Photo by Cliff West
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Virginia & Truckee 2-6-0
locomotive #13, the Empire, was built
by Baldwin in 1873. Ordered due to an upswing in freight traffic requiring a
more powerful locomotive than the 4-4-0 American-type, the Empire was delivered in February 1873. By the late 1880s, the
traffic surge had abated, and the Empire
was held in reserve until it was overhauled and returned to regular freight
service for another upswing in 1902. In 1910, it was converted from a
wood-burner to an oil-burner, and was renumbered to #15, because superstitious
crews thought the number 13 was unlucky. The Empire was retired and stored in 1918, and was sold to the Pacific
Portland Cement Company of Gerlach, Nevada, where it became #501 and was used
as a switcher until 1931, when it last operated. In 1938 it was donated to the
Pacific Coast Chapter of the Locomotive and Railway Historical Society and
moved to the San Francisco Bay Area for storage. It was cosmetically restored
in 1966 at the Bethlehem Steel Corporation’s San Francisco shipyards. In 1976
it was moved to the new California State Railroad Museum’s Central Pacific
Railroad Passenger Station in Sacramento, California, and two years later
underwent a complete restoration. It was placed in the California State Railroad Museum’s Railroad History Museum in 1981.
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