East Tennessee and Western North Carolina 12 explained

East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad 12
Powertype:Steam
Builddate:1917
Builder:Baldwin Locomotive Works
Buildmodel:10-26-D
Serialnumber:45069
Fueltype:Coal
Whytetype:4-6-0
Locoweight:98800lb
Locotenderweight:60000lb
Watercap:3000usgal
Boilerpressure:1802NaN2
Valvegear:Walschaerts
Cylindercount:Two
Cylindersize:16x
Operatorclass:10-26-D
Retiredate:1950
1954
Restoredate:1953
July 4, 1957
Currentowner:Tweetsie Railroad
Disposition:Operational
Location:Tweetsie RR theme park, jct. of Tweetsie RR Rd. and US 321, near Blowing Rock, North Carolina
Embed:yes
Coordinates:36.1706°N -81.6475°W
Built:1917
Builder:Baldwin Locomotive Works
Added:March 12, 1992
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:92000147

East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad No. 12, also known as Tweetsie Railroad No. 12, is a narrow-gauge 4-6-0 "Ten Wheeler" type steam locomotive located near Blowing Rock, North Carolina.

History

The engine was built in 1917 by the Baldwin Locomotive Works for the East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad. After retirement in 1940, the East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad ceased operations in 1950 and No. 12 is the only one of the railroad's narrow-gauge engines still in existence. It was sold to the Shenandoah Central in 1952 where it was restored in 1953 and continued to operate in service until its second retirement in 1954. The locomotive was put up for sale again and was later sold to the Tweetsie Railroad theme park in 1957, where it received a full restoration and began pulling excursion trains around the park on July 4, 1957.[1] Today, No. 12 continues to operate at the Tweetsie Railroad along with former White Pass and Yukon Route 2-8-2 No. 190.[1]

The locomotive became listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Laura A.W. Phillips. East Tennessee & Western North Carolina Railroad Locomotive No. 12 . National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory . October 1991 . North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office . 2015-07-01.