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Union Pacific No. 119

No. 119
UP steam loco.jpg
No. 119 replica at Golden Spike N.H.S.
Type and origin
Power type Steam
Builder Rogers Locomotive and Machine Works (original)
O'Connor Engineering Laboratories (replica)
Build date November 1868 (original)
1979 (replica)
Specifications
Configuration 4-4-0
Gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Career
Operators Union Pacific Railroad
Numbers 119, renum 343 in 1885
Official name Union Pacific No. 119
Disposition

Original: Rebuilt 118 in 1987.

Operational at the Golden Spike N.H.S. (replica)
Type and origin
Power type Steam
Builder Rogers Locomotive and Machine Works (original)
O'Connor Engineering Laboratories (replica)
Build date November 1868 (original)
1979 (replica)
Specifications
Configuration 4-4-0
Gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Career
Operators Union Pacific Railroad
Numbers 119, renum 343 in 1885
Official name Union Pacific No. 119
Disposition

Original: Rebuilt 118 in 1987.

Operational at the Golden Spike N.H.S. (replica)

Original: Rebuilt 118 in 1987.

The No. 119 was a 4-4-0 steam locomotive which made history as one of the two locomotives (the other being the Jupiter) to meet at Promontory Summit during the Golden Spike ceremony commemorating the completion of the First Transcontinental Railroad.

No. 119 was built by Rogers Locomotive and Machine Works of Paterson, New Jersey in 1868 along with numbers 116, 117, 118 and 120.

This engine was scrapped in 1903, and a replica was built in 1979, 76 years after the scrapping.

No. 119 was stationed in Ogden, Utah, when a call came from Thomas C. Durant, traveling to Promontory, who needed an engine. Similar to Leland Stanford and the Jupiter, previous misfortunes allowed No. 119 to take her place in history. Durant, the vice president of the Union Pacific Railroad was traveling on the so-called Durant Special for the ceremony at Promontory. A swollen river had washed away some supports to the Devil's Gate Bridge. Durant's engineer refused to take the current engine across but did consent to nudge the lighter passenger cars across the bridge. The bridge held, the cars made it across but Durant and his entourage were left without an engine. Durant's plight was answered when No. 119 was sent from Ogden to take the Durant Special the short distance to Promontory where it came nose to nose with the Central Pacific's Jupiter.

In Andrew J. Russell's famous photograph of the Meeting of the Lines, No. 119 is seen on the right with its engineer, Sam Bradford, leaning off the pilot holding a bottle of champagne up to Jupiter engineer George Booth. Bradford and Booth would later break a bottle of champagne over the other's locomotive in celebration.


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Wikipedia

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