56°F
weather icon Mostly Cloudy

Historic presence: Steam engine takes up residence at train museum for holiday

Local residents are once again being given a special gift for the holiday season: a chance to see and experience a piece of Nevada history.

Daniel Markoff, of Las Vegas, has brought his Eureka and Palisade steam locomotive to the Nevada State Railroad Museum in Boulder City for people to enjoy and ride. It’s the ninth year he’s shared his love of history with others.

The Eureka is one of only three 4-4-0 narrow-gauge steam engines built in 1876 by Baldwin Locomotive Works in Philadelphia known to exist. It is also the only one that works.

Its sister engines, the Jupiter and the Sonoma, are in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History and the California State Railroad Museum in Sacramento, respectively.

“I can’t tell you how significant an object it is,” said Randy Hees, director of the railroad museum. “It’s such a special piece.”

Visitors to the museum on Yucca Street can see the train in action on Saturdays and Sundays through Dec. 17.

Industrial art

According to an information board created by Markoff, “the Baldwin 4-4-0s were produced during the gilded Victorian age when there was tremendous pride in American craftsmanship and ingenuity. Her ornate brass domes, gold leafing and colorful pin striping along with her highly crafted walnut cab and running boards are typical of the exquisite industrial art during the 19th century.”

The engine’s numbers refer to its wheels, four small steering wheels in front and four larger driving wheels in back.

Originally built as a passenger engine to transport people between Eureka and Palisade, about 30 miles west of Elko, the train remained in service until 1901, when it was sold to Sierra Nevada Wood and Lumber Co. in Lake Tahoe and used in the lumber industry.

Markoff said it didn’t take the buyers too long to realize that the wood-burning engine was using up their cash crop, so it was converted to run on oil.

In 1938 or 1939, the engine was sold to be scrapped and taken to San Francisco, where it was spotted by rail historian Gerald Best, who also was a sound operator for Warner Bros. He convinced the studio to purchase the engine, move it to Burbank, California, and use it in films.

It was first featured in “Torrid Zone,” starring James Cagney, and its last film was also John Wayne’s final movie, “The Shootist.”

Park attraction

When Westerns were no longer popular among filmgoers, the train was sold to the Old Vegas theme park in Henderson, where it sat as a display until 1985, when the park was destroyed by a fire.

Markoff obtained the engine in 1986 after it sat idly for a year, still covered in timbers that fell during the fire.

Though a lawyer by trade, he was a history major at the University of Nevada, Reno and was intrigued by the history of the engine.

“I felt like the guy who shot an elk on a 10,000-foot peak. Now that you got it, what are you going to do with it?”

So he laid some track in his backyard and brought the locomotive home on big trailers, built a shelter around it and devoted the next six years to restoring it to its former glory.

Through research at the Stanford library and California State Railroad Museum and a gift of the original blueprints, he found the designs, colors and dimensions to restore the train.

“She’s in better shape than I will be at 143,” he said.

Historic restoration

Hees said he is inspired by Markoff’s mechanical and cosmetic restoration of the engine, especially since it was all done by a private individual.

The Eureka is on the National Park Service’s National Registry of Historic Places, which also includes objects deemed worthy of preservation.

Markoff’s love of the train and enthusiasm for history is shared by several volunteers who help him maintain and run the engine. They all are part of a group of pilots who “hang out at the North Las Vegas airport,” he said.

“There’s a sense of pride,” said Dave Austin, who works as a fireman for the engine and is helping Markoff create a matching baggage and passenger car from the ground up.

Like Austin, J.D. Allen has been volunteering for years to help Markoff with the engine. He will happily share tales of the locomotive’s history and revel in the childlike fun of playing with trains, except on a much larger scale than toys.

In addition to Boulder City, Markoff has brought the Eureka and Palisade to New Mexico and Colorado. It’s also been featured in several documentaries and will be showcased next year in an episode of “Outdoor Nevada.”

Hali Bernstein Saylor is editor of the Boulder City Review. She can be reached at hsaylor@bouldercityreview.com or at 702-586-9523. Follow @HalisComment on Twitter.

MOST READ
THE LATEST
All that jazz

Saturday, the Las Vegas Jazz Society and Boulder City Friends of the Library hosted an afternoon of jazz music in the library’s amphitheater. More than 100 people turned out for the free concert.

Mitchell proud to be Leader In Me Lighthouse School

It is so great to see our students back in school this week after spring break. As we head into this last quarter of the school year, it is an important time to reflect on the year as we begin planning for next year.

What is occupational therapy?

Occupational therapists ask, “What matters to you?” instead of “What’s the matter with you?”

All Aboard!

This past weekend, the Boulder City Parks and Recreation gym played host to the Spring Model Train Show. There, hobby enthusiasts bought, sold and displayed their trains.

Shorter SBAC test: A win for students

Exciting news for our students and community! The Clark County School District (CCSD) will be implementing the shorter version of the SBAC, Nevada’s state assessment for reading, math, science, and writing.

A busy few weeks at Garrett

Garrett Junior High School was honored for their outstanding STEM education at the state capitol in Carson City. The school was recognized as one of six new schools in CCSD to earn the distinguished Governor’s Designated STEM School distinction, awarded by the state Office of Science, Innovation, and Technology.

Budgeting keeps BC balanced

The Finance Department is in the process of preparing the 2025-26 fiscal year budget. Nevada Revised Statutes require all Nevada cities adopt their final budget on or before June 1. Department directors met with the Finance Department’s budget team last week to review each estimated budget.

What’s Happening Every 15 Minutes?

More than $259 billion dollars are spent on alcohol per year in America. Fifty-one percent of Americans go to the bar at least once a week. Nearly 3% of alcohol is stolen. More than 9% of Americans drink daily, as 29 million people are alcoholics in the U.S. More than 18 million people are impaired while driving, having about one million DUI charges. And every 15 minutes, someone in the U.S. dies in an accident due to those who drive under the influence.

What is a colonoscopy and why you need one

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the American Cancer Society recommend people aged 45-75 get a colonoscopy every 10 years.