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Roads for Adventure
Photographer: Barry Swackhamer
Taken: June 20, 2017
Caption: Roads for Adventure
Additional Description: The Central Pacific Railroad began laying track east from Sacramento in 1863. After tackling the rugged terrain of the Sierra Nevada Mountains and crossing the Great Basin, the railroad reached Utah in March 1869.
After the rails were joined on May 10, 1869, the new railroad had to be operated and maintained. Along the Promontory Branch 28 sidings, stations, and associated towns were built to service up to ten trains a day.
Kelton, with a population of about 700, had a major stagecoach line and mail and freight rout that supplied Idaho, Oregon, and Intermountain North.
Terrance, with nearly 1000 residents, was the largest community and served as the maintenance headquarters for the Salt Lake Division. The town included a roundhouse, a machine shop, and an eight-track switch yard along with hotels, a saloon, a library, bath-house, and many other thriving businesses.
The Promontory Branch of the railroad was replaced in 1904 by the Lucin Cutoff, a shorter route built on pilings across the Great Salt Lake. The original grade saw only local use afterwards, and railroad facilities and dependent towns were soon abandoned. The rails were removed in 1942 for use in the war effort.
Today, cattle graze where once thousands labored to open the West to industry and commerce. Today's byway follows the last 90 miles of grade laid by the Central Pacific before their rails met the Union Pacific's at Promontory Summit. The Transcontinental Railway Back Country Byway is interpreted at many sites along the route on your public lands.

Rediscover the West...
Back Country Byways open doors to new experiences. Following the Byway can take you back in time, allow you glimpses of things you've never seen, and provide you with a variety of recreational values, whether scenic, recreational, or historical, and provides a unique encounter with the land.
The Bureau of Land Management's Back Country Byways Program is a national effort to open us less traveled corridors of the western public lands, to provide access to the treasures of our rich heritage, and to enhance opportunities for scenic driving. The public lands exhibit such a diversity of resources and uses - they can provide can provide an enjoyable experience for almost anyone!
... And Respect the Lands
The western lands are special places. These public lands, as well as the lands in private ownership surrounding them, require great care. The resources must be preserved, not only for the wildlife that inhabit the lands, but also for future visitors. Please be considerate of others you encounter in your journey, leave gates as you found then, pack out trash, and value the rights of private landowners.
Submitted: July 9, 2017, by Barry Swackhamer of Brentwood, California.
Database Locator Identification Number: p388545
File Size: 3.189 Megabytes

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