Photo by Cliff West
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Virginia & Truckee 4-4-0
locomotive #12, the Genoa, was built
by Baldwin in January 1873. The Virginia & Truckee Railroad Company was organized
on March 5, 1868, and the 21-mile route between Carson City and Virginia City was
completed on January 29, 1870, with an extension connecting Carson City to the
Central Pacific Railroad in Reno completed in August 1872. The Genoa pulled passenger, freight and
mixed trains on the V&T for nearly 30 years. On December 31, 1908, the Genoa was retired and stored in the
Carson City engine house, where it remained until it was sold to the Eastern
Railroads Presidents’ Conference in 1939. The Genoa was modified to resemble Central Pacific Railroad #60 Jupiter, one of the locomotives at the
driving of the golden spike completing the transcontinental railroad in 1869.
It was used in the Railroads on Parade pageant at the 1939-1940 World’s Fair in
New York City, and operated at the 1948 Chicago Railroad Fair. It was donated
to the Pacific Coast Chapter of the Railway & Locomotive Historical
Society, which presented it to the state of California in 1969. For the 100th anniversary
of the transcontinental railroad, Genoa
It reprised its role as Jupiter for
the golden spike reenactment at Promontory Summit in Utah, with Virginia &
Truckee #11 Reno playing the part of
Union Pacific #119. The Genoa’s last
run was at the California State Railroad Museum in Sacramento, California, in
May 1979. It was then restored to its 1902 appearance as seen here.
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