Cholona: Difference between revisions

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Cholona is a [[Railroad | railroad]] siding and ghost town located east of [[Trego]] in [[Pershing County]].  The 1955 Lovelock 250,000 map indicates that a section house was at Cholona.<ref>[http://ngmdb.usgs.gov/img4/ht_icons/Browse/NV/NV_Lovelock_321726_1955_250000.jpg 1955 Lovelock 250,000 map showing a section house at Cholona]</ref>
Cholona is a [[Railroad | railroad]] siding and ghost town located east of [[Trego]] in [[Pershing County]].  The 1955 Lovelock 250,000 map indicates that a section house was at Cholona.<ref>[http://ngmdb.usgs.gov/img4/ht_icons/Browse/NV/NV_Lovelock_321726_1955_250000.jpg 1955 Lovelock 250,000 map showing a section house at Cholona]</ref>
The 1914-1915 WPRR Descriptive Time Table states:"Cholona, 460 miles, is the halfway point between Salt Lake City and San Francisco. This stretch of soda and [[Borax | borax]] country is the east edge of the Black Rock Down; much of the whitish soil is said to be volcanic ash."<ref>"[[Descriptive Time Tables, Denver and Rio Grande - Western Pacific, Winter 1914-1915]]."</ref>


[[Image:Cscrm_000335_07_access3675x2040.jpg|right|thumb|WPRR 1910 Timetable showing Cholona]]
[[Image:Cscrm_000335_07_access3675x2040.jpg|right|thumb|WPRR 1910 Timetable showing Cholona]]

Revision as of 04:40, 16 September 2015

Cholona is a railroad siding and ghost town located east of Trego in Pershing County. The 1955 Lovelock 250,000 map indicates that a section house was at Cholona.[1]

The 1914-1915 WPRR Descriptive Time Table states:"Cholona, 460 miles, is the halfway point between Salt Lake City and San Francisco. This stretch of soda and borax country is the east edge of the Black Rock Down; much of the whitish soil is said to be volcanic ash."[2]

WPRR 1910 Timetable showing Cholona
October 1913 map showing Cholona
c. 1914 map of the W.P.R.R. showing Cholona

References

  • GNIS
    • Citation: U.S. Geological Survey. Geographic Names Post Phase I Map Revisions. Various editions. 01-Jan-2000.
  • Helen S. Carlson, Nevada Place Names: A Geographical Dictionary," p. 77. "Name of uncertain meaning"
    • Citation: (T54): "Western Pacific Railroad Company. Eastern Division Timetable 54."
    • Citation: (Dir. 1971): "Directory of Geographic Names, Prepared by the State of Nevada, Department of Highways, Planning Survey Division, Cartographic Section. In cooperation with U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration, 1971."
  • "Map of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad and Western Pacific Railroad," c. 1914 shows Cholona.
  • Dave Basso, "Ghosts of Humboldt region: a glimpse into Pershing County's past," 1970. p. 15. "Cholona is an abandoned railway town..."
  • Rufus Wood Leigh, "Nevada place names: their origin and signifance," Deseret News Press, 1964. States that Cholon is the name of a city in French Cochin-China. Wikipedia states: "Chợ Lớn is a Chinese-influenced section of Ho Chi Minh City (former Saigon)"
  • Nevada State Journal, Friday, July 18, 1941, Page 5, Mrs. William Killinger of Cholona, Nev, visiting.
  • Reno Evening Gazette, Monday, August 10, 1914, Page 8, "a Greek sectjon foreman on the Western Pacific line at Cholona, near Sulphur"
  • "Four Injured in Collision on Railroad," Reno Evening Gazette, Thursday, April 28, 1910, Page 3. Head-on train collision during a sandstorm between Cholona and "Hot Springs" (presumably Trego).
    • J. F. Gallagher, brakeman, of Winnemucca injured
    • Bert Dyer, engineer
    • Adolph Becker of Winnemucca, hit on the head, expected to die
    • Engineer Baker