The Oregonian Railway was a 3 ft ( 914 mm ) narrow gauge railroad in the Willamette Valley in the U.S. state of Oregon .
4-718: A group of Scot capitalists formed the Oregonian Railway Company, Limited after purchasing the bankrupt Dayton, Sheridan and Grande Ronde Railroad in 1879. The first changes made were to move the Dayton terminal, on the Yamhill River , to Fulquartz Landing on the Willamette River . On the opposite bank of the Willamette, the railroad built Ray's Landing. This became the north terminus of
8-519: The U.S. state of Oregon . In 1877, farmers in Bellevue , Dallas , Perrydale , Sheridan and Willamina met to discuss building a railroad that would serve their towns. An agreement was reached, and the railroad was incorporated. The railroad constructed twenty miles of tracks on the Yamhill and South Yamhill rivers between Sheridan in the west and Dayton to the east. By 1879, the railroad
12-544: The narrow gauge line on the east side of the Willamette valley. The line connected towns such as St. Paul , Woodburn , Silverton , Brownsville , and Coburg . The railroad also expanded the westside line south to reach Perrydale , Dallas , Monmouth , Independence and Airlie . The stop at the end of the line was named after the Earl of Airlie , the leader of the Scot capitalists. Revenues were dropping, and by 1886 or 1887
16-556: The railroad granted a long-term lease to Henry Villard of the Oregon & California Railroad . In later years, Villard would leave the Oregon railroad scene and the line came to be under the control of Southern Pacific Railroad . Dayton, Sheridan and Grande Ronde Railroad The Dayton, Sheridan and Grand Ronde Railroad (DS&GR) was a 3 ft ( 914 mm ) narrow gauge railroad in Yamhill and Polk counties in
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