The V-shaped flume built by the Summit Fluming Company in 1869 was purchased first, and lumber moved uphill in wagons until the
Lake Tahoe Railroad was built in 1875 to carry production from two more sawmills C&TL&F built at Glenbrook in 1873 and 1875. The route climbed following North Canyon Creek and required two
switchbacks to reach the summit at an average grade of 2.44 percent with some as steep as 4 percent.
Baldwin Locomotive Works built two
2-6-0 locomotives named
Tahoe and
Glenbrook. Either locomotive could pull six
flatcars of lumber to the summit, and trains sometimes used twelve cars with one locomotive pulling and the other pushing. By 1877 the railroad had 75 flatcars; and a third similar locomotive was built that year to move the desired volume of lumber when one of the locomotives required repairs. Railroad and flume operations were coordinated by installation of one of the first
telephone systems in the west between Glenbrook and Carson City. As additional log raft towing capacity was required, C&TL&F purchased the
Meteor in 1876 the
Emerald (II) in 1887. C&TL&F's second Glendale sawmill burned in 1887; so their remaining Rigby sawmill shifted to 24-hour operation to sustain lumber production. ==Lake Valley Railroad==