
The Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad (T&T) was a standard-gauge shortline railroad that operated from 1907 to 1940, primarily serving the remote mining regions of eastern California and southwestern Nevada. Incorporated on July 19, 1904, in New Jersey by Francis Marion “Borax” Smith, president of the Pacific Coast Borax Company, the railroad was envisioned as a vital link to transport borax from Death Valley-area mines to markets, while also connecting to the booming gold and silver districts near Tonopah, Nevada, and potentially reaching “tidewater” (a Pacific port like San Diego). However, it never reached either endpoint on its own tracks, terminating instead at Ludlow, California (connecting to the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad) in the south and Gold Center, Nevada (near Beatty) in the north, spanning approximately 167 miles.
The T&T was constructed amid fierce competition, including obstacles from Senator William A. Clark’s Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad. Construction began in 1905, with the line reaching Death Valley Junction by 1907 and full operation shortly thereafter. It initially thrived on borax haulage but later diversified into other minerals, passengers, and general freight. The railroad outlasted competing lines in the Death Valley region, providing essential service to isolated desert communities until its abandonment in 1940, with rails removed during World War II for scrap.
Location and Role of Bradford Siding
Bradford Siding was a minor but functionally important stop on the T&T mainline, located at milepost (MP) 128.01, approximately 6 miles north of Death Valley Junction, California, in Inyo County near the Nevada border. It was classified as a siding—a short spur track allowing trains to pass or load/unload—rather than a full station. The siding featured a spur line extending to nearby clay pits, making it a key loading point for non-borax minerals.
The site was situated along the Amargosa River valley route, where the T&T paralleled modern California State Route 127. Heading north from Death Valley Junction, the line passed Bradford Siding before entering Nevada stations like Jenifer and Scranton.
Origins and Naming
Bradford Siding was named after John Bradford, a local operator involved in early clay mining and transportation in the Amargosa Valley. Around 1916–1925, large clay deposits were discovered just over the state line in Nevada by prospectors like Ralph “Dad” Fairbanks. Initial operations involved small-scale mining, with clay hauled by tractor (notably Holt caterpillar tractors operated by John Bradford) across the desert to the siding for loading onto T&T railcars. Bradford also maintained a small milling operation and boiler at the site for processing.
By the mid-1920s, clay production increased, attracting interest from oil companies that produced hundreds of tons monthly using crude mills. The siding became the primary transloading point, as direct rail access to the Nevada pits was limited.
Peak Operations and Connection to Clay Mining (1920s–1930s)
Bradford Siding gained prominence in the late 1920s after the Pacific Coast Borax Company relocated its primary operations to Boron, California, in 1927, reducing borax traffic on the T&T. To sustain revenue, the railroad diversified, hauling alternative commodities such as lead from Tecopa, gypsum, talc, and—significantly—feldspar and clay from Bradford Siding.
In 1926, clay operations consolidated under the Death Valley Clay Company, which acquired a former borax plant in Death Valley Junction. To improve efficiency, the company extended the narrow-gauge (3-foot) Death Valley Railroad (DVRR, a separate borax-haul line from Ryan to Death Valley Junction) northward. This extension ran parallel to the T&T mainline using a third rail for dual-gauge operation, reaching Bradford Siding and then branching into Nevada to serve the clay pits directly.
This setup allowed clay to be transported via narrow-gauge from the mines to Bradford, where it was transferred to standard-gauge T&T cars for long-haul shipment. The arrangement supported growing production from pits like the Bell Pit and Associated Pit.
After the DVRR ceased operations in 1931, the T&T took over the Bradford spur, converting it to standard gauge. This ensured continued service to the clay mills through the 1930s, even as overall T&T traffic declined amid the Great Depression and waning mining activity. As late as 1931, remnants of John Bradford’s original mill and boiler remained visible at the siding, though no longer operational.
Decline and Abandonment
By the late 1930s, the T&T faced insurmountable challenges: declining mineral output, competition from trucks and highways, and financial strain. The railroad ceased operations in 1940. Bradford Siding, tied to the diminishing clay trade, was abandoned alongside the mainline. The site reverted to desert, with no significant structures surviving. Rails were removed in the early 1940s for wartime scrap metal.
Legacy
Bradford Siding exemplifies the T&T’s adaptation from borax dependency to diversified mineral hauling, extending the railroad’s viability into the 1930s. Today, it remains a obscure historical footnote, with the former right-of-way traceable along modern roads near the California-Nevada border. Remnants of the grade and occasional artifacts can still be found by explorers, highlighting the harsh desert environment that both enabled and ultimately doomed such remote rail operations.
The T&T’s story, including stops like Bradford, is preserved through sources such as historical societies, abandoned rail databases, and accounts in works like David F. Myrick’s Railroads of Nevada and Eastern California. It underscores the transient nature of early 20th-century desert railroading in support of America’s mining frontier.
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