
Drivers
rarely notice the huge wall that rises up on the ocean side as
Highway 1 drops down into the valley just north of Davenport.
What the heck's going on here? And, isn't there a creek down in
that valley somewhere?
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Are
those Real or Fake?

Looking
north toward Davenport across San Vicente Beach. The dam-looking
structure on the right is the railroad rampart that carried
Union Pacific trains to Davenport.
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Sometimes an object is so large that we never notice it. We may pass
by it for a lifetime and never realize that it's there. Such is the
case of what I like to call the North Coast Railroad Ramparts. It was
not until recently that I began to notice the huge, wide earthen mounds
that carry the railroad tracks across each coastal stream between Santa
Cruz and Davenport. Study the above photograph. It was taken while standing
on the southern end of San Vicente Beach looking north toward Davenport.
In the distance on the right you can see the tall white stacks that
mark the Lonestar Davenport Cement plant. And, notice the very level
wall on the right. That's the rampart.
The
second photograph is the view you usually see while driving Highway
1 toward Davenport. Because you are intent on your driving, you don't
notice that, as you drop down into the valley cut by San Vicente Creek,
the wall on your left blocks your view of the ocean. This pattern is
repeated all along the stretch of highway from Santa Cruz to Davenport.
The railroad line that runs between present-day Highway 1 and the ocean
blocks each and every coastal stream.
Highway 1
looking north toward Davenport. Note the straight, flat line atop
the bank on the left. That's the railroad grade atop the Rampart.
Both the rampart and the fill upon which Highway 1 was built are
artificial. The original grade of San Vicente Creek is well below
both of them. |
The
story of the Ocean Shore Railroad Ramparts
In 1905, after years of discussions about a possible coastline railroad
between Santa Cruz and San Francisco, the Ocean Shore Electric Railway
began building a line south from San Francisco and north from Santa
Cruz. When completed, the planned railroad would have two standard gauge
electric lines running side by side, shuttling passengers and freight
along the coast and opening it up to dependable transportation for the
first time. Meanwhile, almost simultaneously, the Southern Pacific Railroad
announced that it too would be building a railroad line along the coast
north from Santa Cruz. The two railroads cooperated in designing trestles
and cuts that would eventually accommodate three (3!) broad gauge railroad
lines running side by side.

The San Vicente
Creek trestle being filled in, 1906. If you look closely you can
see the fledgling cement plant in the distance on the right. So,
the first thing you should remember is that inside each of those
ramparts is the skeleton of the trestle that was buried almost a
century ago. The trestles were built first to provide a framework
for the fill material, helping to contain the materials when they
were dumped as well as guiding the pile with a uniform slope on
either side. Besides, imagine how difficult it would be to get the
materials from each side of the canyon to the middle without the
trestle from which to dump it. |
One
of the primary sources of freight for the railroads was to be the carloads
of cement that would be shipped from the under-construction Santa Cruz
Portland cement plant on the north side of San Vicente Creek. Because
of the extreme weight of the intended freight, the railroad construction
engineers determined that wooden trestles could not bear the huge weight
of loaded trains, so they decided to build temporary trestles at each
stream crossing and then immediately fill them in. The fill material
was readily available from the huge cuts necessary to level out the
grade on either side of each valley.
Eventually only two sets of track were laid atop these ramparts, one
for the Ocean Shore Railroad and one for the Southern Pacific. The Ocean
Shore went out of business in 1923, and today, there is but one set
of rails atop the ramparts, operated now by the Union Pacific Railroad.
The exit tunnel
for San Vicente Creek at the beach. The creek flows directly into
the ocean behind the photographer. Before the construction of
the cement plant, and this railroad rampart/tunnel system, San
Vicente Creek was considered to be the best trout-fishing stream
in Santa Cruz County. |
What
happened to the creeks?
Perhaps even more ingenious than the ramparts was the way that the engineers
solved the problem of allowing each of the creeks to flow past these
huge earthen dams. Rather than put culverts down and then cover them
with the fill material, railroad workers drilled a tunnel on the north
side of each valley to allow the streams to flow out to sea. So, each
creek wandered up to the rampart, turned right and followed its base
until reaching a tunnel that then carried it out to the beach.
Several observers in 1906 wondered aloud whether or not the tunnels
would be of sufficient size to carry the water from heavy winter storms,
but despite the huge rains of such flood events as Christmas 1955 or
January 1982, the tunnels have proved to be large enough to handle the
flow.
The social and cultural impact of the ramparts
Many North Coast residents bemoaned the creation of the ramparts in
1906 and the way that they blocked their access to the ocean beaches.
However, the ramparts were actually huge screens, blocking the beaches
from public view. Beginning in the 1950s (and accelerating in the 1960s),
these "secret" beaches became havens for folks wishing to
sunbathe and cavort in the nude. Today, almost a century after the ramparts
were built, they provide privacy for nude sunbathers and homeless communities
along the coast south of Davenport.
All
of this does relate to railroads, indirectly, as locomotive engineers
who operate between Santa Cruz and Davenport often slow and sometimes
even come to a stop on sunny days to enjoy the view.
Looking north
toward Davenport. You can see Highway 1 dropping down below the
railroad grade and crossing San Vicente Creek. The highway creates
its own rampart upstream from that of the railroad |
The
Lesser Ramparts of Highway 1
When the State of California began straightening out the extremely crooked
and dangerous Coast Highway in the 1930s, their engineers decided to
echo the railroad ramparts that were already there. So, in each of the
major valleys, they laid shorter roadbeds upon which to build the highway.
All of this raises once again the question of how did they make certain
that San Vicente Creek could exit to the ocean during heavy rains? The
highway engineers merely built culverts that extended the tunnels upstream
so that the creeks continued to make their right turn, slide along the
face of the new, highway rampart, into the new extended tunnel and out
to sea.
Sources:
The history of the Ocean Shore Railroad and Southern Pacific can be
found in The Last Whistle by Jack Wagner, published in 1974,
and Ric Hamman's California Central Coast Railways, 1980, soon
to be republished by Otter B. Press.
The two ramparts
of San Vicente Creek at Davenport. The straight line on the upper
left is the Railroad Rampart, while the lower rampart of Highway
1 and its stream of cars is just below it. Imagine if the San
Vicente tunnel were blocked, the resulting lake would flood the
highway and all of the buildings in the center of the photograph. |
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