The Museum has launched the companion website of the new exhibit: Railroads Built the Pacific Northwest. The exhibit is a free-standing display of 4 double-sided interlocking panels highlighting early passenger and freight service in the PNW. The companion website features content and images from the exhibit, plus a little extra that didn't fit into the panels!
The exhibit was designed by the Webb Group and fabricated by Artcraft Display Graphics Inc. Deputy Director Jessie Cunningham curated the exhibit, which included content development and image selection. Images came from either the Museum’s collection or were purchased from other local sources including Snoqualmie Valley Historical Museum and UW Special Collections. The Museum is excited to offer the companion webpage, since it makes the exhibit accessible to those that cannot travel to the Museum to see the exhibit in person.
The display, Railroads Built the Pacific Northwest, is the Phase 2 exhibit for the Train Shed Exhibit Building. The exhibit will be stored during Santa Train but may be in the freight room over the winter. It will be installed in the Train Shed next spring along with the Phase 1 exhibit. Tour Package program participants will have more to see and experience in 2015!
The exhibit was made possible with generous grants from 4Culture and Humanities Washington.
Friday, November 14, 2014
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Happy Birthday, Washington State — remix
Five years ago, we took credit on these pages for Washington State's 120th birthday. Well, we won't do that again.
Instead, we'll take credit for its quasquicentennial!
We said it then and we'll say it again: it was no coincidence that railroad builder D. H. Gilman signed this Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway Company stock certificate in 1888, and that U.S. President Benjamin Harrison signed Proclamation 294 admitting Washington into the Union the following year.
Today, we think the pace of life has rapidly increased with electronics, computers, smartphones — instant this and instant that. And so it has. But that's just what it felt like as the final decades of the 19th Century hurtled toward the 20th. The railroad turned a laborious multi-day journey from Seattle to Snoqualmie into a picnic. Literally. An excursion to Snoqualmie Falls became a recreational day trip. And folks in Snoqualmie? Whatever they wanted could be brought in by rail. Quickly. Life was transformed. So resist that sleepy historic town stereotype and let the flavor and flourish of those days swirl around you. The Depot and other wood buildings from the period can help you picture it.
![]() |
President Harrison. Courtesy FCIT. |
What else was here then? The two-story building behind the Depot was built not long after — in 1902 — for the Modern Woodmen's fraternal organization. Across King Street, the tavern is the original first floor of a two-story hotel built in 1910.
Across the main street from the Depot, at 8096 Railroad Avenue, another wood building harbors stories of Snoqualmie dating from 1909. And not much more than a block away at the corner of River Street and Falls Avenue, the hip roof porch and posts are among the features that maintain the historical appearance of another 1909 building, although additions and changes have been made to the structure since its original construction for Reinig Brothers General Merchandise.
Is the Snoqualmie of today — a main row of businesses facing the Depot, with additional enterprises peppered around neighboring streets, all in the shadow of Mount Si — so very different from the Snoqualmie shown here in 1897? The Depot-centered activity that greeted Washington's birth as a state has its echoes in activity surrounding the Depot today. More than 1,000 people rode the train during the last weekend of October. And the Northwest Railway Museum recently launched a steam program. So when you board the newly rehabilitated coach 218 with its mahogany paneling and mohair-covered seats, you might have an opportunity to ride in the wake of a steam locomotive. Just like the passengers who looked out those coach windows when the State of Washington was just a whippersnapper.
![]() |
Santa Cruz Portland Cement 2 pulls coach 218 in 2014. |
Thursday, November 6, 2014
Soft launch of new exhibit

The exhibit was designed by the Webb Group and
fabricated by Artcraft Display Graphics Inc. Deputy Director Jessie Cunningham curated
the exhibit, which included content development and image selection. Images
came from either the Museum’s collection or were purchased from other local
sources including Snoqualmie Valley Historical Museum and UW Special Collections. The companion webpage will be available on the Museum's website within the next week.
The display is the Phase 2 exhibit for the Train Shed
Exhibit Building. Unfortunately the fabrication wasn’t completed in time to
install the exhibit in the Train Shed before tours wrapped up for the 2014
regular season. The Museum wanted to make the exhibit accessible to the public
immediately, so it has been installed temporarily in the Depot freight room.
You can come and view the exhibit for the next month during open hours (10am -
5pm, Monday thru Sunday). The exhibit will be stored during Santa Train but may
be in the freight room over the winter. It will be installed in the Train Shed
next spring along with the Phase 1 exhibit. Tour Package program participants
will have more to see and experience in 2015!
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
And so it begins . . .

Monday, October 27, 2014
Hallloween train steam
The next opportunity for a steam experience is during Santa Train 2014 in December. On Friday, December 19 only, Santa Trains will be pulled by SCPC 2. So come and enjoy another "new" steam experience at the Northwest Railway Museum! Tickets are available in advance here, but don't delay because Santa Train usually sells out in advance.
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Steam program announced
On October 20, 2014, the Northwest Railway Museum officially announced plans for a steam locomotive program, and identified the
locomotives that have been selected for rehabilitation, restoration and operation. This is an exciting time for the Museum, and represents continuing fulfillment of the long-term plan first developed nearly 20 years ago.
Steam locomotives were a driving
force throughout much of Washington State’s history. They pulled trains throughout the Northwest
beginning with the arrival of the first railroads in the 1870s and dominated
transportation in Washington until diesel electric locomotives replaced them in
the late 1950s at the dawn of the Interstate Highway era. Steam locomotives transported goods and
people during the latter half of westward expansion, and fostered the
development and settlement of communities across Washington State and King
County.
Northern Pacific Railway locomotive 924 selected first
Beginning
immediately and over the next two years, the Museum will rehabilitate and
restore former Northern Pacific Railway 924, a 0-6-0 (six-coupled) locomotive. Built by Rogers Locomotive and Machine Works in 1899 for the St. Paul and Duluth Railroad as their
number 74, the locomotive was renumbered 924 after that road was purchased by
the Northern Pacific Railway. In the
early 1900s it was Seattle’s King Street Station coach yard switcher, later serving the Seattle and
Tacoma yards, and in light branch line service. Sold in 1925 to
the Inland Empire Paper Company in
Millwood, Washington she remained on their roster until 1969.
This locomotive is
a classic example of late 19th century Northwest switching and
branch line steam locomotives. When the locomotive is complete, the
Museum will be the only American institution operating class one steam west of
Colorado with regionally-appropriate motive power and rolling stock on its
original railroad.
Two operating locomotives will allow
the steam program to continue during scheduled maintenance and periodic servicing, and
will allow for expanded service during large events. Consequently, the Museum is planning for the operation of two steam locomotives.
Canadian Collieries locomotive 14 selected as second.
Canadian
Collieries 14 is a classic Baldwin ten wheeler
that will allow the Museum to provide a complete and authentic experience
recreating railway passenger service from the first two decades of the 20th
century. Ten wheelers were the most popular and greatest-produced
locomotive of all time and examples were found on nearly every major railroad
in the Northwest, including the lines of the Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway that ran through
Snoqualmie.
Making it happen!
The Museum is making a significant commitment to steam by investing in people and facilities. A qualified team of paid and volunteer staff with prior experience in steam locomotive rehabilitation and restoration has been assembled and is being led by Curator of Collections Stathi Pappas. Pappas has a graduate degree in Archeology, and has participated or led more than a dozen similar projects.
The machinery required to perform the work has already been obtained for all aspects of boiler and running gear work. The work will be performed inside the Conservation and Restoration Center, the purpose-built collections care facility opened in 2007 and already equipped with an inspection pit, a monolithic floor, and utilities including sanitary sewer with oil-water separator that allow the Museum to maintain the locomotives in an environmentally-responsible manner.
Several major grants and contributions have been pledged and work will begin next week; additional fundraising will be performed during the next 24 months to offset costs that will approach $1 million. Contributions are encouraged and will be used to directly pay for the work performed; they can be made on the Museum's secure web site here and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.
Making it happen!
The Museum is making a significant commitment to steam by investing in people and facilities. A qualified team of paid and volunteer staff with prior experience in steam locomotive rehabilitation and restoration has been assembled and is being led by Curator of Collections Stathi Pappas. Pappas has a graduate degree in Archeology, and has participated or led more than a dozen similar projects.
The machinery required to perform the work has already been obtained for all aspects of boiler and running gear work. The work will be performed inside the Conservation and Restoration Center, the purpose-built collections care facility opened in 2007 and already equipped with an inspection pit, a monolithic floor, and utilities including sanitary sewer with oil-water separator that allow the Museum to maintain the locomotives in an environmentally-responsible manner.
Several major grants and contributions have been pledged and work will begin next week; additional fundraising will be performed during the next 24 months to offset costs that will approach $1 million. Contributions are encouraged and will be used to directly pay for the work performed; they can be made on the Museum's secure web site here and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
Lettering a coach
You can visit and RIDE on coach 218 at the Northwest Railway Museum . Your next opportunity are the Halloween Steam Train rides on October 25 and 26. See you there!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)