-2012 Don Strack)

Southern Utah Railroad

This page was last updated on August 27, 2011.

Additional Information

Timeline

(see Southern Utah and Castle Valley timeline, above)

Locomotives

Road
Number
Wheel
Arrangement
Builder Builder
Number
Builder
Date
Date To
SURR
Date
Retired
Notes
SURR 50 3 Truck Shay Lima 2274 Mar 1910 Apr 1910   1
SURR 100 2-8-0 Lima 1088 Nov 1909 Oct 1909 Nov 1916 2
SURR 102 2-8-0 Lima 1127 Dec 1910 Dec 1910   3
SURR 104 2-8-0 Alco 47772 May 1910 May 1912   4

General Notes:

a. Southern Utah rented D&RGW 4-6-0 503 in July 1909, for its use until its own number 100 arrived during mid October 1909 (first track was laid at Price in mid May 1909).
b. Southern Utah no. 50 arrived at Price, Utah, sometime between April 1 and 7, 1910; Lima records show a build date of March 15, 1910.
c. Southern Utah no. 100 was ordered on April 26, 1909; arrived at Price sometime between October 14 and 21, 1909.
d. Southern Utah no. 102 arrived at Price sometime between December 22, and 29, 1910.
e. Southern Utah no. 102 was delivered in late December 1910.
f. Southern Utah no. 104 was purchased from Alco-Schenectady stock in May 1912. The original locomotive had been ordered in January 1910 as Buffalo & Susquehanna 177, order canceled in April 1910, locomotive completed for ALCo stock in May 1910; leased to Utah Railway; Alco records show a delivery date of May 1912.
g. The following locomotives were shown as being on-property at the time of an August 1911 mortgage: 50, 100, 102, 104.
h. Poor's 1914 Railroad Manual shows four locomotives, page 1244.
i. Locomotive specifications:
  Road
Number
Cylinders Drivers Engine Weight
  SURR 50      
  SURR 100 20x24 inches 50 inches 159,000 pounds (locomotive only)
  SURR 102      
  SURR 104      

Notes:

1. Southern Utah no. 50 was sold (in 1918?) to Booth-Kelley Lumber Co. no. 5, at Wendling, Oregon; then sold to Flora Logging Co. no. 5 at Carlton, Oregon.
2. Southern Utah no. 100 was transferred to United States Smelting, Refining & Mining's smelter in El Paso, Texas; moved on February 20, 1916 to D&RG's Salt Lake City shops for overhaul, numbered as USS&R 2060; needed in Mexico due to motive power shortage on NdeM due to Villa revolts, to be operated between Pachucha, Mexico and Laredo, Texas

One source showed that after its service in Mexico, the locomotive became San Antonio & Aransas Pass 270, then SP(T&NO) 870.

Allen Copeland adds this comment: a letter from Gerald Best describes a railway in Mexico, the Ferrocarriles Pachuca y Tampico, which was part of Ferrocarriles Mexicano. The Pachuca y Tampico had a number 4, which was reported as Lima 1211 (ed. note: this matches Castle Valley 103) , built in 1912, purchased from Utah Railway in 1918 via the Cia Real del Monte y Pachuca at Pachuca, Mexico, who later turned it over to Pachuca y Tampico as their number 4. The Pachuca y Tampico was abandoned on July 1, 1931 and the Lima 2-8-0 ended up as property of Cerveceria Moctezuma number 10 (Montezuma Beer Co.). Gerald Best wrote that he saw the locomotive in 1957 on an NdeM dead line.
3. Southern Utah no. 102 was leased to Utah Railway on December 1, 1917, then sold to Utah Railway as their number 2 on July 1, 1918; scrapped by Utah Railway at Martin, Utah, in September 1939.
4. Southern Utah no. 104 was leased to Utah Railway on December 1, 1917, then sold to Utah Railway as their number 4 on July 1, 1918; scrapped by Utah Railway in April 1956.

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