Some of the BC&G's equipment, as well as that of its sister railroad the Elk River Coal & Lumber Co. have been preserved, some in operating condition. BC&G Consolidation #
4 was owned by the
North Carolina Transportation Museum in
Spencer,
North Carolina. It operated in tourist service until 2001. It was subsequently purchased by the
Durbin & Greenbrier Valley Railroad, which intends to restore it for operation between
Durbin and
Cass, West Virginia. BC&G Consolidation #
13 is owned by Jerry Joe Jacobson and is stored at the
Age of Steam Roundhouse in Sugarcreek, Ohio, where it, along with all other equipment in the roundhouse, can be viewed by the public on tours the museum offers. Consolidation #14 is on static display outside
Gaithersburg, Maryland's
commuter rail station. ERC&L Shay #19 is on display in Ohio. Climax #3 is owned by the
Roaring Camp and Big Trees Narrow Gauge Railroad in
California, but is not serviceable. The ERC&L's American log loader and bobber logging caboose are both restored and on display at the
Cass Scenic Railroad State Park in Cass, West Virginia.
BC&G Mikado #17 had been initially preserved on the
Livonia, Avon and Lakeville Railroad but was scrapped in 1970 following the locomotive's sale to a private owner who found it to be mechanically irreparable. At one time the
Elk River Railroad ran modern diesels from
Gassaway, through Dundon and a branch to a coal loading facility at
Avoca then from Dundon to
Hartland. ==Restoration==