What would become one of the longest narrow-gauge railroads in the United States was incorporated in 1888 as the Nevada-California-Oregon Railway, better known as the N-C-O. Some passengers insisted N-C-O stood for the “Northern California Outrage” or the “Narrow, Crooked, and Ornery.”
History writer Patricia A. Barry says it was “damned and ridiculed by many,” but “was a boon to countless stockmen and other shippers” before its final owner, the Southern Pacific, shut it down in 1929. Before the railway existed, the nearest railway shipping point for Southern Oregon’s remote Asturias and Lakeview areas was Gazelle, Calif., 200 miles to the Southwest, or Reno, Nevada, 200 miles to the southeast. At its zenith, the N-C-O ran from Reno, Nevada, to Prineville, Ore., passing through Madeline, Alturas, Lakeview, Paisley and Silver Lake. Barry tells a tongue-in-cheek story about a woman who repeatedly and anxiously asked the conductor when the train would reach Alturas. When she revealed she was about to give birth, he wanted to know why on earth she had boarded the train in the first place. She replied, “This train is so slow I didn’t know I was in such a condition when I got on!”
Sources: Barry, Patricia A. "A Layman's History of the N-C-0 Railway." The Journal of the Modoc County Historical Society 4 (1982).
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Narrow Gauge Railway Runs between Reno and Prineville, Ore.
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2415
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