Misplaced Pages

Washington Park and Zoo Railway

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The International Rose Test Garden is a rose garden in Washington Park in Portland , Oregon , United States. There are over 10,000 rose bushes of approximately 650 varieties. The roses bloom from April through October with the peak coming in June, depending on the weather. New rose cultivars are continually sent to the garden from many parts of the world and are evaluated on several characteristics, including disease resistance, bloom formation, color, and fragrance. It is the oldest continuously operating public rose test garden in the United States and exemplifies Portland's nickname, " City of Roses ". The garden draws an estimated 700,000 visitors annually.

#290709

46-683: The Washington Park & Zoo Railway (WP&ZRy) is a 2 ft 6 in ( 762 mm ) narrow gauge recreational railroad in Portland, Oregon's Washington Park with rolling stock built to 5/8 scale. Opened in three stages in 1958, 1959 and 1960, it previously provided transportation between the Oregon Zoo , Hoyt Arboretum , International Rose Test Garden , and the World Forestry Center . The extended line through Washington Park, now out of service but still in place,

92-753: A few sidings to allow trains running in opposite directions to pass. This trackage is all still in place but not in service. This allowed up to three trains to be in operation at once when in service. As of 2010, Washington Park and Zoo Railway has three trains in normal operation: The Zooliner No. 2, 4-4-0 No. 1 Oregon (original steam train), and Oregon Express No. 5. Two of them (the Zooliner , and 4-4-0 No. 1, Oregon ) are scale replicas of real trains. In addition, there are two small switcher locomotives that are used for non-passenger purposes. Most regular service, including all non-holiday weekday service, uses only two diesel trains. The steam train operates on only

138-434: A few weekends per year and for special events. In the 1980s, two of the three trains were equipped with wheelchair lifts to allow mobility-impaired persons to board the train, and in 2005 these lifts were upgraded so as to better accommodate heavier electric wheelchairs . The Zooliner is a 5/8-scale replica of the diesel-powered Aerotrain , which is famous for its unusual shape that was influenced by automobile designs of

184-723: A gazebo added in 1991, and a wall honoring past presidents of the Portland Rose Society. It is a popular site for weddings. The Royal Rosarian Garden displays roses honoring past Prime Ministers of the Royal Rosarians , a civic group which serves as the official greeters and goodwill ambassadors for the City of Portland who serve in the many Rose Festival events, and features a stone bench honoring Jesse Currey. The Royal Rosarian Garden contains many roses that are no longer commercially available. Established in 1975,

230-755: A new elephant exhibit area and changes to the railway's route within and near the zoo grounds. On November 22, 2014, operations resumed on the new Zoo Loop line within the zoo, but not on the portion of the line within Washington Park. The railway was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2020 as a historic district using its original name, as the Portland Zoo Railway Historic District. The 1958-built Zooliner and 1959-built Oregon Steamer locomotive, and their respective passenger cars were placed on

276-541: A new frame was built in 1982. The Oregon was taken out of service in August 2002, in need of extensive other repairs, and was almost retired and relegated to static display, due to lack of funds to pay for the repairs. However, donations resolved this problem, and the locomotive was overhauled and returned to service on April 2, 2004. Nowadays, No. 1 is normally only scheduled to operate on a few busy weekends per year, including Memorial Day weekend and Labor Day weekend, but

322-473: A section of 4.5-percent grade . In the off-season, weather and business permitting, the 10-12 minute Zoo Loop trip runs. This run goes through the Oregon Zoo grounds only. The Washington Park trips that previously operated during spring and summer months also cover this section. The Zoo Loop is mostly a one-way loop, whereas the two-way 2-mile line through Washington Park is single-track but equipped with

368-480: A utilitarian diesel switcher locomotive temporarily filling in until the new steam locomotive, No. 1, was ready. The steam locomotive entered service on June 20, and it and the streamlined Zooliner proceeded to carry passengers daily at the exposition all summer. Meanwhile, the railroad at the zoo's then-new site in the West Hills remained closed while construction continued on the zoo itself, but reopened on

414-478: Is also brought into use, as needed, to meet demand for train rides on weekends that have a particularly high number of visitors to the zoo. It is also normally used during the annual "Zoo Lights" event, held between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day. The train now known as the Oregon Express is the only one that is not a copy of a real train. Its diesel locomotive is WP&ZRy No. 5. It was built in 1940s by

460-459: Is an abstract stainless steel sculpture and fountain along the main promenade, designed and built by Oregon artist Lee Kelly and dedicated in 1975. The fountain honors Frank Edwin Beach (1853–1934), the man who is said to have christened Portland the "City of Roses" and who first proposed the annual Rose Festival. Royal Rosarian is a bronze statue depicting a Royal Rosarian tipping his hat. It

506-490: Is one of eleven American Garden Rose Selections test sites in the United States. Rose breeders and distributors from across the world typically donate about 2,500 roses per year to the garden. Sometimes the garden gets roses a year or two before they're introduced to the market, but most of the roses in the garden are commercially available. The garden features an inventory that shows the names and locations for all of

SECTION 10

#1732798051291

552-709: The Cascade Range , with Mount Hood featured prominently. The Queens Walk is a brick walkway at the base of the garden with bronze plaques featuring each Queen's hand written name and year, honoring each Rose Festival queen since 1907. The plaques originally were installed in Lambert Gardens near Reed College , but were moved to the International Rose Test Garden in the early 1950s. The roses and other plantings are tended by three paid staffers and dozens of volunteers. The garden

598-869: The Circus Train . It was later rebuilt a few times to a relatively more modern style, with a slanted front end. The color scheme and decorative motif of the train have been changed a few times, as has the train's name, which has gone from the Casey Pioneer to the Circus Train to the Astroliner to the Orient Express to the Oregon Express . This locomotive has four associated passenger coaches. Locomotives No. 3, built in 1929, and No. 6, built in 1938, are small industrial diesel locomotives, not normally used for passenger service. They are used for track maintenance and switching , but if needed can haul

644-566: The Oregon Express . When the Centennial Exposition ended (on September 17, 1959), the two trains used there were moved to the new zoo line, although the steam locomotive did not enter service at the zoo until January 1960. The 1.4-mile (2.3 km) extension eastwards through the park to a new station near the Rose Gardens opened on May 28, 1960. Like the two trains, the small Washington Park "Rose Garden" station building

690-472: The Portland Zoo Railway , the 1.2-mile (1.9 km) first section of track opened for service on June 7, 1958, and was formally dedicated on June 9, more than a year before the zoo opened fully at the same site. This service used the Zooliner trainset, the railway's first and only train at that time, and operated daily except Mondays through the summer. Meanwhile, the zoo's new West Hills site

736-547: The 1905 Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition. Portland was already dubbed "The City of Roses" and the test garden was a way to solidify the city's reputation as a rose-growing center internationally. In early 1918, the garden began receiving plants from growers in England and Ireland, as well as Los Angeles, Washington and the Eastern United States. In 1921 Florence Holmes Gerke , the landscape architect for

782-815: The Milwaukee Locomotive Co. and acquired by the Zoo from the Portland Machinery Co. in 1958. No. 5 was the original construction locomotive, named Casey Pioneer , used for laying the original portion of the Zoo Loop track in the zoo in 1958. It operated at the Portland Zoo in 1959 while the other two locomotives and coaches were operating at the Oregon Centennial . It was made to look like a steam train at that time and called

828-672: The Miniature Rose Garden is a test ground to help determine what miniature roses will go to market. The Miniature Rose Garden is one of only eight such miniature rose testing grounds for the American Rose Society. The national annual American Rose Society winners are displayed in the middle of the garden along the center aisle. The Shakespeare Garden was donated by the Shakespeare Society in 1943. It originally featured botanicals mentioned in

874-615: The National Registry, along with the railroad route itself (including the section within Washington Park), the water tank and tower, the Tunnel-Roundhouse complex and the Washington Park station. The longer 35-40 minute round-trip Washington Park route previously ran on weekends from mid-April until Memorial Day and then daily through Labor Day . (However, service along this route has been suspended since

920-590: The Oregon Journal, convinced city officials to institute a rose test garden to serve as a safe haven during World War I for hybrid roses grown in Europe. Rose lovers feared that these unique plants would be destroyed in the bombings. The Park Bureau approved the idea in 1917 and by early 1918, hybridists from England began to send roses. A decade before the test garden was proposed, 20 miles (32 km) of Portland's streets had been lined with rose bushes for

966-625: The Rose Garden, which remains closed but is in good condition, and a contributing building of the National Historic Landmark district, is a short walk from the International Rose Test Garden ( 45°31′03″N 122°42′22″W  /  45.517509°N 122.706189°W  / 45.517509; -122.706189  ( Rose Garden station ) ) and Portland Japanese Garden . The line includes

SECTION 20

#1732798051291

1012-577: The Washington Park Master Plan's endorsement to remove the "long route", which runs from the Oregon Zoo to the International Rose Test Garden. The master plan primarily called for the removal of all tracks so that it could be replaced by a paved twelve foot (12') wide path. As of May 2020, over 37,000 people have signed the online petition in support of keeping and repairing the, "long route". As of 2023, no action has yet been taken on this proposed Washington Park plan. Originally named

1058-473: The Zoo railway, and it was leased to Metro at that time. When the zoo was renamed again in 1998, as the Oregon Zoo, the railway was not renamed. The line also served the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry from 1958 to 1992 while that museum was located near the zoo. A suspension of service forecast to last at least through summer 2014 was due to begin on September 23, 2013, to allow construction of

1104-480: The best rose that day from thousands of submissions. Portland remains the only North American city to issue such an award. By 2013, the garden's collection had expanded to over 10,000 rose bushes of over 650 varieties. The International Rose Test Garden covers 4.5 acres (18,000 m ) in several tiers facing downtown Portland, the Willamette River , and East Portland. On clear days, there are views of

1150-531: The city of Portland, was charged with designing the International Rose Test Garden and the amphitheatre. The garden was dedicated in June 1924. Currey was appointed as the garden's first rose curator and served in that capacity until his death in 1927. Since 1940, the rose garden has been one of the official testing gardens for what is now called the All-America Rose Selections . Originally,

1196-452: The fall of 2013 for an undetermined time, as repairs are needed on a few small slides along the track.) This run went through the woods of Washington Park and the grounds of the Oregon Zoo. (Few animals are seen from the train.) The Zoo station is near the zoo entrance ( 45°30′33″N 122°42′57″W  /  45.509194°N 122.715778°W  / 45.509194; -122.715778  ( Zoo station ) ). The Washington Park station near

1242-431: The garden occupied about a block, sandwiched between a playground and an elk corral. A parking lot replaced the original rose garden when the garden moved to its current location in 1928. The garden later expanded in the 1950s when Washington Park's zoo moved to its current location. The award called Portland's Best Rose was established in 1996. Rose experts from around the world attend a one-day judging in June and select

1288-475: The latter's opening day, July 3, 1959 (by which time most animals had been moved from the old zoo). For the next few months, the zoo line was served only by a train hauled by the locomotive that had been used during construction of that line. That locomotive (later becoming No. 5) was a diesel engine made to look like a steam locomotive, and the train was called the Circus Train . The engine and its cars have been modified several times since and are currently known as

1334-526: The original, No. 1 Oregon uses oil as a power source, but it is still a real steam locomotive (not a diesel that is made to look like a steam locomotive). It weighs about 8 tons. It first carried passengers on June 20, 1959, on the temporary Centennial Exposition line in North Portland, but was moved to the then-new Portland Zoo site around the end of the summer, when the exposition ended. This locomotive has four associated passenger coaches built at

1380-476: The passenger cars of the Oregon Express or Oregon trains as a substitute for those trains' regular locomotives (Nos. 5 and 1). Both were acquired secondhand from Weyerhaeuser . No. 3 resembles an early EMD switcher . The line carries U.S. mail and was one of the first recreational railroads to have its own postmark, and is the last railroad in the United States to have continually offered hand-cancelling and processing of mail. The postal cancellation stamp

1426-438: The period when it was built, considered futuristic at the time. The Zooliner was built in 1958, its mechanical parts by Northwest Marine Iron Works and its streamlined bodywork by the H. Hirschberger Sheet Metal company of Portland. It first "officially" carried zoo guest passengers on the date of its dedication, June 9, 1958 (and this date is lettered on the side of the locomotive), but its actual first day carrying passengers

Washington Park and Zoo Railway - Misplaced Pages Continue

1472-506: The price of a ticket was $ 5.00 for the short 6-minute internal loop within the zoo grounds, but zoo admission was also required. Zoo officials announced in September 2013 that the line would be closed for about one year for construction, with the last day of service scheduled on September 22. The temporary closure was necessitated by the construction of the zoo's new Elephant Lands exhibit, which will also include remodeling of other parts of

1518-467: The roses. The Rose Garden Store opened May 1, 2000. The store sells rose-themed books, merchandise, and garden supplies. The garden includes an amphitheater designed with the original garden. It hosts many events throughout the year, predominantly classical music concerts and a few plays. During good weather, the amphitheater is popular for picnicking and flying disc games . The Frank E. Beach Memorial Fountain (officially titled Water Sculpture )

1564-556: The same time. They were designed to resemble the early twentieth century open-air excursion cars that resembled those of the Portland Electric Transit Company. They feature a clerestory roof with transom lights. Each car has a step rail to access the swinging doors. The body panels are constructed in a lattice of horizontal boards attached to a vertical board framework. The steam locomotive's original frame broke several times during its first two decades, but

1610-632: The trainset was built in 1996. The rearmost car was rebuilt in late 2005 to resemble a dome car , in connection with installation of a larger and more powerful wheelchair lift . 4-4-0 No. 1 Oregon is a 5/8-scale replica of a classic American 4-4-0 steam locomotive of the 19th century. It was built in 1959 by the Oregon Locomotive Works. It is a scale copy of the 4-4-0 locomotive, Reno , of Nevada 's Virginia & Truckee Railroad (built by Baldwin Locomotive in 1872). Unlike

1656-547: The works of William Shakespeare . Over time, the Shakespeare Garden has evolved, planted with summer annuals, tropical plants, year-round shrubs, and roses. The rose varieties are named after characters in Shakespeare's plays. The Shakespeare Garden includes a formal walkway and a raised sitting area. Parking at the International Rose Test Garden costs $ 2 per hour, to a maximum of $ 8 per day. The rose garden

1702-583: The zoo grounds – through the woods of Washington Park and also to build a steam locomotive. It was decided to model the planned steam engine on a real one, a Baldwin 4-4-0 type, and construction began in the autumn, with plans to use it initially at the Oregon Centennial Exposition , scheduled to be held the following summer in North Portland (at the site of what is now the Portland Expo Center ). The steam engine

1748-427: The zoo grounds. The short-loop route through the southwest part of the zoo grounds was scheduled to be removed permanently, and during the one-year suspension of service a new section of track was to be laid to create a replacement for the short loop. Train operations returned running on the new Zoo Loop line, within the Oregon Zoo only, as of November 22, 2014. In May 2018 an online petition was created in opposition to

1794-485: Was about 2 miles (3.2 km) long. The service is currently operating on a 1 ⁄ 2 -mile (0.80 km) loop completely within the Oregon Zoo grounds. The railway carries about 350,000 passengers per year. The railroad is operational year-round when the Oregon Zoo is open, except in January and part of February, when it is closed for required maintenance. Special events occur during the winter holidays. As of 2023,

1840-587: Was also first used at the Centennial Exposition and was moved to the new line after the fair closed. The railway was renamed the Washington Park and Zoo Railway in 1978, following the zoo's change of name (in 1976) to Washington Park Zoo. At this time, July 1, 1976, the zoo ownership was transferred from the City of Portland to the Metropolitan Service District, now called Metro. However, the city of Portland retained ownership of

1886-507: Was created by American artist Bill Bane and dedicated in 2011. The American Garden Rose Selection (AGRS) test garden covers two terraces of the Rose Garden. The roses testing in the garden are identified by number rather than by name; the plants are evaluated for two years by multiple criteria before being judged. The Gold Award Garden, dedicated in 1970, features award-winning roses from the AGRS Test Garden. The garden features

Washington Park and Zoo Railway - Misplaced Pages Continue

1932-424: Was issued to the railroad by the U.S. Postal Service in 1961. The locomotive of the Zooliner has a postal mail slot on the side of the cab, and mail boxes are located at the Zoo and Washington Park stations. 2 ft 6 in gauge railways 2 ft 6 in ( 762 mm ) gauge railways are narrow gauge railways with track gauge of 2 ft 6 in ( 762 mm ). This type of rail

1978-543: Was named "Oregon" , or alternatively "the Oregon" . In the summer of 1959, the Portland Zoo Railway operated trains at two different sites. Nos. 1 and 2, the Oregon and the Zooliner , served a temporary railway line through the grounds of the Centennial Exposition, which lasted for about three months. The Zooliner entered service on the exposition's opening day, June 10, along with a second train hauled by

2024-477: Was only open on weekends, because it was still under construction, and even by August penguins and bears were the only animals moved from the old zoo, which remained in operation. The initial train service around the yet-unfinished new zoo grounds was suspended in mid-September 1958, not to resume until the zoo's opening in July 1959. A fundraising campaign was launched, to raise money to build an extension – outside

2070-570: Was promoted especially in the colonies of the British Empire during the second half of the nineteenth century by Thomas Hall and Everard Calthrop . Several Bosnian-gauge railways with 760 mm ( 2 ft  5 + 15 ⁄ 16  in ) are found in south-eastern Europe. 760 mm (29.92 in) is well within tolerances of 762 mm (30.00 in). International Rose Test Garden In 1915 Jesse A. Currey, president of Portland's Rose Society and Sunday editor of

2116-469: Was two days earlier. The Zooliner was originally powered by a 140-horsepower (100 kW) diesel engine , and is now powered by a 165-horsepower (123 kW) diesel engine with hydraulic transmission. It is numbered as WP&ZRy locomotive No. 2. The brakes are pneumatic, the same as on its full-size namesake. The train includes four or five streamlined passenger coaches pulled by matching locomotive No. 2. An additional (fifth) similar smooth-side car for

#290709