Sonoma Locomotive at the California State Railroad Museum
Photo by Cliff West
North Pacific Coast Railroad
36-inch gauge 4-4-0 locomotive #12, the Sonoma,
was built by Baldwin in 1876 and was last run in October 1940. The North
Pacific Coast operated an 80-mile main line between Sausalito and Duncans
Mills, but always faced financial difficulty. By the end of 1879, the Sonoma had been sold to the Nevada
Central Railroad, where it became #5 and was named General J. H. Ledlie. It was still in service when the Nevada
Central was abandoned in 1938, and the line’s general manager J. M. Hiskey
acquired it and loaned it to the Pacific Coast Chapter of the Railway &
Locomotive Historical Society. It was taken to the Southern Pacific shops in
Berkeley on December 15, 1938, and made to resemble Central Pacific #60 Jupiter for the daily reenactment of the
completion of the transcontinental railroad at the Golden Gate International
Exposition on Treasure Island in San Francisco. After the exposition, the
locomotive was put into storage in October 1940 and has not run since. It was
moved to the new California State Railroad Museum in Sacramento, California, in
1977. In 1978 it was donated to the museum by the J. M. Hiskey family. It has
been restored to its original appearance.
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