Shay No. 5 on static display by the
Williams Depot. The drive shafts between the crankshaft and the trucks have been removed. 116 Shays survive today, some a combination of parts of two Shays. This is a partial list: • The oldest surviving Shay, serial number 122, built in 1884, is currently displayed in Redding California, at
Turtle Bay Exploration Park. • The oldest operational Shay is located at the
Cass Scenic Railroad State Park in West Virginia as their locomotive No. 5. It was first bought in 1905 by the
West Virginia Pulp & Paper Co. at Cass. Number 5 is in fact still running on its original rail since it first ran in 1905, and it was designated the official state steam locomotive in 2004. • The Yosemite Lumber Company's #4 Shay is partially restored and is on display at the
Sierra Nevada Logging Museum in Arnold, California. It worked at the top of the El Portal Incline, bringing
sugar pine logs to the incline head, where the loaded rail cars were lowered about in . There they were picked up by a different railroad and taken to the mill. • The
Arizona State Railroad Museum foundation owns former
Anaconda Copper Mining Shay No. 5, which was previously stored in
Montana. Although it never operated in
Arizona, it was acquired by the ASRM to represent the Shays used by various logging and short line railroads in
Northern Arizona, such as the Saginaw and Manistee Lumber Company. It has been displayed by the
Grand Canyon Hotel in
Williams since 2014. •
Mount Emily Lumber Company 1 was operated by the Oregon Historical Society for several years. Since 2022, it has been owned by the
Oregon Rail Heritage Foundation of Portland, Oregon. • Stimson Lumber Company "Peggy" (a Class: B 42-2 Shay) was built in 1909, shipped to Seattle where she changed owners until eventually the Stimpson Lumber company bought her to work their Oregon and Washington holdings. Peggy worked those holdings until 1950, when she was retired from active service; at which time she was donated to the City of Portland. Between 1969 and '71 she was refurbished and moved to her present location at the World Forestry Center, where she remains today. • Restored and on outdoor display in downtown Cadillac, Michigan for free viewing is a
Cadillac–Soo Lumber Company locomotive with tender. • The
Allen County Museum in
Lima, Ohio displays a two-truck, gauge Shay which was used in a local quarry, and is probably the survivor nearest to the factory where it was built in 1925. It was rescued in 1953 only hours before being cut up for scrap, and was restored at no cost by
Baldwin-Lima-Hamilton. • The Camino-Placerville & Lake Tahoe No. 2, a three-truck Shay, is on display at the
Travel Town Museum in
Los Angeles, California. • The
Roaring Camp & Big Trees Narrow Gauge Railroad in Felton, California, operates two Shays, No. 1
Dixiana (Class B, s/n 2593 of 1912) and No. 7
Sonora (Class C, s/n 2465 of 1911). •
Railtown 1897 State Historic Park preserves a class C Shay,
Sierra Railroad No. 2, and occasionally runs it on its excursion trains. • The
Colorado Railroad Museum has two Shays, Nos. 12 and 14, which operated on the
Georgetown Loop Railroad for about 20 years. • The
New Jersey Museum of Transportationat
Allaire State Park is restoring the gauge Ely-Thomas Lumber Company No. 6. This locomotive ran on the
Pine Creek Railroad from around 1955 through 2002, when it was taken out of service for boiler work. ] • The
Yosemite Mountain Sugar Pine Railroad owns and operates two former
West Side Lumber Company Shays, Nos. 10 and 15, on its line just south of
Yosemite National Park. •
Stephen F. Austin State University has a Shay locomotive (s/n 2005 of 1907) on display outside of the Arthur Temple College of Forestry and Agriculture in
Nacogdoches, Texas. • The
Canada Science and Technology Museum owns one operational engine constructed from two locomotives, Merrill & Ring Lumber Co. numbers 3 and 4, used in their forestry operations at Theodosia Arm on the British Columbia mainland. This Shay is operated by volunteers of the
Bytown Railway Society • Graham County Railroad No. 1925, (Class C, s/n 3256 of 1925), survives at the
North Carolina Transportation Museum in
Spencer, North Carolina. 1925 is the fastest Shay ever recorded, recorded running at during "The Great Shay Race" at Railfair '99. It ran at the museum from 1997 to 2005 when the engine required boiler work. Since then it has been stored in the roundhouse as a static exhibit, and the universal joints have been removed. • Serial number 3345, a class C Shay was the last narrow gauge Shay. It was built in 1929 for the
New Mexico Lumber Company. It was acquired by the LaPorte County Historical Steam Society and moved to the
Hesston Steam Museum, where it was damaged in an engine house fire in 1985. It was rebuilt and resumed operation in 2006. • West Side Lumber Company No. 9 (Class C, s/n 3199 of 1923) was purchased by the
Midwest Central Railroad in 1966, and with a minor refurbishment in the mid 1990s, continued to operate there. In January 2011, the MCRR and the
Georgetown Loop Railroad entered into a 7 to 10-year agreement where 9 was refurbished by the GLRR staff. It went into revenue passenger service at the Georgetown Loop Railroad on July 14, 2012. It returned to Iowa in late summer 2019, and began service at the 2019 Reunion. • The
Illinois Railway Museum, the largest railroad museum in the United States, runs a three-truck three-cylinder Lima built in 1929, a veteran of the J. Neils Lumber Company. • Meadow River Lumber Co. No.1 is the only Shay in the collection at the
Steamtown National Historic Site in
Scranton, Pennsylvania • The
Cass Scenic Railroad has the following Shays: • Class C No. 6 (s/n 3354 of 1945) built for the
Western Maryland Railway and the last production Shay. It is the second largest Shay built weighing 162 tons. It was in service for only four years when it was retired and placed in the
B&O Railroad Museum. In 1981 it was removed from static display, in exchange for a smaller Shay (ex- Cass Scenic No. 1) and Porter Saint Elizabeth #4. It is the largest surviving Shay. • Class C #11, built in 1923, from the Hutchinson Lumber Company, Feather Falls, California; it weighs 103-tons. • Class C No. 2, a Pacific Coast Shay built in July 1928 for the
Mayo Lumber Company of Paldi, Vancouver Island, British Columbia. No. 2 is the only Shay to have burned wood, coal, and oil in her lifetime.. • Class C-70 No. 4; originally number 5 of the Birch Valley Lumber Company, Tioga, West Virginia in 1922. • Class C-70 No. 7, No. 4, which is non-operational. • The gauge
Alishan Forest Railway in Taiwan has two classes of Shay. It has five 18-ton Class A models and ten 28-ton Class B Models. Four of Class Bs are operational: numbers. 21, 25, 26, and 31. The rest are on static on display in Taiwan. No. 14 has been exported to Australia's
Puffing Billy Railway. • Locomotive No. 22 is on display at Jiji Railway Station in Jiji, Taiwan • The Little River Railroad And Lumber Company 70-ton Shay number 2147 resides at the company's museum in Townsend, Tennessee. • The Railway Historical Society of Northern New York (RHSNNY) is home to the Class B Shay No. 8 "Livingston Lansing" which was willed to the museum by Mr. Lansing. It is on display at the RHSNNY museum in Croghan, N.Y., on the
Lowville and Beaver River Railroad. It is not operational. • Three Class B Shays are at the
BC Forest Discovery Centre in Duncan, British Columbia. Shay No. 3262, built in 1924 was rebuilt in 1995. • Goodman Lumber Company No. 9 is on display at Mid-Continent Railway Museum in North Freedom, WI • The Longview Public Library in Longview, WA has a fully restored Shay on the library grounds. During special events that is close to the Library and the Civic Center, the Shay is opened up for the public to walk through. http://longviewlibrary.org/shay.php • Shop number 2769, built in 1914 for the Great Northern Railway, is currently on display in a small park near the BNSF mainline in Columbia Falls, Montana. • One Class C Shay is exhibited at
Buenavista railway station in Mexico City, formerly belonged to Teziutlan Copper Co. as TCC-2, weighing 45 tons, with a wheel drive engaged for 29.5 inches, vertical cylinders 10 by 12 inches, a force transmission and crankshaft gears. It used wood as fuel until 1946, when it was adapted to burn oil. The Compañía Minera Autlán SA de CV donated this locomotive to
Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México as a historical piece in October 1980. • Abitibi Power and Paper Co. Shay No. 70, Shop No. 3298, built in 1924, hauled lumber for the Abitibi Power and Paper Co. for many years before being donated to the Town of Iroquois Falls where it currently sits in a small park. Originally built for the Tallassee Power Co. as the 2,713th Shay built. It was passed to five different companies before retiring. • The Davis-Aken Lumber Company #2 Shay is on display at the Pennsylvania Lumber Museum in Ulysses, Pennsylvania. • Lopez Sugar Corporation No. 10 is the only known extant example in the island of
Negros in the
Philippines. It is displayed in front of the company headquarters as of June 2022. • The Woodstock Lumber Co. Class B Shay No. 5, Shop No. 2958 is owned by
Clark's Bears, formerly Clark's Trading Post, in Lincoln, NH. Built in 1917 and bought by the Woodstock Lumber Co., new, in 1919. The 2-truck 50-ton was used as a switcher in their yard. Other sources say that the locomotive saw service on the Beebe Railroad in Campton, NH, as well as the East Branch & Loncoln Railroad. The Woodstock Lumber Company became the Franconia Paper Co., and Clark's bought it from them between 1951 and 1952. The shay is not operational currently, and there are no known plans to restore it. It can sometimes be found on display, along with the disassembled components of Clark's
Heisler Locomotive. ==Images==