's locomotive no. 35 dressed up as a stand-in for Union Pacific 119 in a Golden Spike reenactment at the 1949
Chicago Railroad Fair 's replica of no. 119 As was the case with the
Jupiter, the Union Pacific only began to acknowledge the 119's historical significance well after it was scrapped. For a 1949 reenactment of the Golden Spike ceremony staged at the
Chicago Railroad Fair the
Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railroad's locomotive number 35 was cosmetically altered stand-in for the 119; with
Virginia and Truckee's Genoa portraying the
Jupiter. In 1968, the Union Pacific sponsored the construction of the
Omaha Zoo Railroad in the
Henry Doorly Zoo, including a narrow gauge replica of the 119, built by
Crown Metal Products. In the mid 1960's, with the upcoming centennial of the Golden Spike ceremony, the National Park Service embarked on a project to reproduce the Union Pacific No. 119 and Central Pacific
Jupiter exactly as they appeared in 1869, to have them exhibited on a section of restored trackage at the recently established Golden Spike National Historic Site at Promontory Summit. The park service commissioned Roy E. Appleman to provide recommendations for the best way to replicate the engines. Appleman's conclusion, based on research provided by noted railroad historian and steam engine owner
Gerald M. Best, among others in the field, was that there were no preserved examples of engines close enough to their design to properly represent them, and the best option was to construct replicas of the locomotives entirely from scratch. These engines were displayed on a section of restored trackage on May 10, 1969, and remained on display until the following year, when the
Reno was sold and moved to
Old Tucson Studios and the
Genoa was sold to state of California, joining the rest of the former Pacific Coast Chapter RLHS-owned equipment in Sacramento in what ultimately became the
California State Railroad Museum. Beginning on March 4, 1969, the Union Pacific operated a Golden Spike Centennial Exposition train, which embarked on a tour of their network beginning in East Los Angeles and concluding in Omaha on October 12 of that year. This train consisted of flatcars displaying the Virginia and Truckee's
Inyo and
Dayton on loan from
Paramount Pictures and dressed up as the
Jupiter and 119, respectively, along with pieces of vintage railroad construction rolling stock, and a chair car containing photos, models, and other displays relating to the transcontinental railroad. After the
Reno and
Genoa were sold in 1970, the
Inyo and
Dayton replaced them at the Golden Spike National Historic Site. To construct full size replicas of the
Jupiter and 119, the National Park Service initially approached
Walt Disney Studios, which had previously built two steam engines from scratch for their
Disneyland park's railroad, for the project. Disney declined, but recommended the
O'Connor Engineering Laboratories in Costa Mesa, California, who had designed many unique pieces of filming equipment used by the company, for the task. Since none of the original drawings of either engine survived, over 700 detailed engineering drawings had to be recreated based entirely on the photographs taken of the engines during the ceremony, as well as research on the construction of similar locomotives during the mid 19th century. Disney animator and steam engine owner
Ward Kimball did color matching and original artwork for the
Jupiter and No. 119. In 1974, the
Inyo and
Dayton were sold by Paramount to the state of Nevada, and were moved to Carson City in 1978, to become part of what would become the
Nevada State Railroad Museum, and the completed replicas were delivered to Promontory the following year. No. 119 and Jupiter's paint schemes were updated in 1994, replacing Kimball's color choices with new hues based on a recently uncovered newspaper report vaguely describing the Jupiter's livery, along with further research on locomotive liveries of the late 1860's and early 1870's. and shares most of the 119's proportions and specifications, although it was built to resemble a wood burning locomotive. As such, the
York does not have the smokebox extension, and features a balloon stack of the
Jupiter's design. It also deviates further from both the
Jupiter and 119 by having a cowcatcher with horizontal slats. ==See also==