Monarch Branch

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StatusDefunct
Termini
Monarch Branch
Overview
StatusDefunct
OwnerDenver and Rio Grande Western Railroad
LocaleColorado, United States
Termini
Connecting linesUP Tennessee Pass line
Former connectionsD&RGW Marshall Pass line
Service
TypeMine railway
History
Opened1883
Closed1982
Technical
Line length15 mi (24 km)
Track gauge4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm)
Old gauge3 ft 0 in (914 mm)
Highest elevation10,090 ft (3,080 m)
Maximum incline4.5%

The Monarch Branch was a branch line of the Denver & Rio Grande Western built in the 1880s to serve the Colorado Fuel & Iron limestone quarry at Monarch, Colorado. Originally part of the D&RGW's 3 ft 0 in (914 mm) narrow-gauge system, the 15 mile line connected with the rest of the narrow-gauge network at Poncha Junction, on the Marshall Pass line. The upper part of the Branch was on a 4.5% grade and included both an "S" curve and a double switchback to reach an elevation of over 10,000 ft (3,000 m). The line was converted to standard-gauge in 1956 after the narrow-gauge mainline from Salida to Gunnison was closed in the early 1950s. From that time forward, the line operated as a standard-gauge branch of the D&RGW until the early 1980s when Colorado Fuel & Iron closed its blast furnaces at Pueblo, Colorado. Operations on the Monarch Branch subsequently ceased and the rails were pulled up a short time later.[1]

C&FI Feldspar Mine at Monarch Pass

References

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