Camino, Placerville and Lake Tahoe Railroad


The Camino, Placerville and Lake Tahoe Railroad was an Class III short-line railroad operating in the Sierra Nevada in California, east of Sacramento. It was built primarily to haul lumber from the El Dorado National Forest. The standard gauge line ran west from a sawmill at Camino to a connection with the Placerville Branch of the Southern Pacific Company at Placerville. Loaded cars of lumber descended a 3.5 percent grade from at Camino to at Placerville.

History

The CPLT's history starts in 1903 with its predecessor, the Placerville and Lake Tahoe Railway. The Placerville & Lake Tahoe Railway started grading on or about September 15, 1903. On April 11, 1904, the Placerville and Lake Tahoe was incorporated and the line was opened that same year. At Camino, the Placerville & Lake Tahoe went to narrow-gauge where it extended another into the forest in the area of Old Pino, Pino Grande and Pilot Creek. From 1910-1911 the Placerville and Lake Tahoe did not operate. In 1911 the Placerville and Lake Tahoe was sold at foreclosure for $62,714.58 and was reorganized on December 28, 1911 as the Camino, Placerville and Lake Tahoe Railroad.
The CPLT was owned by the Michigan-California Lumber Company. In 1986 the Southern Pacific abandoned the Placerville Branch, eliminating CPLT's access to the national rail network. Scrapping of the CPLT commenced on September 3, 1986.
Other railroads operating in the narrow gauge forest were the American River Land and Lumber Company, that built a line through the forest in 1892. American River Land & Lumber was sold to El Dorado Lumber Company in 1901 and extended the line to. In 1917, the El Dorado Lumber Company was sold to the Michigan-California Lumber Company.

Chart of History of Area Lines

Standard Gauge 8 mile line

NumberBuilderTypeDateWorks numberNotes
1Lima Locomotive Works3-cylinder 2-truck Shay locomotive1904885built for exhibit at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition; scrapped 1955
2Lima Locomotive Works3-cylinder 2-truck Shay locomotive19223172built as Little River Redwood Company #4; purchased 1932; placed on display at Griffith Park Travel Town Museum in 1955
101GE TransportationGE 44-ton switcher195331231purchased new

Narrow Gauge 50 mile line