| Santa Maria Valley Railway Historical Museum |
![]() "I'd like to focus today on the human side of this transaction," said Jane Brennan-McGovern, great grand daughter of Capt. Hancock, as she opened the ceremony. "You'll have to excuse me if I slip into refering to Captain Hancock as Poppa. The family is sad to lose the railroad, but delighted with the new owner and the potential for the railroad's future." Hal Madson (r), author of Railroads of the Santa Maria Valley, added that SMVRR No. 21 was inaugurated at this very spot 81 years ago. [See "Final Run of No. 21".] ![]() Ever wonder how a train whistle can sound both mournful and hopeful at the same time... Traditionally, a railroad change-of-ownership ceremony includes two blasts of the locomotive whistle, one by the previous owner and one by the new owner. Today, the two great great grand daughters of Captain Hancock, Brenna and Sydney, sounded the whistle first followed by a blast by the boys, Michael, nephew of SMVRR's Dave Jennings, and Adrian, son of 3rd-generation SMVRR railroader Jesse Flores. There have been many members of the Flores family that worked on the SMVRR. But for the fact that the loco's whistle is heard every day in Santa Maria, the whole town would surely have taken notice. ![]() Jane presented a plaque to wish Mike Parry well, who will be leaving the SMVRR after 24 years of service to stay with the Hancock land company. Two remaining SMVRR employees, Dave Jennings (white shirt) and Vince Martinez (blue shirt) looked on. ![]() Brenna and Sydney turned over No. 1801's keys and an SMVRR lantern to Michael and Adrian. ![]() The speakers' table for today's event was shaded by SMVRR No. 1801, spotted against the old depot building at the downtown railroad yard. The depot building is now the office location for the new operators. ![]() ![]() At the other end of No. 1801 is the depot building, and to the left is the speeder and Caboose No. 180, the latter recently restored by the Museum ![]() One of the SMVRR GE 70-ton locomotives rested quietly in the enginehouse during the ceremony. ![]() ![]() See the SMVRR's press release (PDF, 224kb). |
Ceremony:
81 years ago, Captain G. Allan Hancock bought the Santa Maria Valley Railroad (SMVRR). Today, a brief yet profound ceremony at the SMVRR's downtown yard commemorated an historic change of ownership of the railroad from the Hancock organization to its new owners as of last week, the Coast Belle Rail Corporation. |